For most homeowners, the thought of dealing with water damage is about as attractive as going to the dentist for a root canal, if not worse. If the recent destruction caused by Hurricane Ida taught us anything, it's that water damage can be catastrophic. The source of water damage can come from many different sources, including natural causes like rainstorms and internal property issues like pipe bursts. From plumbing problems to full-on floods, water damage in Cary, NC, can weaken your home's structure and even cause your family to fall ill. That's why it is so important that you address water damage in your home as soon as possible.
At Restoration Experts of North Carolina, we understand that dealing with water damage can seem like a losing effort. With our team by your side, however, you don't have to lose hope. We provide comprehensive water remediation in Raleigh, from initial documentation of your damage to the time that we mitigate your problem. With a team of IICRC certified technicians and high-tech inspection tools, we have the experience and the innovation to restore your home or business to its original beauty.
With years of experience in the water damage restoration industry, there is no project too small or complex for our team to handle. Our customers are our top priority, and there are no exceptions to that rule.
Our goal is to restore your losses using mitigation techniques whenever possible to help restore your property to its original condition. If reconstruction is required, we will handle every aspect of your loss through a single, dependable point of contact.
At Restoration Experts of North Carolina, we make it a priority to provide our customers with comprehensive documentation and step-by-step status updates. Our transparent business model makes it easy for our customers to understand our water remediation progress. That way, you know exactly where we're at with your project and have a permanent record of your home or businesses' restoration. You won't ever have to worry about hidden fees, unauthorized charges, or annoying efforts to sell you additional products or services.
Our goal is to be your one-stop source for water remediation in North Carolina. To help achieve this goal, we offer a wide range of additional services on top of our already stellar water damage restoration services. We combine our unmatched expertise with strategic partnerships to better serve our customers. We can provide all you need, from interior design consultations and decorating services to replacement furniture and appliances for your home or business. We are committed to giving our customers informative, effective, streamlined water remediation services in Raleigh.
Water damage can happen to any structure, from large storefronts in town to suburban homes outside of the city. Incidents that cause water damage can happen at any time, making them particularly hard to remediate for non-professionals. To make matters worse, spotting signs of water damage isn't as easy as you might think. Some signs are obvious, while others are subtle and even hidden. However, one of the best ways to address water damage in your home or business is to keep a sharp eye out for the following signs, so that you can treat the problem quickly and get back to normal life.
Looking for signs outside is a great place to start, as it can narrow down external sources of water leaks. Keep an eye out for the following signs outside:
After you're done checking for signs of water damage outside, it's time to move indoors. Obviously, if you spot any of the following signs, your family could be at risk. It's important to call Restoration Experts of North Carolina to schedule an inspection to determine the extent of your damage.
If your home or business was recently flooded or you have had recent water damage, it is crucial to dry out your home or place of work ASAP. There are many risks associated with floods and leaks. One of the most common risks in situations like these is when water becomes contaminated. Contamination can happen when a sewer pipe bursts or a body of water floods into your home, like from a river or creek. Contaminated water often contains bacteria and microorganisms that can result in serious conditions like giardia. Even clean water can be a risk when stands for too long, since mosquitoes and other bugs breed in such conditions. Bugs that die in the water and critters that hatch eggs spread bacteria and attract even more bugs to the area.
After water recedes, the dampness left behind can cause fungus and mold growth - both of which can be detrimental to your health, especially if you have respiratory issues like asthma or have allergies.
Whether you have a small damp spot in your basement or severe flooding from a storm, do not take water damage lightly. Waiting to fix the issue will have a huge impact on your wallet, and more importantly, your family's health.
Restoration Experts of North Carolina utilize the latest high-tech inspection tools like thermal imaging to discover the extent of your water damage. Using pumps, we extract the water and then use high-powered fans and heaters until your business or home is dry. While we're drying your property, our team monitors and documents the entire process. We also specifically address any health hazards that can be associated with more severe categories of water damage.
This water comes from broken or frozen pipes, failed water heaters, roof leaks, ice maker hoses, and more.
grey water is contaminated due to soiling like body oils, laundry soils, food stains, etc. This type of water often originates from dishwashers, washing machines, tub overflows, and hot tubs.
This type of water contains thousands of bacteria, protozoa, and disease-causing viruses. Black water most often comes from septic back-ups and overflows, sewer leaks, and toilet overflows.
