Roof Debris Cleared Before the Next Rain
After golf ball–sized hail pummeled Butler in early 2004, Darnell Washington watched neighbors struggle with torn shingles and splintered decking piled in driveways. The air smelled like wet asphalt and frustration. With weather forecasts warning of another storm within 72 hours, homeowners faced ruined landscaping or worse—water intrusion if debris wasn’t removed fast. Most rental bins were booked solid, and fly-by-night haulers quoted wait times of days, not hours.
We rolled a 20-yard container onto the curb by noon the same day the call came in. Our crew used wheelbarrows to avoid scratching driveways and sorted recyclables on-site per EPA Waste Management Certification standards. By sunset, three households on the block had clean yards and dry attics. The bin was gone before the next drizzle hit, and the street looked untouched—just like before the storm.
They showed up when others bailed, and I didn’t have to lift a finger.
Miguel R., Butler







