BigLuke -Ouch. Sounds like you should have gone to Bootcamp prior to purchasing this park. There isn’t an easy answer for someone in your situation, but if I were you, I would:1. Make sure the master water meter has a leak alert on it. This is usually a graphic image that appears on the meter’s digital screen that looks like a faucet dripping. Basically the meter is smart enough to know when water is being used constantly, which indicates a leak. Your municipal water provider should install a meter that has this feature. City/rural water companies are usually obligated to replace meters more than 10 years old and/or meters with more than 10 million gallons on them (regulations vary by water company). But be sure you’ve got a ‘new-fangled’ master meter at your park that your manager (or you) can go check daily to see if it’s detected a leak. Finding out you have a leak from your quarterly water bill 90 days after the fact is obviously too late.2. Sell off as many of your mobile homes as you can. Don’t rent them. Sell them on terms. This will generate cash you can use to…3. …replace the water lines. You might call American Leak Detection to come find leaks; it’ll cost around $750 and is money very well spent if you can get away with ‘spot replacement’ of water pipe. But it sounds like you have leaks ‘everywhere,’ and the only path forward may be complete replacement. (Of course, use Schedule 40 PVC).4. Sewer pipe may need to be ‘spot’ or ‘entirely’ replaced too. Orangeburg is a disaster.5. Ask your local MHA for their thoughts on grants, etc. And if you find such, please post back here on the Forum!Good luck,-jl-