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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Unusual Jobs: Window washers

Mark Rutkowsky, above, and Eric Katzer hang off a building at Rock Pointe Aug. 27. The two regularly rappel off the roofs of buildings to clean windows around Spokane. (Jesse Tinsley)

One thing is for certain: High-rise window washing is not a job for everyone.

Eric Katzer said he can tell by the way job candidates walk across a roof whether they are cut out for it or not. Katzer owns and operates WestCoast Window Cleaning, a window washing company that cleans windows on tall downtown buildings like the U.S. Courthouse, the downtown post office, the Spokane Arena and on this particular day, Rock Pointe Corporate Center.

“And some applicants just kind of go wobbly when they get up here,” Katzer said, while standing on the roof of Rock Pointe. “The worst thing that can happen is that they don’t tell us how scared they are before they go over the side of the building.”

Katzer got into the business when he was about 16 because he needed work and a friend’s father owned a window washing company. And today, roughly 30 years later, it’s still what he does for a living.

“There’s nothing better than hanging off a building, washing windows,” Katzer said with a big smile.

Katzer has rappelled down nearly every tall building in Spokane, and many in Seattle and other Northwest cities. He’s donned superhero costumes while washing the windows at Providence Sacred Heart Children’s Hospital, to the delight of the young patients there.

Office workers may be momentarily startled as the washers swing down in front of a window pane, but most continue with their tasks. If he’s ever come across any sort of unusual behavior in an office, Katzer is not saying.

“We just do our job,” he said.

The equipment he uses is pretty simple: He sits on a platform that looks like a sturdy backyard swing, with a tall bucket of window washing water dangling below it. Rags, squeegees, suction cups to hold him up against slippery glass façades and anything else he needs to do the window job is somehow attached to him.

And over the rim he goes.

“I hang the platform over the edge of the building and just slide down and sit down on it,” Katzer said.

The platform ropes and Katzer’s safety harness are, of course, attached to the building. Sometimes there are special attachment points on a roof. Other times Katzer runs ropes around a structure – like a huge air-conditioning unit or a ventilation tower of some sort – then attaches his ropes to that.

“We know the buildings we work on very well,” Katzer said. “All the ropes and straps we use are tested on a regular basis.”

Spend a morning with Katzer and his crew and it’s very obvious he doesn’t rely on luck to keep him safe. Everything the crew does is methodical, organized and done in the safest possible manner.

During an ordinary workday the biggest crisis they encounter is yellow jackets.

“You see the nest and they just come at you, and you have to decide whether it’s worth it,” said Mark Rutkowsky. “The best way is usually to come back later when the bees are all in there and spray them.”

The two joke and chat as they work their way down the building, quickly and efficiently, before heading off to the next job.

Do any of them climb mountains for fun?

Both shake their heads no.

“Climbing is for work,” Katzer said. “I can’t imagine doing it in my spare time.”