Mold remediation claims in New Brunswick are among the most documentation-intensive claim types — and among the most frequently disputed when documentation is incomplete. A complete, defensible mold claim requires four separate documents: the pre-remediation assessment report, the moisture source documentation that explains the mold's origin, the IICRC AMRT-standard remediation protocol log, and an independent post-remediation clearance test from a party other than the remediator. Element Restoration Hub is IICRC AMRT certified and produces all four documents for every MAPLEHURST, New Brunswick mold remediation job. Call (833) 999-4716 now.
The pre-remediation assessment report establishes the pre-intervention condition — the affected area extent, the results of any air or surface sampling, and the moisture source identification. Without a documented pre-intervention condition, the scope of the remediation cannot be reviewed against what was present before work began. Some New Brunswick carriers require an independent industrial hygienist assessment before remediation can begin; others accept a certified remediator's assessment with IICRC AMRT credentials. Element Restoration Hub's pre-remediation assessment is produced to the documentation standard that satisfies both requirements.
The independent clearance test is the document that most frequently distinguishes settled mold claims from disputed ones. A clearance test conducted by the remediator who performed the work cannot serve as independent verification — the party certifying successful remediation has a financial interest in the outcome. Element Restoration Hub arranges for an independent industrial hygienist to conduct the post-remediation clearance sampling, and the clearance test results are submitted to your New Brunswick carrier under the hygienist's credentials. This is the format commercial mold carriers in New Brunswick require for clearance documentation, and it eliminates the most common basis for post-remediation claim dispute.
The moisture source enabling mold growth is identified, confirmed, and documented as inactive before remediation begins. Active moisture sources make remediation non-permanent; your New Brunswick carrier may reject a mold claim where the source remains active at the time of remediation. Element Restoration Hub documents source inactivation before any mold-affected material is disturbed.
Physical containment establishment, negative air pressure differential confirmation, and the IICRC AMRT material-specific remediation sequence are all documented in the remediation log. The containment documentation demonstrates that spore migration outside the work area was controlled during disturbance activities — a scope item that adjusters review as a liability control measure in occupied-building remediation.
Post-remediation clearance sampling by an independent industrial hygienist. Clearance results and the final moisture readings confirming the source moisture condition has been resolved are included in the close package for your New Brunswick claim — two final documents that close the mold claim loop from pre-assessment to verified clearance.