
After Irene cut off Bluegrass Lane, we got the perimeter back up fast
The morning after Hurricane Irene, Bluegrass Lane still had puddles sitting in the curb line and downed branches stacked along the drive. I remember homeowners standing around Levittown Hall talking over the noise of pumps and chain saws, trying to keep kids and pets out of muddy recovery zones. Raj got the call because the property had loose debris, open access points, and a cleanup crew waiting on a safe boundary. If we didn’t get temporary fence in place, the worksite stayed exposed and the neighborhood kept dealing with the mess.
We rolled in with panels, stands, and sandbags, then walked the line twice because soft ground after floodwater will shift on you if you rush it. Our crew set the fence where foot traffic naturally funneled, near the driveway edge and the soggy side yard, then tied off the weak spots so the corners held. Raj checked the gates himself and kept the crew moving until the perimeter looked clean and readable. The homeowner got a safe barrier, the cleanup team got room to work, and the property stopped feeling open to everything.
I finally felt like the yard had a boundary again, and that took a load off my mind.
Maria D.