When your property floods, the first step you should take is to call a qualified contractor to help facilitate your water clean-up in Cary, NC. Restoration Experts of North Carolina has restored countless water losses and knows what needs to be done to get your home or business back to pre-loss condition. In situations like these, you must act fast to prevent damages and illnesses. Also, many home insurance policies require the homeowner to do everything in their power to protect the property from further damage.
That's where Restoration Experts of North Carolina comes in. We'll bill your insurance company directly and will handle all the necessary water remediation work, so that you can focus on your family and your day-to-day responsibilities. Our team is on-call 24-hours a day and will be on our way to your home or business fast.
First things first - call Restoration Experts of North Carolina ASAP if you know for a fact that you have a black water leak. Black water contains disease-causing viruses and a plethora of bacteria that can be harmful to you or your children. If a sewage line leaks or your toilet overflows significantly, use our 24-hour emergency line, and our team will come to your location quickly. Until we arrive, take these steps to minimize black water damage in Cary, NC.
Stay far away from areas affected by black water.
Plug all of your toilets with a string mop or wadded rags if you have had an overflow event.
Turn off your HVAC system. Cover exposed vents to prevent water from infiltrating your air ducts.
If the source of black water is coming from outside, be sure to turn off all water connections at their entry points.
Whether your home was flooded from a hailstorm or you have an overflowing dishwasher, we are here to help. Our primary goal is to provide your family or customers with the most effective water remediation in Cary, NC. That way, you can rest easy knowing you have a team of professionals on your side who are qualified and capable of full-serve water clean-up. Remember, if your home is affected by water damage, time is of the essence. We're only a call away from keeping your home or business dry and safe.
...
CARY, N.C. – Freshmen reigned supreme – first with Linda Ullmark's equalizer and then a heroic effort on both ends of the field from Trinity Armstrong – to book North Carolina women's soccer a trip to the championship match of the 2024 Ally Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament.
The fourth-seeded Tar Heels, who are ranked No. 8 nationally, knocked off top-seeded and top-ranked Duke, 2-1, during the semifinals on Thursday night at WakeMed Soccer Park in Cary after two goals in the second half.
It was the 950th win in program history. It was also UNC's first win over a No. 1-ranked opponent since Nov. 10, 2019, in a 2-1 double overtime victory over Virginia to win the 2019 ACC Tournament.
The Tar Heels are now one step closer to earning their 23rd conference title. They will face third-seed Florida State, the No. 6 team in the country, in the ACC championship game on Sunday, Nov. 10, at noon ET in Cary on ESPNU.
Following its rivalry win, Carolina improved to 16-4 (7-3 ACC) on the year. The team snapped a 15-game unbeaten streak by Duke, the regular season champion, which is now 14-2-1 (9-0-1 ACC).
How It Happened
Inside the Box Score
Up Next The fourth-seeded Tar Heels return to WakeMed Soccer Park in Cary on Sunday, Nov. 10, to face third-seed Florida State in the ACC Tournament title game. Kickoff will be at noon ET and will air nationally on ESPNU. Tickets can be purchased here.
A No. 4 seed has reached the ACC final just twice before – in 2013 and 2016 – since the inaugural tournament in 1988 and has yet to win the championship crown. The last time a fourth seed reached the final was when UNC did so in 2016, ultimately falling to FSU after a 4-3 PK decision.
North Carolina and Florida State combine for 32 of the league's 36 women's soccer championships. The Tar Heels and Seminoles will meet in the ACC Championship final for the second time in three seasons and 10th time overall.
Stay up to date with UNC women's soccer by following the Tar Heels on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.
Cary voters' rejection of a park and recreation bond on Election Day has put the future of the town's long-planned sports facility in doubt.Why it matters: Cary's planned $300 million ...
Cary voters' rejection of a park and recreation bond on Election Day has put the future of the town's long-planned sports facility in doubt.
Why it matters: Cary's planned $300 million Sports & Recreation Community Center has been pitched as both a key part of the South Hills mall redevelopment and a potential attraction for bringing visitors into the area.
Driving the news: But on Election Day Cary voters rejected both bonds that the town put on the ballot — one that would put $560 million toward six different parks projects and another that would invest $30 million toward affordable housing.
What they're saying: Cary Mayor Harold Weinbrecht said the bond results will put a stop to all of the projects that the town proposed — unless a future bond brings them back up. But there is no plan to do that right now, he added.
