What to Expect When You Call From Marlboro
Active losses in Marlboro get the same dispatch protocol as any other call into our Matawan 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.
On active losses (burst supply lines, sewer backups, fire and smoke calls, wind-driven water intrusion), the standard is sub-hour arrival anywhere inside our coverage radius. Marlboro is roughly 5 miles from where our Matawan crew bases out of, so under normal traffic that is a 15-25 minute response. We pre-stage trucks and equipment for the seasonal surge windows specifically so individual arrival times do not slip during storm events.
The on-site sequence: shut off the source, document the damage with photos and moisture readings, deploy extraction and drying equipment sized to the loss, monitor daily until each substrate returns to dry-standard. Reconstruction picks up on the back end with the same crew, scoped from the same Xactimate that mitigation produced. No handoff between mitigation and rebuild contractors, no separate negotiation, no scope-gap that the homeowner has to bridge.
What gets sent to the carrier on a Marlboro job
Insurance handling on Marlboro jobs follows the standard our carriers expect: building-diagram-mapped moisture readings, sequential photo documentation of every wet surface, Xactimate scopes with line-item pricing the adjuster can approve, and direct billing once authorization is on file. The cause-of-loss narrative we attach is the part that matters most — it determines which policy responds (homeowners, NFIP, sewer backup endorsement) and how much the carrier covers.