Keeping Bluegrass Lane access clear after Hurricane Irene
Back in 2011, Hurricane Irene left parts of Bluegrass Lane cut off, and I remember the wet smell hanging over the street the morning after the floodwater dropped. Homeowners were trying to keep kids, cleanup crews, and deliveries moving while soft shoulders and scattered debris made every driveway a mess. Folks were nervous because one bad gap in the wrong place could slow everything down and leave a property open when they needed control most.
We rolled in with our crew, set posts where the ground still held, and tied off panels so the line stayed steady even on soaked turf. Raj kept the layout tight around access points near the neighborhood roads, and we checked each section before we left because flood cleanup doesn’t give you room for sloppy work. That fence gave homeowners a clear boundary, helped crews work without fighting traffic, and let everyone breathe a little easier once the area got moving again.
‘They got our line up fast, and it kept the whole cleanup moving.’
Bluegrass Lane homeowner

