How We Keep Your Waste Tanks From Overflowing in Flint
We've seen what happens when a waste tank overflows. It's messy, it's a health hazard, and it ruins an event. After the Flint Water Crisis, we don't take clean, reliable sanitation for granted. Our crew's PSAI and OSHA training means we plan for capacity from the start. Here's our process: we size your job based on guest count and duration, not just a guess. For a weekend festival at Downtown's Whiting, we'll schedule extra pumps before the final concert. We use units with larger 60-Gallon Waste Tanks for construction sites and monitor them weekly. Flint's weather plays a role too – our 154 days below freezing mean we check for ice blockages, and those few hot days accelerate usage. We get it there fast, and we keep it clean. No excuses. That means proactive service, not waiting for a call.
Daily Prevention Protocol
- Check your event schedule against our recommended Special Event Restroom service intervals
- Inspect the Ventilation Stack Design and 60-Gallon Waste Tank capacity before we leave the site
- Monitor weather forecasts, especially during our cold Metawanee Hills winters and brief hot spells
- Place units on level ground, away from drainage areas in Downtown flood zones
- Communicate any sudden crowd increases at venues like University Park events immediately

