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Crime scene cleaners do the heavy lifting when it comes to blood cleanup following homicides, suicides, and unattended deaths. Cleaners do not usually own the company for which they remove blood from homes and businesses. A few cleaners in our country make "OK" money. They do not make what they have earned. In fact, paying cleaners what they earn foregoes a hierarchical business model. Paying cleaners for their work would mean owners would not profit; because of this situation it would be wiser for cleaners to own their own crime scenecleanup business. This way they would earn what their labor merits, the whole pie instead of a small percentage in wage hour work. Making wages for cleaners an even murkier subject, some work for a flat fee; so if a cleaner cleans a suicide in a bedroom they make a flat $400 for one day's work. This sounds like a lot of money, but it is not. The next day they may do a similar job, and run into many problems, physical and psychological. Because of the nature of the crime scene cleanup business cooperatives of some sort need to arise. Most of all, they need to help destroy county government monopolies over crime scene cleanup.
Crime Scene Cleaners Directory