Westlake Village Affordable Blood CleanupIf you don't have money to hire a professional blood cleanup company, try visiting Do it Yourself Blood Cleanup. I cannot guarantee your outcome, but stay with it and you'll get it done. I must advise user of this web page's information that safety comes first. Then working slowly with deliberateness. Call me if you have any questions. I do not mind helping. I do my best to make affordable blood cleanup available to as many people victimized by homicide, suicide, unattended death, and county government corruption. Call Eddie Evans now for an affordable blood cleanup service. Eddie's experience with blood cleanup following homicides, suicides, unattended deaths with following decomposition beats his Westlake Village competition hands down. A Self-Employed Blood Cleanup Practitioner As a self-employed blood cleanup practitioner (license number 134), few in the United States can claim as many blood cleanup jobs completed. Customer satisfaction guaranteed with fixed fees. That's right, I don't start blood cleanup and then turn around and say, "I didn't see this so I need more money," or something to this effect. Because of my skills, abilities, and knowledge when it comes to blood cleanup in Westlake Village and its surrounding areas, I'm confident that my telephone quotes are close enough. For a guy like me, a few more hours more work is no big deal when I'm wrong. Besides, I still earn enough to keep my blood cleanup business doors open. Visit Biosafe for suicide cleanup information, one of my first web sites on the Internet for marketing my biohazard cleanup services. For most blood cleanup work I charge less than $1,000 anywhere in Westlake Village. I cannot charge this amount for shotgun homicides or suicides in many cases. Likewise, industrial accidents also cost more. All things being equal, my fees still remain below my competition's fees. My Westlake Village competitors must pay employee wages, sick pay, medical insurance, workmen's compensation, vacation pay, and training costs. I have none of these expenses. At $1,000 per blood cleanup, you can imagine how much my blood cleanup clients save compared to my competitors. I'm about affordable blood cleanup. I can make blood cleanup affordable for most families in and around Westlake Village. Over half of our homicide cleanup needs take place in residential setting. Most usually male perpetrators murder their spouse or female partner. When female perpetrators of murder commit homicide, it's in self-defense, usually. Some cases of children murdering a parent, usually their father, occurs in defense of the mother. Most Westlake Village blood cleanup work for homicides resembles the same blood cleanup issues as suicide cleanup. There are differences often enough to warrant comment. Most homicides cause death instantly because of handgun wounds to the head. In these cases the victim's heart stops beating and their loss of blood stops. Suicide victims sometimes fail to die instantly, especially during a bleedout from razor cuts. In these cases a good deal more blood flows into their surrounding environment. Bleedouts following a suicide or suicide attempt sometimes lead to blood's flow along slanted floors. In Westlake Village' older hotels some floors tilt after years of settling. Suicides most often occur in our white male population, especially those proclaiming religious affiliations to some form of Protestantism. It doesn't matter what religion a person professes or does not profess, I remain committed to helping suicide victim's family members find affordable blood cleanup. Unattended Death Blood Cleanup An unattended death occurs when someone dies alone. They may remain "down" for minutes or weeks. Usually somewhere between one to ten days passes before they're discovered. In fact, to my experience, most unattended deaths are followed by decomposition. Often unattended deaths occur among our elderly when they first awaken for the day. These deaths occur in bathrooms and a high percentage occur on their toilet. Usually they fall to the floor, but not always. An unattended death remaining in place on a toilet for days or weeks creates all sorts of decomposition cleanup issues. A decomposition on a toilet leads to a horrific scene and horrific working conditions. A Westlake Village biohazard cleanup in summer months involving a decomposition into a toilet calls for strict professional practices. Such hazardous cleanups become the least affordable when occurring on a second floor or above. Fluids leak from the deceased onto the floor. Flow to walls and down walls follows decomposition because of gravitational pull and unleveled floors. Before long fluid makes its way along floor and wall seams and down into the room below if not next to it too. When it comes to an affordable cleanup, unattended deaths followed by decomposition become very unaffordable for many people. I still try to arrange for some way to help families get these terrible conditions removed. It takes time, patience, and resources. In recent months I have begun to barter for services, but not biohazard cleanup services. Perhaps it's time to begin bartering for death cleanup, in general.
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Visit Mario's Los Angeles General Contractor page for contracting help.
Orange County blood cleanup offers a good deal of information related to Orange County consumer fraud. It's good to know about because the same sort of fraud takes place in Los Angeles County, and in the same way. Coroner and administrator employees take advantage of families. When homicide, suicide, and unattended death (identification issues) persons who decompose, county employees have first contact with these families. Los Angeles County employees send these families to corrupt blood cleanup companies. In return these Los Angeles blood cleanup companies give a kickback to the referring county employees. It's a real big way for county employees to make tens of thousands of dollars more every year. Read Orange County Fraud and Orange County Government Crooks for more information on this type of crime scene cleanup cronyism. |
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Chaparral surrounds Agoura Hills.
