Today, I comitted a rather large faux-pas. While washing a building of 6 townhomes, I overlooked an open window until the rinse phase. Being the through guy that I am, it's a good bet that their carpet, drapes, etc are now nicely speckled with bleach spots. No one was home, and I should have left a card but I thought I'd ask around first. I'll be back every day this week, so I can always catch them again. That said, my questions:
- Should I persist in attempts to contact the owner, or am I just asking to pay for all manner of things that may not have actually been damaged to start with.
- Where does the buck stop? If the management company (who hired me) sent a letter of warning, does it fall on the homeowner? If not, does it fall on the managment company? Should I offer to split the damages with the mgmt company?
- Granted, this one I just plain didn't see. But for those that I do locate how do I protect myself? Skipping units doesn't seem feasible, as each bldg had at least one. That, and it's a real pain to come back for one unit in the middle of 9 others. I kept a reasonable distance from them, but there is still risk.
Anyway, no complaint yet and I can always fall back to my insurance company but I want to be prepared to handle it as fairly and easily as possible. That, and a $500 ded. is a rather large pill to swallow.
Today, I comitted a rather large faux-pas. While washing a building of 6 townhomes, I overlooked an open window until the rinse phase. Being the through guy that I am, it's a good bet that their carpet, drapes, etc are now nicely speckled with bleach spots. No one was home, and I should have left a card but I thought I'd ask around first. I'll be back every day this week, so I can always catch them again. That said, my questions:
- Should I persist in attempts to contact the owner, or am I just asking to pay for all manner of things that may not have actually been damaged to start with.
- Where does the buck stop? If the management company (who hired me) sent a letter of warning, does it fall on the homeowner? If not, does it fall on the managment company? Should I offer to split the damages with the mgmt company?
- Granted, this one I just plain didn't see. But for those that I do locate how do I protect myself? Skipping units doesn't seem feasible, as each bldg had at least one. That, and it's a real pain to come back for one unit in the middle of 9 others. I kept a reasonable distance from them, but there is still risk.
Anyway, no complaint yet and I can always fall back to my insurance company but I want to be prepared to handle it as fairly and easily as possible. That, and a $500 ded. is a rather large pill to swallow.
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