San Luis Obispo Suicide Cleanup

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Homicide - Suicide - Unattended Death - Decomposition - Traumatic Blood Loss

Make an appointment for suicide cleanup in  any time, or just ask questions.

Call my San Luis Obispo suicide cleanup telephone number any time to learn about corruption in our county government's death administration.

My name is Eddie Evans and I have cleaned over one hundred suicide scenes. Almost all of these cleaning jobs came by the way of the Internet. My suicide cleanup service in Orange County saves clients a lot of money because I clean alone. I do not pay referral fees to county employees or other companies.

For the entire year of 2009 I cleaned once in Orange County. I cleaned for a client in Garden Grove who claimed that a coroner's employee referred him to another company. My client stated that a coroner's employee referred company "charged too much." So he searched the Internet and found me. The date of this conversation was 28 September 2009, my forty-first wedding anniversary.

I hope that you will call my telephone number at anytime, any day for suicide cleanup information or to make an appointment for suicide cleanup service. I give a written certificate of cleaning along with my invoice. I guarantee my work, which means that I will return to on request. You will find my comments about suicide below.

You might be interested to know that In San Luis Obispo, white male suicide exceeds other demographic groups by over hundreds. White femal suicides in San Luis Obispo occur much less often then San Luis Obispo's male suicide, but outnumber suicide by black females in San Luis Obispo by a factor of 10 to 1.

Suicide Cleanup

I clean after suicides throughout California. I live in Orange County, but I am forced to work all over the state because of our county government corruption. The coroner and administrator's offices refer grieving families to suicide cleanup companies, which cost the grieving families more money. I also I clean after homicides, unattended deaths, and other biohazards.

My toll-free telephone number remains open every day, every hour. You will find that my suicide cleanup fees save my clients thousands of dollars. I clean alone and have no employee costs. My wife handles our administration and billing needs.

My competitors must pay workmen's composition, medical insurance, and other employee benefits. Think how this adds to cleaning costs in Orange County

I also own orange-county-biohazard-cleanup.com, which exists to help others find my services. Another one of my suicide cleanup web pages serves all of california.

My biohazard cleanup pages offer information about bloodborne pathogens. These germs cause illness and even death. Here's some more information about disposing of blood:

  1. Dilute with water and add bleach;
  2. Kill germs with chemicals for cleaning and disinfecting.
  3. When possible allow blood soiled material to dry before placing in the sewer system. Moisten again if needed, but use something like bleach and water.
 
I usually use 70% alcohol sprayed on nonporous surfaces to disinfect. Carefully using alcohol helps to lessen the spread of waterborne pathogens, germs. Alcohol ignites easily, so I use it very carefully. In this way I eliminate the potential for
biofilm formation
. Try the Environmental Protection Agency web site. for more disinfectant information.
 

I have no need for high-level disinfectants for suicide cleanup. High-level disinfectants cause germs to mutate, so I use them only where absolutely necessary. For suicide cleanup, I find no need for such powerful disinfectants. Removing blood soiled material, disinfecting, cleaning by scrubbing and rinsing repeatedly, and then disinfecting removes germs during suicide cleanup.

  1. I clean using detergents and disinfectants.
  2. I use protective coatings on wood and concrete floors once cleaning ends.
  3. I use ozone to help reduce odors.
  4. I use the county sewer systems for the majority if not all biohazardous waste, saving clients hundreds of dollars.
 
Small amounts of blood and other body fluids should not affect the functioning of a municipal sewer system.
  • I use the EPA-registered hospital disinfectant/detergents list when needed. These chemicals were designed for general housekeeping purposes in patient-care areas.
  • Cleaning detergents and water work well in nonpatient-care areas.
  • I clean and disinfect beyond the death scene to remove possible cross-contamination. Surfaces like lite switches, doorknobs, bed rails, and around toilets receive alcohol disinfection.
  • I make up cleaning solutions as needed, and replace with fresh solution often.
  • I rarely use mops, and when I must I change the mop head at when I complete each suicide cleanup.
  • I use paper towels to soak up blood, which I easily disinfect with large volumes of bleach and water.
  • My crime scene cleanup pages offer cleaning information.

My Guarantee

My suicide cleanup work has a guarantee that will remove the offending materials, dispose of these materials properly, and thoroughly clean and disinfect soiled areas. I also remove fabrics, bedding, beds, couches, chairs, and carpet as needed. No Orange County too small or too big turned down for a guarantee.

I guarantee my suicide cleanup price covers everything needed to clean and disinfect the soiled areas.

Orange County Government Corruption

I have well over 100 web pages advertising my suicide cleanup service in Orange County, but I rarely receive telephone calls for suicide cleanup in Orange County. Over the years I have learned about cronyism, corruption, in Orange County's coroner and administrator's offices.

 

Eddie Evans

I keep my prices down by keeping my expenses down. If suicide cleanup work ever comes my way in Orange County, I will be able to share my low prices with Orange County's tax payers. I remove blood and other infectious materials while and disinfect the soiled area and material as I work.

For over seven years I have cleaned alone. I have also cleaned after military trauma. If you like, call any time to talk with Eddie Evans

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Guarantee and Price - Eddie Evans

 

Comments about Suicide

Every suicide cleanup has its differences, but many of these, about 73%, share demographic similarities. White males commit suicide for about 73% of the suicides in the United States. Why so many white males choose suicide remains unclear, especially when compared to the numbers for other demographic groups.

