What Working with Our Aberdeen Township Crew in Cliffwood Looks Like
Active losses in Cliffwood get the same dispatch protocol as any other call into our Aberdeen Township base. Real human on the line, address + cause + access captured in the first 90 seconds, truck rolling within 10 minutes. The information layer is thin on purpose — the people who answer the phone are the people who decide what gets loaded onto the truck.
For losses that need immediate intervention (pipe failure, smoke contamination, sewage event, structural envelope breach), the dispatch standard is on-site inside the hour. From our Aberdeen Township dispatch base, Cliffwood is about 1 miles out — typically a 10-20 minute drive depending on traffic. During storm windows we pre-stage extraction and drying equipment so the response stays sub-hour even when calls stack up.
Once the truck is parked, the work follows the same pattern every time: source-control (water off, power isolated, containment up), then comprehensive documentation (photos, moisture readings, written cause-of-loss narrative), then sized equipment deployment. Daily monitoring visits with logged readings until every wet substrate returns to baseline. The reconstruction crew is the same team that did the mitigation — same phone number, same contract, same accountability through final walkthrough.
Working with adjusters on Cliffwood losses
The carrier paperwork on a Cliffwood loss starts at hour one and continues through final invoice. Daily moisture logs mapped to a building diagram, before/during/after photos of every affected surface, an Xactimate-format scope for both mitigation and reconstruction. Carrier-approved adjusters get a complete file rather than a series of follow-up requests. The cause-of-loss framing is the single most important document because it dictates which policy bucket pays and at what limits.