How Our Warren Township Team Handles a Bedminster Job
Active losses in Bedminster get the same dispatch protocol as any other call into our Warren 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.
Active emergency response — water actively intruding, fire just extinguished, sewage actively backing up — runs to a sub-hour on-site target across our service area. Bedminster is roughly 5 miles from where our Warren Township 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.
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.
Claim documentation for Somerset County properties
What ends up in your carrier file from a Bedminster job: a labeled building diagram with daily moisture readings, sequential photographs of every wet substrate at each visit, equipment run-time logs by unit, separate Xactimate scopes for mitigation and reconstruction with line-item pricing, and a written cause-of-loss summary tying the event to the right policy bucket. We bill the carrier directly when assignment is authorized, so out-of-pocket exposure for the homeowner is minimal.