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Part of our house flooded almost 3 weeks ago. We got 14" inches of rain in 2 hours. Anyway, we cleaned one room out, carpets and all. Left the carpet in the other becasue that is what the landlord wanted. And washed the walls with bleach water. We threw away most of the furniture that got wet. Yet the rooms still stink really bad. The room with carpet was steamed cleaned. I think it didn;t do a bit of good to do that. It is just rank down in those rooms. Any ideas to get the landlord to help out here?

2007-09-07 17:15:32 · 8 answers · asked by Luvbuz01 5 in Home & Garden Maintenance & Repairs

8 answers

I am going to tell you something you likely don't want to hear, but you'll have to remove the wall board or plaster to a line above what was the flood waters line throughout the home to erradicate the smell and the development of molds and bacteria. If your landlord isn't going to do this I strongly suggest you get out as it's very unhealthy and will only get worse if not properly remedied.

I also suggest that in the future you get yourself some renters insurance with flood protection. This insurance covers you just like a homeowners policy and is really pretty inexpensive. If you'd of had it now your contents would have been covered, as well as temporary housing, whereas you'd of had the money to move and put a new home back together.

I wish you the best of luck; I've been where you are and know all to well what you're going through. If I can be of any additional help to you on this please feel free to contact me in the future.

Mike Lonergan
TradesProfessional, Inc.
http://www.tradesprofessional.com

2007-09-07 17:52:07 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The landlord should be dealing with this problem, after all, he owns the house.

Now a couple of things: flood water in a house is a huge problem. The major issue is mold growth, which could lead to a very unhealthy condition. Not only does all the carpet have to be removed, but the walls removed down to the studs to above the water line and the walls replaced. You cannot clean it because you cannot clean the dampness and stink inside the walls, where there will be a tremendous mold problem. Bleach will not work and is NOT the proper way to treat mold. The damaged material MUST be removed and replaced. There is no other option.

Call the local heath department or building inspector. They may issue a code violation or even condemn the property or else force the landlord to make necessary repairs, and this does not mean wiping a wet rag over it.

2007-09-08 15:40:32 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You just got screwed, you should have moved and let the landlord handle this situation by himself. This wasn't your concern.
I hope you had renters insurance? no, think about it the next time you rent a place.

Your going to have to strip the wall board off the walls and peel all the insulation out, get rid of it all. Strip off everything, the carpets will be no good along with the padding, toss it all out.
All the remaining walls and whatever is left will have to be sprayed and washed with a bleach to inhibit the growth of mold and bacteria. Your going to have black mold growing on everything.

I would just forget this and write it off as a bad loss and look for another place to rent. Your getting paid for the work you did, I hope.

I would suggest to the owner to hire a Hazmat crew to come in a clean the place in the correct manner, then have new wallboard put in, a complete remodel, like "flipping" it's going to cost thousands but, in the end, he may gain.

2007-09-07 23:11:47 · answer #3 · answered by cowboydoc 7 · 0 0

the recent floods will commence a chain reaction for the period of the country as far as coverage is going.Their could be a clause in all regulations different than for flood conceal,till a extreme top type is paid.it form of feels nowhere is secure from flooding and different than for large harm to residences around the country the certainly infastructure has took a beating.As to a decrease in abode expenditures I dont think of so using fact everywhere would be suspect.that's a daunting time forward for coverage expenditures to upward thrust to checklist extreme stages.construction and contents conceal have continually been at a existence like value point interior the united kingdom,and the maximum up-to-date activities will push up expenditures.that's a actuality of existence we could bear.

2016-10-10 04:20:31 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Call the local zoning commission or building inspector or some other local government agency which deals with housing. You are living in unsafe conditions. Move out if you can.

2007-09-08 04:07:13 · answer #5 · answered by John himself 6 · 0 0

PLEASE RENTERS INS ONLY COVERS YOUR GOOD NOT THE STRUCTURE, THAT IS THE LANDLORDS PROBLEM.
YOU SHOULD HAVE VACATED TILL IT WAS CORRECTED, LANDLORD SOUND LIKE ONE I DONT WANT,CHEAP SKATE, PROBABLY NO INS HIMSELF, AND ONLY WANTS YOUR RENT.
NOT KNOWING HOW THE OTHER CARPET WAS CLEANED AND DRIED, THE WALL AS MENTIONED PREVIOUSLY NEED TO BE CUT OUT AND DRIED ALSO.
DEHUMIDIFIED WOULD OF HELPED DURING THAT PERIOD OF DRYING.
SEND HIM A REGISTERED LETTER WITH YOUR COMPLAINT AND CONTACT YOUR LOCAL HEALTH DEPT FOR ASSISTANT IN CHECKING IF IT IS SAFE TO HABITAT THE RESIDENCE

2007-09-07 18:23:56 · answer #6 · answered by john t 4 · 0 0

Do you have renters insurance? Does it cover floods? If it does, you should call professionals to deal with the mold problems.

If not, consider moving.

2007-09-07 17:27:13 · answer #7 · answered by redunicorn 7 · 1 0

Yes, Send them a bill for the team you "hired" (you) and see how quick they show up!

Mold and mildew settle in between 24-48 hours. You should move out!!

2007-09-07 17:23:02 · answer #8 · answered by ? 5 · 1 1

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