California Trauma Practitioner's List - Ask why your county government employees refuse to share this list without their misinformation.Orange County Trauma Cleanup
A trauma cleanup practitioner I knew questioned the depth of an injury and its cost for cleanup. "If we had a free market for trauma cleanup, we would know beforehand what others must charge for trauma cleanup." Referring to Orange County corrupt coroner and corrupt administration employees made sense. Their monopoly over trauma cleanup in Orange County costs tax payers tens of thousands, no, millions of dollars more every year. Worse, their monopoly stands in the way of free market pressures for more thorough trauma cleanup. Red continued referring to what could be in Orange County, rather than what does exist, county government corruption. Continuing his monologue on trauma cleanup, Red recalled his years in the army and the terrible wounds he helped to clean after. Red's definition had come to sound like a textbook. For Red, trauma cleanup meant more than a janitorial exercise in removing blood. For Red, trauma to a human body meant a ripping, tearing, mutilating flesh, tissue, muscles, and even bone crushing. For Red, physical trauma meant psychological trauma accompanied these terrible wounds.body wound or shock produced by sudden physical injury, as from violence or accident. A fractured pelvis, compounded fractures, and other excruciating, crippling blows brought moments of terror to victims of violence. As the sixth cause of human death worldwide, trauma shock arises from circulatory shock and respiratory failure. . Red never did figure out how civil servants came to choose Mammon over ethical conduct. When Red finally figured out why his trauma cleanup business failed so miserably in California, and why he would never survive in this business, he suffered his own form of psychological trauma. He had nothing less, no where to go, but for minimum wage jobs with no hope of life-enhancing experience and knowledge. Whether by chance or design, Red's early-morning freeway crash brought peace to his life. Rex would have cleaned for poor people given the chance. He wanted to help those in need. Enriching himself from other's pains was not in his nature. Perhaps that's why he could not comprehend deputized county employees running trauma cleanup rackets at poor people's expense. I continue to think of Orange County trauma cleanup as something affecting the poor, and how Rex would have made such a difference for them. Now, I find plenty of poor clients for my trauma cleanup efforts, but not in Orange County. I suppose nepotism has thoroughly invaded our Sheriff-Coroner and county administration departments, judging by my lack of work, almost no work, in Orange County. There's more to cleaning after physical trauma then trauma cleanup for poor people; poor and minority neighborhoods host plenty of trauma. Ask any law enforcement officials and community leaders about traumatic injuries in Orange County. They'll point to increased violence from stepped-up gang activity, drugs and the readily available of guns causing traumatic injuries. But, while I use this term here, trauma cleanup, I refer to a broader meaning. I'm referring to crime scene cleanup as well as homicide cleanup, in particular. So these areas of trauma cleanup come together. I also use this term for blood cleanup and biohazard cleanup. There's no doubt about it. When trauma occurs, we cannot deny blood a place at the scene. It goes without saying, too, that biohazard cleanup follows traumatic injuries. Any time there's blood or other infectious materials (OPIM) around, biohazards may have a place on the trauma scene. Emotional trauma follows physical trauma. We don't need a psychologist to point out this cause and effect relationship. We know it intuitively. We've known it since that very first time we fell and bloodied our knees. We cried. We shared our pain with those we know, with those we trust. Besides its physical and emotional costs, there's trauma's financial costs. So who pays for trauma cleanup? Surviving victims often bare the costs. Of course, homicides, suicides, and unattended deaths with decomposition require payment from friends, relatives, property owners, and insurance companies. Sometimes, when none of these sources step-up to pick up the bill, a local government or state must kick in. When considering a violent homicide resulting in a crime scene cleanup, there's more costs then we might think. An investigation must follow. A coroner's inquest may follow, which involves dissection of a victim for analysis. Death at the hands of another may appear in this way. Pathologists must earn a well earned wage for their professional services. Hidden Costs of Coroner's Cronyism Then there's the hidden costs of Orange County cronyism. This cronyism applies to our Orange County Coroner and County Administrator's departments. Employees in these departments receive kickbacks. They receive kickbacks for referring victims' families to Orange County biohazard cleanup companies. In return, these biohazard cleanup companies pay a kickback. County employees have a monopoly over my business. Orange County families and businesses pay more as a consequence. My fees reflect my costs and what I need to earn a fair profit for my time, skills, abilities, and knowledge. Because of Orange County fraud in the coroner's department, I must travel far to earn my living. I clean once, at most, per year in Orange County. These opportunities arise by chance. Readers might guess how hard I must work, and how many hours I must work to share my services with Orange County families and businesses in need. With all of these challenges and barriers to free enterprise in Orange County's trauma cleanup, my fees remain well below my competitors' fees. I can do this because I'm self-employed. Self-employed owner-operators have a small overhead. My 3 vehicles and 2 trailers must have insurance and registration all year long. My cleaning insurance must cover my business all year long. Just the same, I have lower fees then all other companies in California