P&J has extensive experience responding to natural and man-made disasters
In 1989, P&J entered the disaster response market with Hurricane Hugo’s impact on the South Carolina coast. At the same time, we had spent the last several decades building a name for ourselves as a land clearing contractor, we saw clear applications for our clearing and grubbing skills, and we quickly evolved our own sets of practices on the job. Since this response effort, P&J has responded to significant disasters ranging from hurricanes to ice storms to man-made disasters, including the 9/11 World Trade Center Terrorist Attacks. Our Disaster Response market has focused mainly on vegetative debris, and through that work, we gained extensive experience clearing hazardous debris under challenging
conditions. As we responded to disasters in the 2000s, we started to develop tracking technology and began exploring Automated Debris Management Systems (ADMS). Storm, our in-house ADMS, was deployed in 2011 when P&J responded to the tornado outbreak in Alabama. This innovative technology was the first ADMS developed from a contractor- led perspective, and our use on this US Army Corps of Engineers project streamlined quality assurance procedures to help reconcile and process load tickets more quickly and with less user error than on previous projects.
Having a direct technology partnership has allowed us to tweak and update our ADMS as we continue to use it on the job,
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