How Our Phillipsburg Team Handles a Pohatcong Job
When the call from Pohatcong comes in, the goal is fastest-possible source-control plus right-sized equipment dispatch. The dispatcher captures the loss type (water vs fire vs sewage vs storm), the severity (a sink overflow vs a basement filling), and the access (gate codes, building manager, COIs). The crew is moving inside 10 minutes of the call ending — not 30, not 60.
Active emergency response — water actively intruding, fire just extinguished, sewage actively backing up — runs to a sub-hour on-site target across our service area. The drive from our Phillipsburg location to Pohatcong is approximately 3 miles. Normal-traffic estimate: 10-20 minutes door-to-door. Pre-staged equipment during surge windows (winter freezes, named storms) keeps that arrival time consistent even on high-volume days.
On-site protocol runs the same on every job: stop the source first, then document, then deploy equipment. Source-control means water off at the supply, electrical isolated where wet, Cat-3 areas contained. Documentation means photos of every wet surface and moisture readings of every substrate before equipment goes down. Equipment means air movers and dehumidifiers sized to the affected square footage. Daily monitoring visits log progress until each substrate hits dry-standard. Same crew handles the rebuild on the back end.
What gets sent to the carrier on a Pohatcong job
Most of our Pohatcong work is insurance-billed. We document moisture readings against a building diagram, photograph every wet surface before equipment goes down, write Xactimate scopes the adjuster can settle without a callback, and bill carriers directly when authorized. The cause-of-loss narrative we write determines which policy bucket the claim lands in — homeowners (sudden + accidental), NFIP (true flood from rising water), or sewer/water backup endorsement (combined-sewer-overflow events) — so getting that documentation right at hour one is what determines whether the claim closes cleanly or drags through arbitration.