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Updated about 1 hour ago on . Most recent reply

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Marcus Auerbach
#4 General Real Estate Investing Contributor
  • Investor and Real Estate Agent
  • Milwaukee - Mequon, WI
7,052
Votes |
4,869
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Milwaukee Flash Flood - how to recover

Marcus Auerbach
#4 General Real Estate Investing Contributor
  • Investor and Real Estate Agent
  • Milwaukee - Mequon, WI
Posted

Milwaukee got hit with 8 inches of rain in 2 hours, in some areas 12" and up to 18". Cars were washed down the streets, the sewer system got totally overloaded pushing sewage through floor drains into basements. Widespread power outages lead to failing sump pumps and rapidly flooding basements. 3 days later we still see power on and off, causing basements to flood already pumped basements again. Spectrum has still not restored internet in all areas. We have a large number of effected properties and do what we can, one of them destroyed by a large falling tree. The damage from sewage is 10x worse than just clear water.

Here is what we are doing right now - please let me know what other tips you have:

1.) Pumping water out is obviously first
2.) removing furniture
3.) pulling up carpets and pad, dispose.  
4.) On newer properties, we use indoor outdoor carpet without pad, which cleans up well and looks like we can keep
5. Many HVAC systems are damaged and need new control boards
6.) water heaters need to be restarted, the newer onces require disassembly and blowing dry, damaged electronics... need hot water to clean sewage
7.) we spray enzyme clearner to prevent/limit bacterial growth
8.) at least 2 dehumidifiers, will probably rent commercial units
9.) just bought a thermal camera to identify wet drywall, remove if needed
10.) just ordered a few more commercial ozone generators from maxblaster - the ones we have are too slow

Carpet cleaners refuse to take orders right now, apparently, they get called to basements that need water extraction first.
Home Depot came through today with a delivery of blower fans and dehumidifiers - we always keep some around, also puddle sucker pumps, but not enough for anything of this scale.

For anyone who has dealt with this and have some helpful tips, please let us know!
Probably going to organize an event with the RPAWI to educate fellow landlords

If you have not seen the damage,  news video

business profile image
On Point Realty Group - Keller Williams
5.0 stars
60 Reviews

Most Popular Reply

User Stats

4,869
Posts
7,052
Votes
Marcus Auerbach
#4 General Real Estate Investing Contributor
  • Investor and Real Estate Agent
  • Milwaukee - Mequon, WI
7,052
Votes |
4,869
Posts
Marcus Auerbach
#4 General Real Estate Investing Contributor
  • Investor and Real Estate Agent
  • Milwaukee - Mequon, WI
Replied

Ken, the "nice" thing about a flash flood is that the water only lasts a short time, hours in most cases. The damage is already done, but at least you are not dealing with weeks of standing water and a lot of the issues that come with it. What made our work harder were ongoing power outages; some homes got flooded a second time due to sump pumps not having power. And also widespread internet outages did not help

It's day 5 and we are almost done with pumping, carpet removal and getting water heaters and HVAC's back up running, which helps to clean and dry out the homes. The next question will be how much drywall will we have to cut..

business profile image
On Point Realty Group - Keller Williams
5.0 stars
60 Reviews

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