Search:

Home | Home & Family | Home


Sewage Damage Cleanup Starts Before The Flood

By: Samson Paulotti

Proper sewage damage cleanup is essential since it can overtake your home and even make your drinking water unsanitary if it is not taken care of as soon as possible. Though you may not be able to predict when excessive rainfall or small scale floods will cause a need for sewage damage cleanup, but if you understand how this damage occurs you can take prepare for such occurrences before they ever happen. This is important especially if you live in a flood zone or in an area getting excessive rain during certain seasons.

Sewage damage cleanup is necessary when your home's sewage system begins leaking into the ground around your home. If left to its own devices it can seep into your home and overtake your drinking water, causing even bigger problems for not only your home but your entire community relying on the water supply.

Sewage damage cleanup starts with a flood or excessive rain which keeps the ground around your sewage system too wet and compacted. These systems rely on the air having more air so it can release chemicals and other damaging features of waste, such as bacteria. When the soil is too compacted to allow this release for a longer period of time these things start seeping into the soil and spreading around.

Here are some tips for what you can do before a flood or excessive rainy period hits your area, to make your chances of larger scale sewage damage cleanup less likely at a later date.

*Make sure your septic tank has enough liquid in it. If your tank is too empty it can actually elevate to the top of the ground during a flood or period of excessive rain. If you think a flood is coming it is not a good idea to have it pumped, or you could find sewage damage cleanup required to restore it in the ground.

* Find the floor drains in your basement and find a way to plug them up if a flood is expected or you find your area pounded by a lot of rain. This will prevent sewage from entering your basement through these drains, although it may still seep through cracks in the foundation of your home and cause a potential problem anyway. By closing off the drains you prevent the major entry into your home.

If you do live in a flood zone, do not wait for the next one to hit to test your sewage system's ability to hold up. Once the ground is soaked and the soil is severely compacted you will have no control over what leaks from your sewage system and the huge problems that will follow. The best time to take action is before it actually occurs.

The steps listed here are not time or money intensive, but can mean the difference between having to undertake serious sewage damage cleanup later on or having a properly functioning sewage system that requires little to no cleanup.




Article Source: http://www.articlesofinformation.com

Samson Paulotti is a water service advocate for How To Articles For Home Restoration and Restoration & Cleanup Information

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Home Articles Via RSS!

Powered by Article Dashboard