Alhambra
Arcadia
Artesia
Avalon
Azusa
Baldwin Park
Bell Gardens
Bell will go down in our history as local government corruption equal to our city's coroner and and administrator's fraud. No, Bell has no death administration duties, but it did have a city administrator focused on fraud against his city's tax payers. By orchestrating poorly attended elections, he managed to give himself millions of dollars as his salary. Meanwhile, the poor tax payers paid a higher rate for taxes than any other tax payers in Los Angeles County.
Beverly Hills
Bradbury
Burbank
Calabasas
Carson
Cerritos
Claremont
Commerce
Compton
Covina
Cudahy
Culver City
Diamond Bar
Duarte
El Monte
El Segundo
Florence
Gardena
Glendale
Glendora
One day this year I did clean a homicide in Hawaiian Gardens, a triple homicide. As a homicide blood cleanup project, there really wasn't that much blood or debris, considering the amount of death and carnage. As affordable blood cleanup goes, I made this job very affordable.
Hawthorne
Hermosa Beach comes to mind when discussing religion, suicide, and blood cleanup. Once I cleaned up blood in a Catholic church's sanctuary. A young man pointed a handgun at his head and shot himself. Rudely, to say the least, he did so as a lady stood nearby. She suffered mightily from this young man's suicide. Blood cleanup took many hours because of the gun's caliber and the many pews. No room for error could be tolerated.
Hidden Hills
Huntington Park
Industry
Inglewood
Irwindale
La Cañada Flintridge
La Habra Heights
La Mirada
La Puente
La Verne
Lakewood
Lancaster
Lawndale
Lomita
Every once in a great while I'll receive and opportunity for a blood cleanup job in Long Beach. Naturally my customers find me on the Internet after the coroner's employees ignored them. They're ignored because their blood cleanup problems is in a lower income apartment, not the sort of place with insurance.
Los Angeles county has such great diversity we now have over 100 languages spoken by our residents. Besides crime scene cleanup cronyism, our county involves just about 100 cities. Our county has hundreds of schools, parks, health services, and cemeteries. We have a huge water district and have taken water to the detriment of others species in the central part of our state.
Few places in the word can boast a sanitation system as large and well managed as our own. Heavy rainfall does complicate matters for Los Angeles County when sewage overflows and manages its way into our bays, especially Santa Monica Bay. We should expect this much because of our great quantity of concrete and pavement. In fact, as the car capital of the world, Los Angeles County sometimes appears like a huge parking lot with well designed structures when flying overhead. Our county government must handle these issues for the health and safety of its millions of residents. Or else. Westlake Village know all too well about these congestion problems.
Imagine our air pollution from these millions of residents driving their millions of cars, trucks, and buses. We have our South Coast Air Quality Management District (AQMD) and the Rapid Transit District (RTD). Our overlapping jurisdictions for transportation resemble a crazy quilt, which creates more problems then it solves for commuters. It's nearly impossible to improve transportation in Los Angeles County because its millions of commuters moving to and from work every day. For decades we tried expanding "freeways," but by the time they were completed our congestion problems had only grown. Closing down a freeway land to widen and improve movement only causes untold expense, exasperation, and millions of dollars for commuters. Blood cleanup on our county's highways occurs every day of the year while horrific trauma cleanup takes place. But for our California Highway Patrol, Los Angeles Police Department, Sheriff's Department, and local police departments, our roads would soon look like junk yards.
Reform measures to improve our highways invite many proposal, but few affordable, workable plans. Its like the rest of the county. Finding a way to create a less confusing governmental picture with coordinated efforts is probably impossible. Our city and county were at first created around a borough scheme. From these small boroughs grew suburbs like Lynwood, Bellflower, and Downey. Each has its own transportation problems, hospitals, and schools. Each actually adds a bit of salvation to our county's monumental governing problems by governing small, district areas free of Los Angeles' confusion. So it's not unusual for some reformers to recommend further reduction of governmental redistricting into smaller, discrete cities. Something need to get done because some citizens want "secession" from Los Angeles County's nightmare.
With the county's many problems we'd expect to at least have some sort of secure employment for our millions of residents, but not so. It looks like the great depression these days. Readers may recall our county chamber of commerce denied that and our Los Angeles Times denied national and economic collapse. This could not have helped our unemployed. It seems today that we are witnessing something similar. Our current economic collapse started decades ago for those of us required to work more than one job. Tens of thousands of single moms work two and even three part-time jobs while trying to raise their families single-handedly.
Just like the great depression, home building and real estate speculation dropped precipitously. Unemployment, like then, now measures anywhere from 10% to 20% and higher, depending on which city one measures these numbers. With this economic crisis, current politicians want to abandon the poor by destroying public education for corporate education and all it implies. They want to destroy social security for the millions it serves. They want to destroy medical for the millions of people it serves. Their belief is that the "market" will serve everyone better. This kind of ideology has proven true for the rich, not the poor. In the great depression our Los Angeles Police Department tried to stop indigents from crossing into California by sending them back to neighboring states. A "bum blockade" was created only to fail. Like today, Mexican families were sent packing back to Mexico, some with native born children, citizens. Today the 14th Amendment has become a special concern for many people intending to remove citizenship privileges for immigrants' children born in the United States. So we have more than enough problems.