that hire employees. Imagine what free enterprise in trauma cleaning in Orange County would mean. All families and businesses in Orange County would benefit from our lower blood cleanup costs. Before I forget, I also have a web site called Orange County Consumer Fraud dedicated to freeing the death cleanup business in Orange County, California. Aliso Viejo. Anaheim's population hit about 353,643 in January 2010. This placed it just ahead of Santa Ana, neither of which I find a free market for death cleanup services. As California's 10th largest city, we should expect a fairly high number of blood cleanup companies, but not so. Our county government's monopoly over Orange County biohazard cleanup, in general, ensures a crippled market for blood cleanup services. We should expect to see Anaheim's population top 400,000 in a couple years. This I do not wish to happen, but there's nothing to be done about it. Environmentally, it means a greater catastrophe for all those families without sustainable means. Where will the food and water come from as our population continues to grow; as our oil becomes too costly to support even our military exercises abroad, we must become victim's of our own short-sightedness. It seem like a sort of criminality resides in our denial. It seems most of our county suffers one form of denial or another. It's not only the Sheriff-Coroner's Department that's in denial. In any case, in its early European settler days, about fifty German families began what we now call "Anaheim." This name derives from spanish "ana" for river, and "heim," from a fusion of German meaning "home." Like Buena Park, Anaheim hosts theme parks, including the first Disneyland. Costa Mesa hosts our county's fair grounds and we should think of these grounds as a public commons. Rumors abound in our media that land speculators have their eyes on our Orange County fair grounds. I hope there's nothing to it because we need all the commons we can get, even in my town, Cypress. Being redundant here, an honest person would expect my company, Biosafe, to find work here in Cypress, but not so. Civil servant pukes seized its death cleanup market long before I entered the crime scene cleanup business. Huntington Beach beach shares a high suicide cleanup rate with Costa Mesa, a fact I neglected to mention. It doesn't matter from my perspective. It's a rare day when I do a suicide cleanup anywhere In Orange County. Irvine La Habra La Palma Laguna Beach Laguna Hills Laguna Niguel Laguna Woods Lake Forest Los Alamitos Mission Viejo Newport Beach. The City of Orange strikes me as an archetypal city for the early 20th century. It has a beautiful circle so common on to east coast cities. Orange retains its antique qualities. In fact, since the 1970s, Old Town orange has become more and more a community of antique stores. Placentia Rancho Santa Margarita San Clemente. One hardly imagines psychological trauma arising in our picturesque San Juan Capistrano. Among Orange County's first native residents, our Mission San Juan Capistrano arose in 1776 and came to serve as our county's cradle. It seems fitting that 1776 became a special time in Orange County as it became a special year in our nation's future. A trip to this beautiful church in mid-spring ensures a paradise grows as flowers bring peace and serenity to visitors. Seal Beach Stanton Tustin Villa Park Westminster Yorba Linda. I need to comment on Trabuco Canyon, the one city in which I cleaned after a homicide and a suicide this last year. Following this terrible event, our probate court enlisted the help of a Mr. Muller, one Orange County Public Guardian (administration employee). Apparently, the surviving mother of the homicide became a bit concerned with our county's way of handling affairs. So she came to me. Why me? Because I had, at the time, a commanding hold over Orange County's crime scene cleanup business on he Internet. So of course she called me to help clean after this terrible crime inflicted upon her son in his home. I helped her. In return, she offered to share a document provided by our public guardian. I have placed it on the Internet under this title: Orange County Administrator's Fraud. This interesting document lead me to make two telephone calls, one to Mr. Muller and one to his supervisor. Mr. Muller did not answer his telephone or return my telephone call. I can understand why. His supervisor had nothing to say something to this effect: We cannot single out one company for special consideration. Now this is an interesting statement, considering that Mr. Muller had made asterisk marks on a California Trauma Scene Practitioner's list, none of which were next to my company, of course. And that's how it goes in our county's government. Nobody knows why a guy like me can have a command of the Internet for 9 years and not receive telephone calls, but for half-a-dozen by chance, since 2005. Before 2005 I received a call about every 3 to 6 weeks from a list handed out by our coroner's clerks. Now nothing. I have learned that in all my years, i naively believed civil servants were somehow special. Now i see many actually belong in jail. |
* This fixed price covers all materials used. It also covers removal of some solid waste materials to an Orange County landfill. This price covers one trauma cleanup for a single death from homicides or suicides with one victim. Multiple victims will cost as much as an additional $600 in some instances. Shotguns and large caliber firearms may also cost more. Call for a telephone quote. All work is guaranteed. Any remaining biohazardous waste at job's completion goes to a freezer for stericycle pickup. I do not charge for removing and disposing of biohazardous waste. Brea |
Soon, I'll begin working on Trauma Cleanup web pages for those with limited incomes. Trauma cleanup should be available to everyone one. The truth is that I've neglected my trauma cleanup web pages for other work. Unlike corrupt trauma cleanup companies, I must travel many miles to help my trauma cleanup clients.
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| ©2001 Eddie Evans - Evans Enterprises |