mjwalsh
6 bay SS w/laundromat
We have a huge number of new & sometimes very young & inexperienced contractors in our area because of the shortage of housing. Last Wednesday one of my employees caught one of the vehicles before they had a chance to drive away. Apparently the two guys were ordered by their boss to clean up massive amounts of tar that they had on tools, rebar, scrap pieces of metal etc. & in the back of their construction pickup. Sticky tar all over 5 of our different hoses ... not tiny amounts but firm thick gobs & extremely stuck & attached all over. Our expensive polycarbonate overhead door was closed behind the pickup which could not be just sprayed off with hi pressure but also scrubbed & scrubbed via a brush & solvent. Long story short ... 2 extra long hog hair brushes completely filled with tar that they said they would clean for us ... they have not returned them to us & I do not believe they will be able to clean them satisfactorily. 7.5 man hours of intense scrubbing cleanup showed on our serveillance video of three of us pulled off of other work so we could keep downtime to a minimum. To give you a sense of the magnitude ... we had to throw away about 20 pairs of Nitrile plastic gloves & about 15 used rag like towels & use one half gallon of Zero Cleaning Solvent that we had on hand. Keep in mind this is our busiest time of year & as they left the weather was warmer than freezing, sunny & nice.
They actually had the gall to suggest that they assumed that it was our responsibility to clean up whatever. They tried to say that the walls were rusty ... no tar ... which was absurd since we have FRP & 100% stainless steel in our bay. We have had our truck bay since 1968 & know all about how tough a 5th wheel mess can be ... not even close to the horrific process involved with that much Zero solvent needed & manpower to thoroughly remove the tar.
Police were not called because we had the license number & the name of the company & its parent company. The parent company does actual house building along with the tarred foundation walls. I talked on phone with one of the bosses & emailed him but so far no proper response. I told them in an email that they should consider themselves lucky that we got to it before a brand new vehicle came with a person wearing expensive clothes etc. I made it clear to them that they would have been responsible for any damage to that person up until the time we would see the tar in the event of a "mess & leave" scenario. Keep in mind shoes would immediately get tar on them before we had cleaned the bay floor up.
Has anyone had anything this horrific of sheer stupidity of a tar mess with consequences to your car wash ... where you were faced with going to small claims court? What kind of going hourly rate would you charge them for that kind of clean up? 100% proof can be shown to the judge ... as far as we are concerned via our cameras. I am not sure on how the small claims court will need the footage. I can run my footage from my smart phone (remote desktop) but would probably need to output to an HDMI larger screen for the court.
Any suggestions on how to proceed to make sure these inexperienced & irresponsible under thirty year olds are held accountable for the situation they created? How much time would you give them to accept & pay for the reasonable charges of items ruined (current price list docs attached to email) & $20 per hour labor? Would their contractor's insurance or license come into play? With those of you with credit card acceptance ... if they had used that in the bay ... would you have the ability to bill their credit card for more than their wash? I know one time I was visiting a manager at a rental shop once & he said that once a contractor made such a mess out of one of their portable personnel hoists & he just charged considerable added expense to the contractor's credit card.
mike
They actually had the gall to suggest that they assumed that it was our responsibility to clean up whatever. They tried to say that the walls were rusty ... no tar ... which was absurd since we have FRP & 100% stainless steel in our bay. We have had our truck bay since 1968 & know all about how tough a 5th wheel mess can be ... not even close to the horrific process involved with that much Zero solvent needed & manpower to thoroughly remove the tar.
Police were not called because we had the license number & the name of the company & its parent company. The parent company does actual house building along with the tarred foundation walls. I talked on phone with one of the bosses & emailed him but so far no proper response. I told them in an email that they should consider themselves lucky that we got to it before a brand new vehicle came with a person wearing expensive clothes etc. I made it clear to them that they would have been responsible for any damage to that person up until the time we would see the tar in the event of a "mess & leave" scenario. Keep in mind shoes would immediately get tar on them before we had cleaned the bay floor up.
Has anyone had anything this horrific of sheer stupidity of a tar mess with consequences to your car wash ... where you were faced with going to small claims court? What kind of going hourly rate would you charge them for that kind of clean up? 100% proof can be shown to the judge ... as far as we are concerned via our cameras. I am not sure on how the small claims court will need the footage. I can run my footage from my smart phone (remote desktop) but would probably need to output to an HDMI larger screen for the court.
Any suggestions on how to proceed to make sure these inexperienced & irresponsible under thirty year olds are held accountable for the situation they created? How much time would you give them to accept & pay for the reasonable charges of items ruined (current price list docs attached to email) & $20 per hour labor? Would their contractor's insurance or license come into play? With those of you with credit card acceptance ... if they had used that in the bay ... would you have the ability to bill their credit card for more than their wash? I know one time I was visiting a manager at a rental shop once & he said that once a contractor made such a mess out of one of their portable personnel hoists & he just charged considerable added expense to the contractor's credit card.
mike