If anything will increase, economically speaking, it will include blood cleanup as social control becomes a greater danger for residents and law enforcement.
With these problems we would expect more cooperation from our political system. What's happened, though, is that money has become more important than people in elections. Now that our Supreme Court allows corporations person status when it comes to political contributions, the smallest and largest corporations world-wide can contribute to elections. As a result lobbyist write legislation for our states and national government. As a result our cities and county governments must somehow continue governing with less while shouldering a greater burden of responsibilities for service. As a solution, our right-wing politicians insist that government causes more problems than it solves. They insist that our free enterprise, capitalist system will fix these problems. Meanwhile, they remain mute when asked for specific examples and favoring data to prove their case.
Over 17 million Americans go to bed hungry every night. The bottom 20 percent of households nationwide has less than $100 disposable income. While we look at these problems with hunger in America, there's been a great increase in lobbyist to fight regulation. Over 44 million Americans live below the poverty line and represent the lowest portion that votes. Those who do well tend to vote and they vote for narrow, self-serving legislation. Overall, we receive fewer services for our tax dollar than Europeans.
We've lived through the greatest transfer of wealth in the history of mankind. How Los Angeles County will continue without a great flow of money into its many departments remains to be seen. We're told that we have the best "government that money can buy." For many in Los Angeles, religion comes to their minds as a way of coping with these terrible conditions that seem to grow rather than diminish.
We've created more ways of doing religion than any other people on our planet. With the New Age movements emergence came many psycho-social approaches to human sentiment and consciousness. Along with over 27,000 variations on our Protestant religions, we enjoy a great diversity of ideas when it comes to religion in Los Angeles County. What's changed are our political attitudes as they apply to religion. Historically religion played some role as a progressive force in labor. Otherwise, religion's place in politics remained fairly complacent. This changed after Ronald Reagan's tenure as president. Some not should be made to Jimmy Carter's Baptist beliefs, none of which became a genuine issue during his presidency.
President Bush did make religion an issue in his first campaign for president, and he continued to look to religion as a force for creating institutions for serving the poor and homeless. None of this seems to have made much headway in the short-term or long-term. Our Bill of Rights and tolerance has gone a long way to protecting our government from violence between our many religions. This cannot be said elsewhere. Considering the many religions our peculiar form of government locally and nationally must be doing something right. When it comes to blood cleanup, these findings mean something.
If we were to take a poll of most and least favored religious leanings, Jewish then Catholic believer would do well. Oddly enough, Buddhist would come in near the bottom of this list, which speaks to much confusion among our residents. If we were to ask how many terrorist Protestantism, Catholicism, Moslem, and Jewish ideologies produce, we'd find meaningful numbers. Asking the same question about Buddhist, we'd find zero or very few throughout history.
Malibu
Manhattan Beach
Maywood
Monrovia
Montebello
Monterey Park
My blood cleanup business has not done well in Norwalk, even though in the past I was unrivaled on the Internet in this area. Now I have many Internet competitors in the blood cleanup business. It does not matter how much competition I gain because of Westlake Village County's employee fraud against grieving families. I have cleaned in Palmdale, but not often. I recall a suicide in Palmdale when I first went into the blood cleanup business. This job I over worked, for certain. I cleaned the suicide victim's bedroom suicide scene over and over, and then I sealed it. I took 3 days for 1 suicide cleanup. That's unheard of, but I wanted to be certain I got it right. Most important, I wanted to be certain that I learned everything I could learn from this one job. Today I continue each blood cleanup activity as a learning lab. The more I can learn from a blood cleanup project, the better.
Palos Verdes Estates
Paramount has more than its share of homicides; yet, I've only cleaned one, and that one was in an apartment. The perpetrator, a husband and father, bludgeoned his wife to death in their bathrooms, and then he tied his son to a small bed and burned him to death. I had no experience with blood cleanup involving arson, total arson, but I moved forward as I would with any blood cleanup project. This time I treated the boy's mattress as I would any blood cleanup project's mattress.
Pasadena
Pico Rivera
Pomona
Rancho Palos Verdes
Redondo Beach
Rolling Hills Estates
Rolling Hills
Rosemead
San Dimas
San Fernando
San Gabriel
San Marino
Santa Clarita
Santa Fe Springs
Santa Monica Santa Monica Bay
Sierra Madre
Signal Hill
South Gate
Temple City
Torrance. Needless to say, I do not practice blood cleanup in Los Angeles County very often. Today my blood cleanup business hardly exists in Southern California. It's not just competition.
Vernon
Walnut
Walnut Park
West Covina
West Hollywood
Westlake Village
Whittier
| ©2001 Ed Evans |