A look at 2025: Keeping your properties prepared for winter weather
A look at 2025: Keeping properties prepared for winter weather
With winter in full speed, make sure you're prepared, and your properties are protected.
With the cooler weather already in effect, experts are calling for a warmer and drier south and a wetter north. While warmer weather may not sound so bad, it could result in consequences such as tornadoes, hurricanes and widespread moderate to extreme droughts. Current reports are also showing La Niña, a climate pattern in the Pacific Ocean, will be apparent. This predicted weather means that property owners may have to take additional measures to protect their assets.
The importance of preparation
Natural disasters have been widespread and impact property owners across the country. As the frequency of natural disasters increases, the economic damage left in their wake rises. Making sure you’re prepared is essential in helping to reduce these costs as some damage can be avoidable with the correct precautionary measures. Property preservation providers are an important part of helping mortgage servicers and investors protect their assets, especially in the event of a natural disaster. From providing consultation to staying compliant with regulatory requirements, field services providers serve crucial and necessary roles.
According to the NOAA, in 2023 the average cost spent on winter weather was $1.8 billion, with one winter storm being categorized as a billion-dollar disaster. These climate-related disasters emphasize the importance of having a good property preservation partner.
How can a field services provider protect your investments?
In the wake of any natural disaster, the roles and responsibilities of field service providers must bend to align with the needs of investors. While services such as consulting with mortgage servicers, protecting real estate assets, understanding regulatory requirements and guiding the investor are part of the daily tasks taken on by field services providers, a severe weather event like a snowstorm can bring a level of urgency to the table as service providers aim to mitigate risk, preserve property value and avoid safety hazards.
Quality property preservation goes beyond routine maintenance and checkups. This is especially true when it comes to the fallout from a winter storm. From sustaining property value to mitigating risk and minimizing loss severity, investors want to work with professionals who are prepared for the worst-case scenario and have the tools and expertise to keep their valuable investments safe. While not everything can be taken care of prior to the occurrence of a natural disaster, a proactive approach, forward-thinking and acting with a sense of urgency can make all the difference when it comes to protecting someone’s investment and preserving the value of a property.
As temperatures continue to reflect record-setting cold weather, including heavy snow in parts of the south, being prepared and staying ahead of damages is key. Below are three ways to do that.
#1: Partner with the right property preservation provider
Long before a natural disaster strikes, mortgage servicers should aim to partner with a property preservation company that has the expertise to advise them on the possible path of destruction and asset risk potential. Oftentimes, property preservation vendors have first-hand knowledge of the type of natural disasters their area is prone to and have real-world experience preparing for and dealing with the fallout. Partnering with a provider that can offer a proactive focus on winterization services is crucial. “We actively monitor the weather using a service that tells us when there’s snow in a given area. In some cases, our clients have emergency allowables that empower us to immediately go to the property and remove the snow without asking them. In other cases, we reach out to them to see if they want us to remove the snow,” says Tim Guertin, SVP, field services. This proactive approach helps avoid any code violations and injuries that could be sustained during colder temperatures. “We have a very aggressive snow monitoring service and work with clients to identify which properties are on an investor winterization schedule. There are three key words in this industry: roof, water, mold. Maintenance monitoring and prevention are required to prevent issues.”
Clear communication between a servicer’s field services provider and their local property preservation vendor partners is key to developing a customized approach for a given area. By analyzing projected disaster impact areas and providing ongoing disaster updates, vendors can equip their field services partners with the information and data they need to make decisions that best serve the property owner. Once a disaster strikes, property preservation vendors are key to providing field services with the updated damage assessments they need to effectively manage their portfolios, communicate with investors and begin the process of making insurance claims.
#2: Prioritize utility management
Utility management services include more than just the overseeing of service activation and deactivation. Property preservation specialists often provide utility management that includes coordinating with clients to pay utility bills, getting appropriate documentation such as POA, title deed and authorization letters from clients and utility research to help REO property owners assess usage and expenses in order to find areas of improvement. Utility management can be key in the case of an emergency, including a natural disaster. A severe weather event can lead to utility concerns that, in some cases, can be costly. For instance, if unprecedented low temperatures cause a pipe to burst in a vacant home and the main water valve has not been turned off, flooding can lead to significant damage and serious associated costs.
#3: Consistent disaster inspections
When climate-related events strike, natural disaster inspections can help lenders, servicers and investors identify any damages incurred. These reports identify the current condition of the property and if the property is habitable, provide servicers with an estimated cost to repair damages, ascertain the current conditions of the neighborhood and clean up status, and determine If the mortgager plans to remain or repair the property with inspections, photos, maps, and quick turn times.
ServiceLink offers an array of services to help prepare for disaster and restore after disaster strikes. “We monitor extreme weather situations and compile FEMA data and declarations so we can pull a list of assets within the affected counties,” says Anthony Scotese, vice president, field services operations. “We then issue customized reports designed to help our servicer partners see which of their properties may need to be inspected.” Following inspections, servicers can determine which properties require hazard claims and can conduct the necessary homeowner outreach. Servicers may even take this opportunity to open conversations with borrowers regarding their options for assistance with payments or possible exceptions.
The benefits of a proactive partnership
While managing portfolios following a natural disaster is a continued challenge for mortgage servicers and their property preservation partners, developing a playbook with tested strategies and step-by-step procedures can help mitigate risk, reduce property damage and save on costs. As severe weather events become more routine in the U.S., field services providers will develop more experience working with local property preservation vendors who have specific knowledge of a given region, and the risks associated with that region. Field services providers must also plan for the potential that the local vendors they partner with could be affected themselves by a natural disaster in their area. In these cases, a reallocation of resources and staff may be necessary to address affected property within a suitable timeframe.
In any event, the best approach to successful field services and property preservation is a proactive one. While not all damage can be prevented prior to a natural disaster, upfront preparation and solid relationships with local vendors can mean avoiding unnecessary loss following a disaster situation.
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