Posted on Feb 11, 2015
Clearing/Cleaning On-Post Housing Nightmares. Is There Ever A Secret To Success?
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It's time to PCS and the dreaded time has come to clear quarters. Do you have any nightmares to share with the community? Back in the day, everything fell on the service member, now they offer cleaning teams at a set fee. What is the key to survival when it comes time to leave the casa? Have you EVER passed on the first try?
Edited 11 y ago
Posted 11 y ago
Responses: 6
Most installations have a "clean get away" program. There are groups of folks out there who are authorized by housing to clean your quarters. For a nominal fee, the team will conduct an inspection, render a price, if you agree, you and the team lead go to housing office, Sign an agreement and your done. The team is then responsible and accountable to housing for the cleaning portion. The only thing you will have to do is fix any self help items and work orders. Check your local housing office for this program. Good luck!
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I have successfully cleared two on-post houses with minimal issues (broken blinds). No real secret, just clean regularly. When I moved into my current on-post house, inside the welcome packet from housing, it had information for an "approved" cleaner, which I was told gets you a first time go for clearing.
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I have ALWAYS passed on the first go and the only thing I was ever charged for was a missing garage door opener (that thing was $50). Once your household goods are gone, start upstairs, go room to room. Once a room is done, shut the door and move on.
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On a side note, I just moved from a civilian rental and those hookers are dodging my emails regarding final inspection so I can recoup some security $$. Now, I get an email today saying they inspected it without me and they will send me paperwork? WHAT GIVES? Why do I feel like I am in for some bad news? Hitomi and I scrubbed that place fr weeks and it looks brand new, not like the disaster they handed over to me. I wish my credit didn't circle the bowl in the divorce. Houses in Tucson are plentiful and CHEAP!
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SGT Jim Z.
Yeah I know the feeling about property managers I rented the same house for four years and they were trying to gig me for the paint when in the contract it said normal lifecycle was 5 years and it was not freshly painted when I moved into the house. Oh well they kept some but I got most of it back,
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Suspended Profile
We have passed on the fist try. Pearl Harbor, before I retired in 2000, relaxed their policies and you didn't have to hire "one of their cleaners." Of course the housing area we were in was slated for demolition, so they weren't too concerned about it...
We also passed in Pearl Harbor the first time, 1984, Alameda and Newport RI without difficulty, and my wife did most of the work...
Now, the powder room ceiling in our house in Newport - that's another story...
We also passed in Pearl Harbor the first time, 1984, Alameda and Newport RI without difficulty, and my wife did most of the work...
Now, the powder room ceiling in our house in Newport - that's another story...
I lived mostly in quarters between 1980 and 2006, and I found it got easier to clear as the years went by. In those early years, the 1980s, it was tough. And, for me, especially tough in Germany. Towards the end (late 90s and 2000s) it seemed like a breeze to clear quarters. I don't know if we were getting better at it or if the standards were lowered. I'm gonna guess it was a little of both.
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