What To Do Right After a Storm Damages Your Home
8/3/2021 (Permalink)
You hear the wind blowing and the rain pounding on your window panes, and you hope your home will remain untouched by the storm. Unfortunately, this is not the case. A tree falls on your roof, and water pours into your home, soaking your carpets and covering your hardwood floors. Here's how to stem the tide of storm damage in the event's immediate aftermath.
1. Document Damage Before Attempting Immediate Repairs
If you are planning to submit a claim to your insurance company for the damages, you will want to record them prior to attempting any immediate repairs. Make a list of damaged items, and take photos or videos of each.
2. Make Immediate Repairs Only To Prevent Further Damage to Your Home
Take the following steps when attempting immediate repairs or cleanup:
- Cover leaking roofs with a tarp to prevent more rainfall from entering the home.
- Pull up a wet carpet to prevent mold and move it to a dry location.
- Throw away all perishable food that has spoiled.
Make sure all articles being removed from the home were documented on the inventory list of damaged items.
3. Exercise Caution If You're Staying in a Damaged Home
To restore lost electricity in your home, use generators outside, away from windows and doors. Make sure your sewer system is working before flushing toilets, using water stored previously for this function if necessary. Open windows and run fans inside your home to circulate air and aid the drying process.
You may also choose to contact a company that can perform emergency restoration services in your home. If so, keep receipts for services provided, as well as for any purchases made for immediate repairs, such as a tarp for the leaking roof.
Hopefully, your home will never be subjected to storm damage. If it is, however, these storm tips can get you started on the road to recovery and get your life back to normal as quickly as possible.