Contact Information: Contact: Henry Stimpson Stimpson Communications 508-647-0705 HStimpson@StimpsonCommunications.com Jim Barrett FRSNE 781-769-5080 jbarrett@firerestore.com
Norwood's Fire Restoration Services, in Business 40 Years, Mops Up After Fires, Floods -- and the Occasional Corpse -- Using Latest Technologies
| Source: FRSNE
NORWOOD, MA--(Marketwire - November 1, 2007) - A customer calls his agent in a panic: His
basement is full of sewage. Or a fire has left everything in his house
stinking of smoke. There's mold growth that looks like a '50s horror
movie. Or a wall has been soaked by a leak from an ice dam on the roof.
Today, more customers ask their agent to direct them to a service provider
that can do the job fast and right -- and is on their insurer's approved
list.
For almost 40 years, Fire Restoration Services of New England (FRSNE), in
Norwood, has answered the call. The nastier the job is, the better FRSNE
president Jim Barrett likes it.
FRSNE starts working fast. The customer gets his home or business back in
order and stops worrying, the agent is happy, and the insurance company has
effectively outsourced most of the claim. And it's all done promptly,
before a public adjuster can come along.
"Referring clients to a professional restoration firm, like FRSNE, that
responds immediately and professionally to their needs helps them immensely
when their lives are in turmoil. This really creates goodwill and helps us
keep customers forever," says Scott Bulger, president of Northeast
Insurance Agency, Inc., in Auburn, Mass.
"Jim Barrett gets it done, and so does Fire Restoration Services. It's as
simple as that," says Framingham, Mass., agent Jerry Kennedy, owner of
Charles River Insurance, who has recommended FRSNE for a decade.
Barrett, who's been in the business since the beginning (he holds Certified
Restorer license #002), says that quality in the restoration industry has
improved. Years ago, many people with just a van, buckets and sponges were
passing themselves off as restorers. That's less common today, but some
outfits still do poor work. "They haven't bothered to get the necessary
education," Barrett says. And then the rosy scenario painted above can
turn ugly fast.
Mold prevention is a hot topic.
"Insurers now realize that mold prevention is a lot less expensive than
remediation," Barrett says. "They want us to get involved at the earliest
stages."
FRSNE can dry out basements, carpets, floorboards and wallboards before
mold grows, saving insurers money and homeowners heartache and potential
health problems.
But sometimes mold's been growing for years. Then, FRSNE specialists may
need to sand timbers while using a vacuum with a HEPA filter that captures
mold spores. The firm works with independent certified industrial
hygienists who monitor its work and take air samples.
For more routine odor removal, its restorers use ozone (O3), an active form
of oxygen that safely deodorizes surfaces and kills bacteria. A skilled
restorer turns on the ionization machine and brings the ozone in the room
up to the appropriate level. Like magic, the odor disappears -- completely
and permanently.
Because soiled upholstery and fixed draperies can't be brought to a dry
cleaner, restorers bring dry cleaning to the site. The restorer injects
dry-cleaning chemicals and extracts them with a special vacuum tool. For
fabrics that can't be dry-cleaned, a water-and-detergent solution is used.
Ultrasonic cleaning works for items that can be immersed, particularly
hard-to-clean items like jewelry, figurines, hummels, crystal and
mini-blinds. The items are placed in a tank and the ultrasonics machine
turned on. The ultrasonics causes tiny bubbles to explode on the surface
and carry away the grime.
Freeze-drying is used for restoring wet books, documents and valuable
papers. Placing such items on racks in a freeze-dry chamber promptly dries
them before mildew can set in and ruin them.
Restorers can clean building exteriors and interiors using machines that
blast cleaning materials such as baking soda, sponge particles, ice
crystals or a mixture of water and chemicals.
FRSNE restores both building interiors and exteriors, and contents
including furniture, rugs, clothing, books, computers and consumer
electronics. It has worked on commercial jobs such as the post-fire
restoration of the John F. Kennedy birthplace in Brookline, Mass., plus
universities, schools, hotels and retailers and commercial contractors.
Its sister company, Carpet Concepts, is expert in the inspection,
appraisal, restoration and repair of wall-to-wall carpet and rugs of all
types. When a carpet or rug can't be repaired, it offers replacements at
discounted insurance rates.
FRSNE is a member of the National Institute of Disaster Restoration (NIDR),
New England Institute of Restoration and Cleaning (NEIRC), and the
Institute of Inspection, Cleaning, and Restoration Certification (IICRC).
Worst Messes of All Time
A three-month old corpse was the most malodorous thing Barrett ever
encountered. The man lived in a big house in Wellesley, Mass., where he
survived on a diet of vodka and eggs, Barrett recalls. The landscaping
service kept the grounds tidy and no one noticed anything amiss until a
mailman got a whiff through the letter slot.
A scallop attack was the only stench that ever defeated FRSNE. A fired
scallop-boat crewman got even by dumping a bushel of scallop guts into the
owner's pickup truck and letting them marinate in the summer sun. "He knew
what he was doing," Barrett recalls. "We just couldn't get rid of the
smell completely."
More information about FRSNE and Carpet Concepts, including emergency tips,
is available at www.firerestore.com or by calling 800-649-5080 or
781-769-5080. Service is available 24/7.