Base-Access Dog Poop Cleanup

Dog poop cleanup requests for base-adjacent yards.

Scoop907 can collect base-adjacent cleanup requests, but restricted access must be handled legally by the customer, escort, property process, or an eligible worker.

Nearby demand signals

Searches and route pockets

JBER-adjacent housingGovernment HillMountain ViewMuldoonTikahtnu area

Access details

What customers should include

  • No military endorsement, affiliation, or guaranteed base access is implied.
  • Do not dispatch restricted-access work unless access, escort, or worker eligibility is confirmed.
  • Customers should add escort contact, gate process, call box, and arrival-window notes.

Property service

Apartment, HOA, and shared pet areas

Property or housing-office requests should use the property quote form for recurring service review.

Request property quote

Worker supply

Routes need local workers too

Workers should only accept restricted-access jobs they can legally complete.

Join worker roster

Availability

Is service available here?

JBER and base-adjacent housing is part of the first Alaska route build. Customers can request weekly or one-time cleanup now, and Scoop907 prioritizes starts where nearby homes, property leads, and legal worker access line up.

Customer checklist

Before requesting service

  1. Enter the JBER and base-adjacent housing service ZIP, yard size, dog count, and preferred weekly, twice-weekly, or one-time plan.
  2. No military endorsement, affiliation, or guaranteed base access is implied.
  3. Upload yard photos so the first visit can be priced and routed with fewer surprises.

Worker checklist

Before accepting jobs

  1. Add coverage ZIPs near JBER and base-adjacent housing and keep availability current before accepting jobs.
  2. Do not dispatch restricted-access work unless access, escort, or worker eligibility is confirmed.
  3. Complete service with proof photos so customer trust and payout review stay clean.

Local service questions

Useful answers before you book.

Is Scoop907 available in JBER and base-adjacent housing?

Scoop907 is collecting and prioritizing JBER and base-adjacent housing requests as part of the Alaska launch. ZIP density, access notes, and worker coverage decide which routes open first.

How much does dog poop cleanup cost in JBER and base-adjacent housing?

Residential weekly plans start at $79/month, twice-weekly plans start at $129/month, and premium one-time resets start at $89 before add-ons or first-visit cleanup fees.

What should customers include for JBER and base-adjacent housing service?

Include the service ZIP, yard photos, dog count, cleanup boundaries, and access notes. For this page, the most important access detail is: No military endorsement, affiliation, or guaranteed base access is implied.

Can properties request pet waste service in JBER and base-adjacent housing?

Property or housing-office requests should use the property quote form for recurring service review. Property quotes use station count, shared-area notes, parking rules, and recurring frequency to decide if the route can be serviced cleanly.

Scoop907 Launch Access

Tell us where the route should open next.

Customer bookings, worker signups, and property quote requests all help decide which ZIP codes get active service windows first.

Start with your yard