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Proper Methods For Sewage
Mitagation
A sewage back up or category 3 water loss is an disgusting and
unhealthy situation that will contain bacteria, viruses, blood
and fecal matter. Any company that cleans and removes sewage
should adhere to the The IICRC S500 Standard and Reference
Guide for Professional Water Damage
Restoration.
This guide mandates that any technician that cleans sewage
should be trained in the proper techniques as well as be : 1.
Blood Born Pathogen Certified, 2. Have Osha Confined Space
Certifications 3. Have passed an Osha Medical Exam 4. Have the
proper equipment to safely remove sewage from crawl spaces such
as a air quality meter and Scott pack on
site.
The first phase of all sewage removal projects is the
extraction and pumping of the sewage. This is usually
accomplished with jet vac equipment and vacuum trucks. Only
trucks with 1000 gallon tanks or larger should be utilized in
any sewage mitigation project. The pumps should be water or oil
cooled masport pumps with a lift of at least 30 feet.
Frequently illegal unlicensed contractors will try to use
carpet cleaning trucks to clean up sewage spills. These trucks
only hod around 50 to 100 gallons and an average sewage clean
up exceeds 500 gallons. These contractors will then illegally
dump the waste into the local storm drains, with is completely
illegal. All Licensed Contractors will use high capacity
equipment with an average capacity of 3000 gallon or
more.
After the sewage extraction process is finished its time to
inspect the property for further damage. This inspection should
include all the walls and floor coverings of the rooms that
were contaminated by sewage.
After the inspection the question is should the building
materials should be salvaged or demolished and discarded. This
decision is based on safety issues as well as the values of the
building finishes and contents. It almost always makes sense to
remove floor covering unless it is ceramic or marble. It always
is in the best interest of the client to remove sheet rock and
wallboard because bacteria can proliferate behind
walls.
A detailed moisture inspection should be conducted to account
for hidden damages such as the presence of sewage underneath
floors. This can be conducted with moisture meters and thermal
imaging cameras.
The nest step is to treat the structure with a hospital grade
disinfectant such as microban 5000 to kill all bacteria and
viral partials that will be present. This is a very important
part of the process and clients should make sure that their
contractor are using the proper chemicals. Ordinary
disinfectants and germicides will not kill the necessary
bacteria. Clients should ask for and receive the MDST or maters
data safety sheet of the products that the contractor is using.
If he cant or wont supply one then a client should look for
another service.
After demolition and disinfection the building should be dried
using professional grade dryers and dehumidifiers to less than
15 % ms as measured with a Delmhurst moisture meter. A series
of bacteria test for ecoli and a standard plate count should be
undertaken to make sure the property is safe to
use.
These test should be sent to a certified laboratory for
analysis by a hygienist. No ecoli at all should be present in
the results. A base line standard plate count test of an
unaffected area of the building should be taken for a
comparison.
Chuck Pennington is Owner of Statewide Restoration, a New
Jersey based waste mitagation contractor as well as the
innovator of the Aquadry system of commercial drying. If you
have use of our services kindly go to our web site at
waste mitagation.
Also visit or mold remediation web site at mold
mitagation
Chuck is an author of numerous restoration industry
publications.
by Chuck Pennington - 06/19/2009
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Chuck Pennington is Owner of Statewide Restoration, a New
Jersey based sewage removal contractor as well as the inventor
of the Aquadry method of commercial drying. If you need our
services please go to our web site at sewage removal. Also
visit or mold remediation web site at mold
removal
Source: http://newjerseymoldtest.com
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