Three Clear Paths

Essential. Recommended. Complete.

After the assessment, families should not be left with a confusing list of disconnected fixes. We organize the plan into three clear project options so you can decide what to do now, what to phase, and what to save for later.

Essential

Solve the urgent risk

Focused scope
  • Addresses the most immediate safety, access, power, or security concern
  • Works well for families who need a fast first step
  • Keeps future improvements visible without forcing every decision at once

Example

Bathroom fall-risk fixes, entry lighting, a smart lock, grab bars, or an urgent panel/generator readiness review.

Recommended

Fix the risk and connected causes

Best fit for most families
  • Connects the urgent issue to nearby risks the family is likely to face next
  • Balances budget, timing, safety, and long-term home use
  • Often combines remodeling with lighting, access, electrical readiness, or security planning

Example

Accessible bathroom plus night lighting, outdoor entry lighting, leak sensors, panel readiness, and family access planning.

Complete

Build the long-term safer-home plan

Whole-home transformation
  • Creates a broader plan for safety, independence, security, and resilience
  • Useful when multiple trades, rooms, or family decision makers are involved
  • Can be phased so the home improves in the right sequence

Example

Kitchen/bath modernization, panel and generator readiness, outdoor lighting, smart security, automation, and care plan support.

Proposal Contents

What a Clear Proposal Should Explain

A safer-home project may involve remodeling, electrical readiness, generator planning, lighting, security, automation, and family communication. The proposal should make the boundaries plain before work begins.

Assessment findings and primary risks
Project scope and exclusions
Trade partner responsibilities
Electrical partner scope notes where required
Budget range or fixed proposal terms once scope is defined
Phasing: do now, do next, do later
Change-order expectations
Care plan and future-readiness recommendations

The Right First Step Is the Assessment

The three-option proposal depends on real home conditions, family priorities, trade requirements, and budget timing. That is why the process starts with a written assessment.

Schedule Assessment