NYS DOL-licensed asbestos removal across Homer, NY and Cortland County. Pre-demolition surveys, friable insulation, floor tile, siding, vermiculite. Self-performed — not subbed.
Homer, NY's pre-1980 building stock — homes, schools, commercial structures, agricultural buildings — almost universally contains asbestos-containing materials (ACM). Backwell holds the NYS Department of Labor Asbestos Handler Contractor license and self-performs abatement in-house, including the survey coordination, ICR 56 filings, NESHAP notification, containment, removal, decontamination, and third-party air clearance.
Call (315) 400-2654 for a free written estimate.
Homer sits in the Tioughnioga River valley just north of Cortland, on a broad outwash-floored valley cut into the Appalachian Plateau. The valley floor carries Howard gravelly loam and Chenango gravelly loam — well-drained, cobble-rich outwash — while the adjacent hillslopes run into Lordstown channery silt loam and Mardin channery silt loam with fragipan restrictions on deeper drainage.
The Tioughnioga River and Factory Brook define drainage on the valley floor, and the underlying Cortland-Homer-Preble sole-source aquifer imposes additional groundwater-protection requirements on commercial earthwork and stormwater design. Site work in Homer regularly involves cobble-heavy trenching in the outwash, aquifer-protective infiltration controls on pavement-heavy projects, and steep-slope and rock-excavation challenges when development climbs out of the valley onto the surrounding plateau. Frost depth on the valley floor is substantial, and utility burial depths typically reflect Cortland County climatic data rather than lake-moderated Syracuse norms. Projects close to the Tioughnioga River fall under NYSDEC stream-protection permitting in addition to Cortland County sole-source aquifer requirements, and structural fill is commonly imported where native outwash is too cobbly for slab support.
That building inventory — typical of Cortland County — is dominated by pre-1980 housing and commercial stock with significant ACM presence. Backwell's abatement crews handle this market every month.
Any disturbance, demolition, or renovation of a building constructed before 1980 in New York State requires an asbestos survey by a NYSDOL-licensed inspector before work begins. Backwell coordinates the survey and abatement under one contract. The 10-business-day NYSDOL notification period must run before regulated work starts.
Federal NESHAP rules (40 CFR 61 Subpart M) require EPA notification 10 working days before any regulated asbestos demolition or renovation. Backwell handles this filing.
NYSDEC Part 360 governs asbestos waste handling. Material must go to a NYSDEC-permitted asbestos-receiving landfill — Backwell uses approved transporters and provides waste manifests.
Most contractors sub asbestos work to a separate firm. Backwell holds the asbestos handler contractor license in-house. One contract, one crew, faster turnaround.
We arrange the licensed inspector for ICR 56 surveys, manage bulk sample turnaround, and file all notifications.
Backwell self-performs both. Schedule abatement Monday, demolition Wednesday — no contractor handoff delay.
General liability, asbestos-specific pollution coverage, workers' comp, umbrella. Certificates on request.
Residential typically runs $2,500 – $15,000 depending on materials and scope. Pre-demolition full-house: $5,000 – $30,000. Commercial varies by project.
Yes, if the building was built before 1980. NYS Industrial Code Rule 56 requires a licensed inspector survey before any disturbance.
Residential: 2–5 days on site after the 10-business-day NYSDOL notification period.
Yes. Backwell self-performs both. Combined contract, no handoff delay.
We use NYSDEC-permitted transporters and asbestos-receiving landfills. Waste manifests provided.
Yes. Homer, NY and the surrounding Cortland County service area.
Get a free estimate: Call (315) 400-2654.