Dirty place chickfla

Ron Musgraves

Exterior Restoration Specialist
Staff member
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texas Cindy Gonzales GM 5200 block de zavala


Ron Musgraves www.propowerwash.com
 
Wow...that's dirty. Our town's Chick-Fil-A stays pretty clean as I eat there at least a couple times a month.
 
How hard are they really to clean initially I was looking into doing Pads and Drive thrus this summer and was looking to compile information to make an accurate bid though first.
 
I was at a chick-fil-a the other day.
Judging from the quality of the work, I'm guessing they get one of their workers to do it.
A lot of businesses around here do.
 
like wingstop.
I got called for a bid.
Showed up 30 mins later, and the manager on site decided he was gonna do it himself (terrible oil stains running from the back door to the dumpster), but hey, I got a free beer and wings for my time
 
like wingstop.
I got called for a bid.
Showed up 30 mins later, and the manager on site decided he was gonna do it himself (terrible oil stains running from the back door to the dumpster), but hey, I got a free beer and wings for my time
"You spray water on dirt, how hard can it be!"
 
I was at a chick-fil-a the other day.
Judging from the quality of the work, I'm guessing they get one of their workers to do it.
A lot of businesses around here do.
These are the ones you want.
 
It was disheartening to hear from the contractors there in Houston.

One contractor told me the story of coming up on a job to find his manager lying in water face down in handcuffs. They hadn't even allowed one drop of water to go in the storm drain, but nearby there was a dumpster they hadn't even touched that had a grease spill running off the pad and the officials accused them of doing it.

We were asked by numerous contractors to try to help in Houston.

Usually I'm pretty confident about what we can do because in most of my travels around the country I've been met with very intelligent officials who just want to do the right thing. But in Houston, it has degenerated to the point where the lawmakers and regulators have little to do with it anymore and the police have taken it upon themselves to add power washers to the group of "perps" or "bad guys" they choose to abuse.

This is going to take a lot of patience, prayer and help from local contractors to turn around.

I'm still on my way back home. But when I get there we're going to make Houston a top priority.

Even the hotel where the event was held was dirty. Just about everything was dirty. If that isn't a testament to the failure of the path that has been taken for the past 20 years I don't know what is.

As much mold and algae as there is in that climate, it should be the largest market in the US after Florida, but it's degenerated into a market where everyone is afraid to clean.

Houston falls under the same Clean Water Act as Phoenix or San Francisco, but the local authorities have been fed some BS that has made them act differently.

I know we can change this.

This didn't happen overnight and it won't be fixed overnight.

I hope the good contractors in Houston can hang in there and last through this without losing their businesses.

And for you guys doing mostly residential, don't think this won't affect you. Once the pandoras box has been opened up and the authorities start with this kind of radical enforcement there is little to do to stop them unless the regulations themselves are changed and the law is turned against them. That's the double edged sword that comes out when a few contractors think that enforcement is their friend and telling on their competitors is the way to increase their failing businesses.

I apologize for not recognizing the depth of this problem in Houston a long time ago. Houston is going to be our focus for the next year. We will need the backing of as many local contractors as possible to turn this thing around.
 
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