Skip to content
Nebraska Real Estate Q&A Discussion Forum

User Stats

48
Posts
20
Votes
Tony Cimino
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Omaha, NE
20
Votes |
48
Posts

Flooding in Omaha and Surrounding Areas

Tony Cimino
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Omaha, NE
Posted Mar 13 2019, 12:57

With the recent mass melt off, ground saturation, and flooding, I am sure a lot of you guys are getting calls from your tenants about flooding basements.  I got a call last night.

What are your typical steps you follow when dealing with these type of issues?

Do you call your insurance and make a claim?  Do add soil to the side of the home to redirect runoff? Get fans to dry out the area and hope it doesn't happen again?

User Stats

2
Posts
3
Votes
Jody Joens
  • Omaha, NE
3
Votes |
2
Posts
Jody Joens
  • Omaha, NE
Replied Mar 13 2019, 13:04

I just got the call.  So far, there is nothing claim worthy.  First priority is getting things dry as quickly as possible....or mold.  We pulled carpet, sucked up water, started fans.  I'll also be delivering a dehumidifier later today.  With the actively running water, it was easy to see where some dirt work can likely mitigate another event (hopefully).  I will be tackling that when things dry out.

User Stats

220
Posts
288
Votes
Mike Roy
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Bath, ME
288
Votes |
220
Posts
Mike Roy
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Bath, ME
Replied Mar 13 2019, 13:11

@Tony Cimino - I got the call yesterday.  Six inches of water in a walkout basement due to snow melting down a hill and under the door.

I can tell you that this is when strong relationships come in handy.  My property manager and contractor were on the scene in minutes.  They called in an excavator to dig a temporary channel to divert the water away from the basement, pumped out the basement and brought in a few dehumidifiers to dry it out.  24-hours later, and I think we have a crisis averted.  If it weren't for my All Star Team up in Maine, I'd be in trouble.

The most important thing you can do is to determine the source of the water.  If it's due to a rising water table, then regrading isn't going to help you, but a sump pump probably will.  However if the land around your building is pitched toward it, regrading could provide some benefit.

For us, a permanent solution this spring will involve regrading the area in front of the basement door, repairing a clogged drain that we discovered in the basement as a result of this mess, and possibly supplementing with a sump pump.  One thing we will not install is gutters, as the risk of ice dams in Maine are too great.

In terms of insurance, we carry a $5,000 deductible because we really don't want to be issuing claims.

BiggerPockets logo
BiggerPockets
|
Sponsored
Find an investor-friendly agent in your market TODAY Get matched with our network of trusted, local, investor friendly agents in under 2 minutes

User Stats

24
Posts
12
Votes
Ben Hollingsworth
  • Lincoln, NE
12
Votes |
24
Posts
Ben Hollingsworth
  • Lincoln, NE
Replied Mar 13 2019, 13:16

Yeah, what Jody said.

As for future prevention, look outside to see if you can tell why the water's getting inside.Make sure your gutters & downspouts are all doing their job.  If the outside grade slopes toward the house, then building up the soil will certainly help.

If it's not obvious, I recommend calling the Leak Detective (http://www.TheLeakDetective.net).  He doesn't fix problems; he just figures out how to solve them, which means he's not going to try to sell you on an expensive solution that you don't need.

User Stats

366
Posts
184
Votes
Kyle Godbout
Pro Member
  • Investor
  • Omaha, NE
184
Votes |
366
Posts
Kyle Godbout
Pro Member
  • Investor
  • Omaha, NE
Replied Mar 13 2019, 14:31

I had a carpet cleaning company suck out water and leave a huge dehumidifier and air movers in the basement. Also, if it’s in carpet, it’s recommended to remove padding and replace if saturated. 

This melt off and rain has been devastating. Homes that never leak are leaking unfortunately. 

User Stats

48
Posts
20
Votes
Tony Cimino
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Omaha, NE
20
Votes |
48
Posts
Tony Cimino
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Omaha, NE
Replied Mar 14 2019, 05:47

We had a very small leak, and the basement has stick on tiles that we were planning on replacing once the current tenants move out so not much of an issue.  Clean up the water and go about our day.

From the time our tenant called to now, the leak has stopped and hasn't gotten worse, so I know its just from the snow pack and not from the run off, thank god.  Going over there to re-grade the side of the house, but glad its just a small thing.

User Stats

24
Posts
12
Votes
Ben Hollingsworth
  • Lincoln, NE
12
Votes |
24
Posts
Ben Hollingsworth
  • Lincoln, NE
Replied Mar 14 2019, 07:03

No house should ever leak just because there's a lot of water.  If water's getting inside, it means there's a problem that should be dealt with before it gets worse.  You really want to figure out how the water got in and fix it the right way before we get a really big storm that causes a lot of damage.

User Stats

179
Posts
59
Votes
Jeremy A.
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Maine
59
Votes |
179
Posts
Jeremy A.
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Maine
Replied Mar 20 2019, 23:11

1. if get surface below 17% and air below 50% rh  asap

2. all must be dried within 12-24 hours from first leak 

mold starts activate growth on wet food surface within 24-48 hours if above these numbers 

any food source... think paper, cellulose, wood, drywall, carpet, cardboard, behind inside cavities, walls, 

water from ground, air, and or surfaces

buy or rent carpet fan, industrial desiccant dehumidifier, air scrubber like activtek system, ozone,  etc 

run heat as high as safely can, add more heat or double time. 

3-5 days on most avg basements.

contact for more specific or help. 

mold is my friend