




Most homes have at least one spot where electricity and water get too close for comfort - bathrooms, kitchens, garages, outdoor areas. That's exactly where GFCI protection matters most. We recently handled a full electrical safety upgrade for a home in Dallas, and it covered more ground than a single outlet swap.
We installed GFCI outlets in the wet areas of the home, making sure each one was properly seated, tested, and confirmed active. The green indicator light on a freshly installed Leviton GFCI outlet is a small thing, but it tells you everything - the circuit is live, protected, and ready. That little detail is what separates a properly done installation from one that just looks finished.
On top of the GFCI work, we also handled switch replacements and got a ceiling fan up and running in a screened porch area. Having two electricians on the job meant we could work through multiple locations without cutting corners on any of them. Every connection was checked, every switch seated flush, every outlet verified before we moved to the next one.
GFCI protection isn't optional in most of these locations - it's required by code. But beyond the code requirement, it's genuinely one of the most effective ways to reduce electrical hazard risk in a home. If your home is older and hasn't had the outlets in wet or outdoor areas updated, there's a real chance they don't have this protection at all.
We work in Dallas and the surrounding areas, and this kind of job is exactly what we do day in and day out. It's not glamorous work, but it's the kind of work that actually keeps people safe.