Henry Ward, a partner at Loden Properties, which is redeveloping South Hills, said Wednesday that it was too soon to say what the bond rejection will mean for the sports facility.
Zoom in: The Sports & Recreation Center has been pitched as the anchor tenant of the South Hills redevelopment, which hopes to turn the old mall and its sea of parking lots into blocks of development.
The entire project, which will be built over a 10-year period, would add around 4.5 million square feet of retail, office and residential space on the property. That would include:
Yes, but: Ward has stressed Loden retains a lot of flexibility in its plans.
...
Triangle voters considered hundreds of millions of dollars worth of projects at the ballot box on Election Day, and the results were mixed, with Durham voters expanding funding for sidewalks and Cary voters rejecting a long-planned sports and recreation center.
Why it matters: Cities nationwide use bonds to get big infrastructure projects across the line or to fund initiatives like affordable housing because they can often give municipalities better financing options.
Here are the bonds Triangle-area voters weighed in on:
Cary voters rejected both bonds on their ballots — one that would put $560 million toward parks projects and another that would invest $30 million toward affordable housing.
Go deeper: Cary voters' bond rejection puts long-planned sports facility in jeopardy
Durham voters approved two city bonds on Election Day — each by more than 70% of the vote, despite some concerns over their costs.
Fifty-six percent of Wake County voters gave the OK to the county for a bond that would put $142 million toward building new libraries and remodeling some existing ones.
The fast-growing Wake County town of Zebulon also rejected a bond put forward by the city that would have gone toward street improvements.
Nearly 68% of Orange County voters approved a $300 million bond that will repair and replace schools in the Orange County Schools and Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools systems.
Chapel Hill residents approved five separate bonds on their ballots that would add:
Mariah Carey may not officially be the sole “Queen of Christmas,” but she now has a unique connection to the town of Cary, North Carolina. Founded in 1750, Cary shares the same pronunciation as Carey’s name. Mayor Harold Weinbrecht embraced this coincidence to honor the singer’s legacy.Weinbrecht announced on local stati...
Mariah Carey may not officially be the sole “Queen of Christmas,” but she now has a unique connection to the town of Cary, North Carolina. Founded in 1750, Cary shares the same pronunciation as Carey’s name. Mayor Harold Weinbrecht embraced this coincidence to honor the singer’s legacy.
Weinbrecht announced on local station Mix 101.5 that Cary, North Carolina, will be renamed “Carey” for one day on November 1, in honor of Carey, inspired by her song “One Sweet Day.”
An Instagram video shows a woman adding a lit “E” to the town’s sign, and photos feature the mayor proudly posing with the official proclamation.
Cary, North Carolina, has temporarily changed its name to “Carey” annually to honor the singer and the holiday magic she brings. On November 1, the day after Halloween, the town announced this change.
Coinciding with the announcement, Carey released an Addams Family-inspired video declaring the start of the holiday season. The video transitions from a dark set to a festive Christmas wonderland, featuring Carey in a fur-lined red dress reminiscent of her “Merry Christmas” album cover.
In honor of the 30th anniversary of her best-selling Christmas album, Carey launched an Amazon storefront on November 4.
Just two days before starting her Christmas Time Tour, she released a collection of holiday decorations, gifts, and merchandise, including a massive lawn inflatable featuring Carey navigating reindeer on a sleigh.
For those without a lawn, Carey’s holiday spirit can be enjoyed by visiting her newly unveiled wax figure at Madame Tussauds in New York.
On November 3, Carey admired the figure, which is dressed in a sparkly red gown reminiscent of her look from the 2020 Apple TV+ holiday special, “Mariah Carey’s Magical Christmas,” instead of her classic fur-lined dress.
She expressed her delight, calling the resemblance “surreal” and “very good,” according to a press release from the museum.
Across the Triangle, voters were asked to approve hundreds of millions of dollars in proposed bond measures, ranging from K-12 education and public libraries to streets and sidewalks, parks, and affordable housing. In Wake and Orange counties, and in Durham, voters said yes to the bonds on their ballots, except for Cary voters who rejected bonds for affordable housing and parks projects.Here’s how the votes broke down across the region, and a recap of exactly what the bond money will pay for.Durham Municipal Bonds...
