Hurricane and flood damage in Maine creates a hard 24-72 hour window before mold becomes the dominant problem. Here's what to do hour by hour, what to document, and how Maine's specific exposure shapes the response.
The 24-72 hour rule (Maine edition)
If your Maine home is flooded -- by hurricane, tropical storm, or storm surge -- mold growth begins within 24-48 hours. By 72 hours, visible colonies are routine on cellulose-based materials (drywall paper, wood, fabric, paper-faced insulation).
That window is the dominant constraint on post-storm remediation. Everything else flows from it.
Materials that stay wet beyond 72 hours -- carpet, padding, drywall, insulation, ceiling tiles -- almost always need to be removed regardless of whether visible mold has appeared yet. Trying to dry-in-place wet drywall is one of the most common causes of catastrophic hidden mold a year later.
Maine context: Hurricane / post-tropical cyclone Lee (2023) and historical Hurricane Bob (1991). ME's exposure is lower frequency but coastal homes face significant nor'easter risk.
What to do in the first 48 hours
- Document FIRST. Photograph every room, every wet surface, every standing-water mark, before you remove anything. Insurance claims hinge on this.
- Cut the power to flooded circuits at the breaker if water reached outlets. Don't enter standing water if power is on.
- File the claim immediately. Most policies have prompt-notice clauses that can void coverage if you delay.
- Pump or wet-vac standing water out of the home as fast as possible.
- Open windows + doors to ventilate (if outdoor humidity allows). Run fans and dehumidifiers continuously.
- Pull up and discard wet carpet and pad. They cannot be saved after a flood.
- Cut wet drywall 1-2 feet above the high-water line and remove it. The drywall paper above the cut is dry and stays.
- Discard wet insulation, ceiling tiles, paper-backed wall coverings, and any porous material that can't be cleaned.
Tip: In Maine, post-storm scheduling for mold inspectors typically runs 2-4 weeks behind. Book the assessment as soon as possible -- even if the visit is weeks out, you've reserved a spot in the queue.
Insurance: the dominant post-storm decision
Mold remediation after a hurricane is almost always tied up with the broader insurance claim. The single most consequential thing you can do in the first 48 hours is establish proper documentation.
- Wind damage that admits water (roof, windows, etc.) is typically covered under standard homeowner policies.
- Flood damage from rising water is NOT covered under standard homeowners. It requires separate flood insurance (NFIP or private).
- Storm surge is treated as flood, not wind, by virtually all carriers. This was the central dispute in post-Katrina, post-Sandy, and post-Ian claims.
- Mold sub-limits ($5,000-$10,000 typical) often apply even when the underlying water source is covered.
- An INDEPENDENT mold inspector's report is the most valuable document in a contested claim.
Read your Maine policy carefully -- mold sub-limits and hurricane / windstorm deductibles can be much higher than your all-perils deductible.
Maine-specific watch points
Maine's combination of coastal exposure and high-humidity climate means post-storm drying is challenging. Plan for slower drying than equipment specs suggest, and budget for longer remediation timelines than dryer-climate states.
Frequently asked questions
Sources & references
- FEMA: Dealing with Mold & Mildew in Your Flood Damaged Home — Federal Emergency Management Agency
- EPA: Flood Cleanup -- Avoiding Indoor Air Quality Problems — U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- CDC: Recommendations for Cleaning Up After a Flood — U.S. Centers for Disease Control
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