The Inrecon team: Mark and Randy Fenton, and Donald Sak. 31 3 - 848-5735 1 - 800-421-4141 24 HOUR ENE Maste of Disastel AARON ROBINSON SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS date. Randy Fenton's 13- year-old son was born on the eve of the devastating Kalamazoo tornado in 1980. Their mother's 70th birthday party coincided with a hurricane that slammed into Puerto Rico in 1989. And their parents' gold- en wedding anniversary on Aug. 23, 1992, marked the night that Hurricane Andrew, the worst storm in U.S. history, laid waste to southern Florida. Photo by Marsha Sundq Not even a hurricane can keep the Fenton brothers away from work. ad the Fenton brothers been around, the Pharaoh might have hired them to clean up Egypt after the Ten Plagues. The duo — Mark Fenton, 44, and Randy Fenton, 40 — have made disaster a family business. Their company, Dearborn-based Quality Construction/Insurance Reconstruction (Inrecon), prospers from fixing busi- nesses and homes that have burned, flooded or even blown away in a tor- nado or hurricane. "The whole concept is to provide services to insur- ance companies nation- wide and large building or property owners who are in need of high-speed con- struction and restoration after disasters," says Randy Fenton, the firm's president and CEO. The Fentons and part- ner Don Sak started with a small awning business begun in 1946 by their fathers, Sam Fenton and Bill Sak. They say they live, breathe and eat their work. But it's all in the family. Three of Sam Fenton's sons work in the business, and many employees are relatives. They even remember family milestones by what cataclysm occurred on that Sam Fenton gave his sons business roots; yet it was the second generation who turned the business into a multi-million dollar venture. Since 1959, the 300- employee company with offices in six cities has spe- cialized in cleaning up property that has been ravaged by tragedy. , These days, the after- math of Hurricane Andrew is keeping the company busy as ever. The Fentons have spent weeks, even months, at the scenes of disasters; supervising the company's rebuilding pro- jects. But Andrew is the worst catastrophe in the history of the Fentons' business, and the duo esti- mates it will give them at least another two years' work. When Andrew came ashore, the Fentons were instantly on the move. "We call it war, and you are looking at the gener- als," says Randy Fenton, corporate chief financial officer. DISASTERS page 30 CO Cr) a, .29