I've been pricing trees for some time, and it is hard enough to get that price right in person---let alone trying to do it by a pic. Also, everyone's actual costs will differ due to equipment, insurance, wage rates, etc.
My point for posting here however, is to point out the pitfalls of storm cleanup work. In the upper midwest, we get tornados and straight line winds of catastrophic velocity. There are two main problems with disaster cleanup:
Homeowners often assume that their insurance carrier will cover the cost of the tree work. And in the rush to get a contractor when the tree is on their power line {etc. } they will agree to a bid before they find out that their insurer is a scumbag and is not playin' nice. That leaves the tree guy holding the bag, with a PO'd HO and reluctance/inability to pay. I REALLY hate not getting paid or worse yet, having to go thru all sorts of drama and BS just to finally collect. (I enjoy wasting time arguing in the midst of the workload of a major disaster!!)
The other problem I found has to do with the actual climbing and rigging part of fubar'd trees. Especially with rotating winds, I found trees that were literally all twisted up like a string wrapped around the vacuum cleaner brush. And, of course all of this wood is under extreme pressure. So it's like playin' "Tree Jenga" in the sky. That crap is not only nerve racking, but dangerous to climb as well. Buckets and cranes can help tons, but often access is limited and equipment scarce locally. It is also far too easy to put a fragile bucket or other equipment in jeapordy if you don't take it super slow and easy.......
So, sorry for the long rant here. Just hopin' to spare another guy some extreme suffering and frustration. Storm work is definitely not what it seems. There's a lot to it. And it definitely does not always pan out to be profitable at all.