 |
 |
After The Smoke Clears...
by Jeff Bishop
BigMop.com Price: $129.95
Quantity:
If you’re an owner, how often do you walk in the office and immediately get a rush of technical questions on claims in progress? Do you really have time to sit down and go through the details time after time? Wouldn’t it be easier to pull out After the Smoke Clears and let supervisors read for themselves, indeed, to copy a section or checklist so they don’t forget a critical detail? Make everyone more productive by eliminating the duplication of effort.
Defining disaster restoration, all the categories of service a firm is expected to provide.
The importance of service technicians, to their companies, to insureds, and to insurance companies as well.
Restoration alternatives, how value is determined, depreciation, and the restorer’s responsibility.
Disaster soiling: the health and safety impact, the continuing effect (corrosion, yellowing).
Cleaning and deodorizing chemicals, and restoration equipment and supplies required to process work.
Safety: PPE, printed materials, training, and hazardous situations (lead paint, asbestos, PCBs, explosion).
Structural restoration including: ceilings and walls (coated, covered, paneled, blown), 14 categories of fixtures (doors, windows, lights, cabinets, bathroom), floorcoverings (carpet, vinyl, wood).
Step-by-step procedures for restoring unfinished areas, such as attics, crawlspaces, and storage areas.
Structural exteriors: paint, brick, siding, eaves, awnings.
HVAC safety implications and restoration basics.
Contents including: soft furnishings (upholstery, lamp shades, mattresses, pillows, tapestries), window treatments (draperies, sheers, valences, blinds), case goods (inspecting, cleaning, deodorizing, transporting), and appliances and electronics.
Dry cleaning and laundry (sorting, cleaning options, deodorizing), high-value objects (artwork, sculpture, collectibles, jewelry, inspecting, restoration options, security), kitchen accessories (dishes, utensils, foodstuffs, packing, boxing, transport), books (evaluating, restoration options, deodorizing), and personal items (closet, furniture drawer, bath vanity contents; toys, personal papers).
Smoke odor removal in confined areas (kitchen grease fire) or for overall contamination (gutted room).
|