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Thursday, August 26, 2010

Do Not Be a Victim!!

North Carolina is our home too!  Since before the American Shingle debacle Ridgeline Exteriors has been pushing for licensing requirements for roofers.  We are pushing licensing requirements in the same way that general contractors are licensed in North Carolina.  Now, our push begins to gain traction. 

North Carolina, e-mail your state representatives and push the idea of roofing contractor licensing. 

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Never Pay a Deposit

A lot of our competitors are strapped with cash flow problems and require customers to give them deposits before doing the jobs.  These deposits are used to float jobs being done for earlier customers, typically.  A reputable roofing company in Charlotte will not require a deposit for the work to be done.

A reputable roofing company, such as Ridgeline, will only require full payment when the job is complete or, in the event that it is through an insurance company, when the customer settles completely with the insurance company.

No matter what company you decide to let work on your roof, remember to pick one that does not require a deposit.  There are many reputable, local roofing companies here in Charlotte that will not require a deposit.  These roofing companies have a vested interest in doing your work as soon as possible to receive payment for the work.  In situations where you are required to pay a deposit, there is absolutely no incentive for a company to begin work.

Friday, August 20, 2010

American Shingles Still in the News

American Shingle & Siding sent workers to neighborhoods across the Charlotte area with a shiny promise: a new roof at no cost to you.
George Bostick of south Charlotte - like several thousand homeowners in 10 states - paid the company upfront with a check from his insurance company for hail damage. 
That was early May. American Shingle called later that month to postpone the roofing work. Another postponement came in June. 
Three months since he handed over his $5,500 insurance check, and despite calls and letters to the company's headquarters, Bostick hasn't gotten the work he paid for or a refund. 
"I didn't check them out," says Bostick, a 66-year-old independent trucker. "And that was a no-no."
The N.C. attorney general's office is investigating American Shingle, which is headquartered in the Atlanta area but advertises offices in Charlotte, Greensboro and Raleigh, as well as Greenville, S.C., Columbia and eight other states. The attorney general's consumer protection division has 54 consumer complaints similar to Bostick's, a spokesperson said Thursday. 
Atlanta's Better Business Bureau had registered more than 200 and gives the company its lowest rating, an "F." 
Tom Bartholomy of Charlotte's Better Business Bureau says this is the hardest hit to consumers by a roofing vendor that he has seen in 28 years with the organization. His office has just 12 formal complaints but more than 2,000 calls about the company since it started work in Charlotte last December.
The Observer's calls to American Shingle & Siding Inc.'s offices in the Atlanta area and Charlotte on Thursday got the same recorded message, saying the company was experiencing heavy call volume and asking the caller to wait or call back later. The message repeated for several minutes.
The Charlotte office in an office park off Westinghouse Boulevard is empty, WCNC-TV reported. The landlord says employees packed up without a word. 
A Georgia television station reported this week that American Shingle CEO Carlton Dunko said in an interview that the company got caught in a cash flow shortage. American Shingle has about 3,500 customers nationwide waiting for new roofs, and Dunko estimated he has checks from between 50 and 70 customers that he plans to return, the station reported. 
American Shingle followed a model that descends on neighborhoods hit by hailstorms: The company promised to help secure insurance money for damaged roofs. And it asked homeowners to sign a contract to let their company do the work. 
But there were warning signs. Officials of the Better Business Bureau were bothered by complaints about American Shingle's advertising. 
"They were leaving flyers that said, 'You have hail damage.' That was from a visual inspection on the ground, where you can't tell," Bartholomy said. There were also reports of salesmen showing up with a free pizza and this pitch: Enjoy it while we inspect your roof. 
Bostick said several roofing companies appeared in his neighborhood after a hailstorm this spring. He thought many were too pushy, but the American Shingle sales rep was likable and low-key. 
He "assured us he could get us insurance money to replace our roof at no cost to us," Bostick said.
The salesman promised to send an estimator to meet with the insurance representative and go up on the roof to get an estimate for replacing it, Bostick said. "The insurance company would send us a check and we'd turn it over to them. In return, we'd have to guarantee they would get the job." 
Better Business Bureau guidelines says that's a mistake: A one-third deposit toward the total payment is standard. And consumers should get at least three estimates and learn more about the company they select., including how long it's been doing business in the area. 
Although a neighbor did get a refund from American Shingle, Bostick is still waiting.
His house did get a new roof. 
"I paid for it from my own pocket," he said. "So I'm out that money unless I get it back from American Shingle."


Read more: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2010/08/20/1632874/nc-attorney-general-probes-roof.html#ixzz0x9SVRESM

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Local Roofing Company Scam on WSOCTV

http://www.wsoctv.com/money/24440545/detail.html

Jackie and Kerren Taylor said their roof is leaking from damage done during a hailstorm.
They said they made a $3,400 down payment to American Shingle Roofing, using an insurance check, to re-roof the house.
The payment was made in early May, the Taylors said, but the company told them it will be October before they get a new roof.
“Yeah, I'm angry because we can’t do anything about it,” Kerren Taylor said. “They [have] got our money.”
The Taylors said they asked for their money back, but were told they'd have to pay a 10 percent penalty fee.
They said they know others in their neighborhood who are in similar situations, stuck with damaged roofs months after signing contracts with American Shingle.
“You can walk the neighborhood and almost know who American Shingle got a hold of because the roofs aren't done,” Kerren Taylor said.
The Taylors’ complaint isn’t the first one Action 9 has gotten about American Shingle. Last week, an Action 9 story aired about Ella Frazier, who said she paid the company $4,800 up front, but waited three months without a new roof.
After Action 9 got involved in Frazier’s problem, the company overnighted a refund check to her.
The Better Business Bureau currently gives the company an ‘F’ rating.
“They've made a lot of promises on how they're going to improve things,” BBB President Tom Bartholomy said.
He said until the company makes those improvements, it will continue to have an ‘F’ rating.
Bartholomy said American Shingle has a sales staff selling lots of roofs, but not many roofers to do the jobs.
“They hire their roofers off of craigslist,” he said.
Action 9 contacted American Shingle and a spokesman said they were starting work in the Taylors’ neighborhood, but sent them a refund check.
Still, Jackie Taylor said the experience left him bitter.
“You don't do business this way,” he said.
To avoid trouble hiring roofers, Action 9’s Don Griffin recommends checking them out first with the BBB and not paying them until after you're satisfied with the work.