The most important thing to remember after an extreme disaster is that we must rebuild and move on with life. To be thankful we survived and that we now have more days ahead of us to rebuild our hopes and dreams.
This can be a real test of your resolve and your ability to manage all the new chores on your plate, allowing you to get back to living a normal life. I am affiliated with a company that is trying to lift some of these pressures from people dealing with disaster.
Everyone needs to get paid when they work, we all know even non-profit companies pay their workers, and that this is what allows them to continue moving forward. My friends company is doing just this, making a way for them to get paid to clean up for people after disasters or even before renovations or expansions to property through recycling.
How this works is, a person contacts us, and we go and look at the site to be cleaned. We look at ALL materials that can be recycled, not JUST metals. Wood, plastics, metal, trees and bushes. Whatever is planned in the removal, and then decide if the recycle value vs. the cost of deconstruction (including worker wages) is worth the effort. If it does average out to pay the workers to deconstruct, a contract is formed, and removal begins.
The owner pays nothing, unless agreed in outside conditions in reference to added tasks. Such as say a separate area on the property that has no redeemable value in recycling, the owner could then get a bid and pay for the removal in cash.
The deconstruction includes, removal of all metals, woods, and other reusable items and materials, and the assistance in cleanup and removal of trash. To prepare the area for future construction, contact a building contractor, we are Deconstructors.
So you save insurance money to rebuild, and we clean out your old destroyed items for their recycle value as payment. You don't pay us, unless you have non-recycle jobs you would like done at the same time, so that our workers get paid.
Time for deconstruction depends on our available crew size, and the size and complexity of the deconstruction project. for example a complex iron and tin, steel cabled (450 ft long 40 ft wide) turkey shed hit by a tornado and flipped in every direction in a twisted metal pile- deconstruct time 1 week, 2 days cleanup.
So now you have something less to worry about, Now your "coverage" will not have to pay for cleanup, and the money can be used for rebuilding what you have lost. Without you having to trust some cheap fly by night cleanup company that comes to town, to get paid and run. We are not going anywhere, we plan on being here in SW Missouri a long time.
Green Trash pickup service, Scrap Yards South, Wire case Deconstruction and Air Purification (prototypes in construction 1/100th scale), Metal recycling for Art and Machines.
We are paid by the work site itself, not by your insurance, or from your wallet and purse. We clean up your site for free, and you can use the money you saved on rebuilding...
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