Across the Triangle, voters were asked to approve hundreds of millions of dollars in proposed bond measures, ranging from K-12 education and public libraries to streets and sidewalks, parks, and affordable housing. In Wake and Orange counties, and in Durham, voters said yes to the bonds on their ballots, except for Cary voters who rejected bonds for affordable housing and parks projects.
Here’s how the votes broke down across the region, and a recap of exactly what the bond money will pay for.
Two bonds on the ballot—one for parks, valued at $85 million, the other for streets and sidewalks, valued at $115 million—passed with more than 70 percent of the vote with more than 100,000 votes cast. At the highest end, a possible tax increase for homeowners to cover the bonds would be 3.46¢ for each $100 of assessed property value, which, for the average home in Durham works out to about nine dollars extra a month, or a little over $100 a year.
The parks bond will pay for upgrades to Long Meadow and East End parks, plus construction of a new water park beside the Wheels Roller Rink at Merrick-Moore Park. The streets and sidewalks bond will cover various road and sidewalk repairs, street paving projects, and sidewalk buildouts listed in the city’s capital improvement projects.
Dubbed the Connecting Durham bonds, Durham’s city council members were the initiatives’ biggest champions, but they weren’t the only ones in favor. Residents representing different pockets of Durham, from futsal enthusiasts to environmentalists, organized in favor of the bonds and their $200 million price tag.
The bonds come just in time, too. In October, Durham city council adopted new design standards for transportation infrastructure. The new standards will modernize the city’s building methods and prioritize features like sidewalks and bike lanes, increasing equitable mobility overall, something residents have been clamoring for.
Across Wake County, voters approved a $142 million public libraries bond that will see the construction of new libraries, renovations of others, and the expansion of the Fuquay-Varina Community Library to a new regional library.
The bond will come at a minimal cost to taxpayers—just an additional $2.50 per $100,000 of assessed property value per year, or about $11.87 extra on the annual tax bill for a homeowner whose home is worth $474,750, the median property value for Wake County in April of this year.
Here’s what the new facilities and renovations the bond will pay for:
A new community library in Rolesville
A new community library in the Friendship area of Apex
Replacement of the Athens Drive Community Library
Replacement of the Wendell Community Library
A new, TBD facility to promote digital equity
Express Library on Fayetteville Street
Green Road Community Library
Leesville Community Library
Northeast Regional Library
Richard B. Harrison Community Library
Southeast Regional Library
Zebulon Community Library
Library Administration Building
Definitely the most expensive set of bond referenda on voters’ ballots, the Town of Cary asked residents to approve a combined $590 million to pay for affordable housing initiatives (worth $30 million) and six parks projects, worth a combined $560 million.
Voters said no.
The affordable housing bond failed by a three-point margin, or 47,987 votes against to 45,621 in favor. The parks bond failed by a wider margin of about 10 points, with 51,527 votes against to 42,298 in favor.
If voters had approved the bonds, the town’s tax rate would have increased by 9¢ (8.5¢ for parks and 0.5¢ for housing), staggered in 3¢ incremental increases in 2026, 2028, and 2030.
The countywide, $300 million education bond referendum, approved by about 68 percent of voters, will provide approximately $175 million to Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools (CHCCS) and approximately $125 million to Orange County Schools (OCS) to be used only for school facility improvements.
The current spending plan calls for the replacement of five elementary schools and a middle school: replacing Carrboro, Estes Hills, and Frank Porter Graham Elementaries in the CHCCS system and replacing Orange County Elementary and Middle Schools and a major renovation or addition in OCS.
Based on current projections, the bond is projected to cost a property taxpayer $34.10 for every $100,000 of assessed property value.
The bond, though, will only cover a portion of the estimated $1 billion in improvements needed over the next 15 years to bring the districts’ facilities up to modern standards.
And despite the high approval rate, not everyone has full faith in the elected board officials. In the CHCCS system, community members have separately questioned the implementation of the recent staff-downsizing plan as enrollment in the district has declined. It will be difficult to truly take the temperature of the populace until several board members are up for election in 2025.
Across five separate referenda, Chapel Hill voters overwhelmingly approved $44 million for a slew of connectivity and equity focused projects. These include:
The town’s debt fund allocates money to pay debts and build future debt capacity, so the funds will be distributed without any tax increase for residents.
Comment on this story at bakctalk@indyweek.com.