Walk into any underlit retail store, and you’ll feel it immediately — the space feels uninviting, products look flat, and customers move through faster without engaging. Now imagine that same store with a failed emergency exit sign, non-functioning outlet banks, or a track lighting system that
keeps flickering. That’s not just a visual problem. That’s a safety issue, a code violation, and a liability risk all at once.
Common Electrical and Lighting Issues We See in Commercial Facilities
Across the retail, hospitality, and commercial property spaces we serve, the most frequent calls
we receive include:
• Burned-out or failing bulbs — stockrooms, break rooms, offices, and bathrooms with non-functioning lights that reduce visibility and create unsafe working conditions
• Track lighting failures — interior retail lighting systems that require fixture replacement, relamping, or full reinstallation
• Outlet and switch failures — power outages, tripped circuits, and dead outlets that disrupt operations and point to underlying wiring issues
• Emergency exit sign and emergency light failures — backup battery failures, dead exit signs above entry doors, and emergency lighting that won’t activate during a power loss
• Basement and utility space lighting — often-overlooked areas where fixture failures go unreported until an injury or inspection forces the issue
Why Emergency Lighting Is Non-Negotiable
Of all the electrical maintenance calls we handle, emergency exit and egress lighting failures carry
the highest urgency — and for good reason. Fire departments conduct reinspections. Property managers receive citations. In the event of an actual emergency, failed exit signage can cost lives.
We’ve responded to situations where a backup battery failure on a single exit sign above a front door triggered a fire department reinspection with a hard deadline. That’s not a situation any facility manager wants to find themselves in. The fix is often straightforward — a battery
replacement, a new fixture, or a rewire — but the window to act is short once an authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) is involved.
Staying Ahead of Electrical Failures
The best electrical maintenance strategy is a proactive one. Rather than waiting for a tenant complaint or a failed inspection, a routine lighting audit can identify:
• Fixtures approaching end of life
• Circuits showing signs of overload
• Emergency systems with degraded battery backup
• Areas where lighting levels fall below code-required minimums
Don’t Wait for the Inspection
M2Easy Inc. — Maintenance Made Easy.
Contact us at repairs@m2easy.com or visit www.m2easy.com to schedule service.