Storm Damage & Roof Leak Response

OPEN NOW · CREWS ANSWER 24/7

When an atmospheric river parks over the Valley, dispatch boards light up: roof leaks over bedroom ceilings, wind-lifted shingles, fences into windows, and water finding every unsealed penetration. The 2023 storm runs showed how much damage back-to-back systems can do to housing stock that mostly sees dry weather.

Crews respond with emergency tarping and board-up to stop active intrusion, then extract and dry what got wet inside. Ceiling drywall that has taken on water gets opened before it comes down on its own.

What the crew handles

Emergency tarping

Roof tarps installed to stop active leaks until permanent roof repair can happen in dry weather.

Ceiling and attic drying

Insulation and ceiling drywall assessed and dried or removed before sagging and collapse.

Board-up service

Broken windows and openings secured against the next band of weather.

Storm-season capacity

A dispatch network means multiple crews during peak demand, when single shops stop answering.

Common questions

Water is dripping through a light fixture. What do I do?

Kill the breaker to that circuit before anything else, then place containers and call. Water in electrical fixtures is a shock and fire risk.

Should I poke a hole in my bulging ceiling?

A small relief hole into a bucket can prevent a larger collapse, but only if you are confident about what is above it. Crews would rather you wait the short time it takes them to arrive.

Do you repair the roof too?

Emergency tarping is part of the response. Permanent roof repair is a roofing contractor job, and crews can hand off with photos and documentation of the damage.

Need storm & roof leak response tonight?

One call. A dispatcher answers, a local crew rolls. Open 24/7 across the 209.

Call (209) 980-AQUA

Open now · 24/7 dispatch

Water emergency? Open now Call (209) 980-AQUA · Open 24/7