My suicide cleanup service matches these numbers, it seems. For white women my suicide cleanup experience matches the government's numbers, about 17%. If I received suicide cleanup calls in Orange County I would have numbers for orange-county-suicide-cleanup.com.

Older White Males

In the United States, older white males have the greatest risk of committing suicide. Speculation about their greater risk for suicide usually finds loneliness, illness, and loss of social status among the top reasons for their suicide risks. Because white males born in the United States come have greater status, more choices, they have fewer social and cultural constraints to to blame for their power and status decline, Put another way, other demographic groups have fewer options at birth than whites. Of course this is all changing, but the die is cast for older white males.

Speculation about older white males note many risk factors for this demographic group. Overall, the following elements come to play for many older white males in the United States:

  1. Relatively more power,*
  2. More social isolation,
  3. More freedom,
  4. More willingness to aggress
  5. More guilt,
  6. More perceived responsibility for their situation.
  7. Less opportunity to ventilate aggression,
  8. Easy access to guns.
  9. Alcoholism
  10. Divorce

    "White males have more power" in the sense that they enjoy greater freedom to move about. Few white males create security concerns in the way that black males and hispanic males cause concerns.

    Until most recently in United States history, white males dominated positions of power and authority within social, political, and cultural structures. As a consequence, power and authority vested in this demographic group continues from its own momentum, but slowly loses its prior control and influence.

    "More social isolation" applies to the loss of peers, family members, and co-workers. The structure of housing re-enforces this isolation. We all know about neighbors going decades without acknowledging one another.

    Male hormones, testosterone, play some role in the male's willingness to use violence against themselves. Social and cultural values also place violence against others in high esteem. Monday night football testifies to the power of violence in Unites State's culture. Violent western movies and war movies give hint of the male propensity toward violence.

    With power and authority comes guilt. With divorce and isolation comes guilt. White males without a sense of responsibility and guilt for failed goals and outcomes probably suffer psychotic episodes. We would expect guilt to play a prominent role in the lives of once influential white males.

    Of course we find anger in an extroadinarily wide mix of white, US males, not just the suicidal. Such anger arises from life in white society. White society following WW II carried with it some responsibilities, duties, and ideals. It also carried a potential to suffer a crashing world-view.

    Television rise to prominence during the 1950s afforded our society an opportunity to learn male roles as never before. The Six Gun Mystique rose as never before as white male socialized to the role of strong males immulated what they saw since boyhood.

    I recall Roy Rogers and Dale Evans fighting for justice. Rarely did the gun come into play. The same outcomes followed The Lone Ranger and Tonto, but not as stricly. Before long death by handgun and rifle became common place. Young boys immulated what they watched. Ideals about man-hood reinforced the role of the gun in society.

    Most importantly, we lived in a white male dominated society. Television reinforced this idea.

    As society changed, especially in the 1960s, white male "baby boomers" saw their dominant roles changing from all directions. Not only did African American and Hispanics become more socially prominent, they erned and won the rights so often save for white males.

    Now young, educated African American surgeons, lawyers, and other professionals gained access where many white males could not. US society began to give more reward for merit. White males began to witness a slow, steady erosion of their dominant position.

     

    All of this gives background to an emerging anger nationwide. We see it and we hear it in local and national politics. With unemployment and other social pressures, white males may experience anger not present in other generations. As a consequence we witness white male suicides in number uncommon to other demographic groups.


    We might find higher numbers of suicides in male Hispanics suffering from poverty, loss of family connections, and illness. Within migrating labor groups no one counts suicides. In fact, we might have expected some migrating Hispanic groups to have performed suicide cleanup for suicides and even buried the suicide victim in a nameless hole along side the road.  We can never know.


    What we do know about suicide victims we know about each other. This means that in the end, no one really knows anyone else. We can only guess and hope to come close to the truth.  Surprise suicides proves these words out.


    Everybody’s different and everybody’s OK in their style of living. We don’t agree with what everybody does, but in the end we must agree everyone shares similarities and differences.  This alone perplexes those of us trying to understand suicide.  Everybody has their own desires and fears.


    For  baby boomer, white males these ideas may seem foreign, especially to those males with a drive to reach the “top.” Or, at least, white males with a sense of belonging at the “top” may not share my ideas about similarities.  For some, simply understanding that it’s OK for everyone to think and exist differently helps the world become a healthier place, generally speaking.


    White male identity becomes a crisis for many.  Rather than look at the many different stages of maturity people go through,  some white males insist everyone goes through the same experiences as they do.  They become fixated on identity and when their identity no longer serves as an avenue to security and recognition, the following identity crisis becomes lethal. Add stressors like unemployment, divorce, loss of a home or relative or friend, and the pressure becomes too much.

    Suicide cleanup technicians see evidence of some or all of these stressful conditions experienced by white males.


    We would all do well to help everyone understand there is no way we can really understand one another, not fully. So we cannot expect to change others to change as we might want.  Not everyone will think or choose to look like us.  Let it be.


    Whatever the explanation for the many white male suicides world-wide, I may have hit upon a useful idea above. In suicide cleanup work, I will continue using what I know to clean, and remain open to new ideas to help stop suicide.

©2001 Evans Enterprises