Ceiling collapses after tenants say management failed to fix bathroom leaks in Bedford — News 12 Bronx

A family living in Bedford says the ceiling in their bathroom came crashing down after management failed to fix leaks.

The De Jesus family’s bathroom is covered in water, sheet rock, plaster and mold. The family, including Janet De Jesus’ disabled husband and her 1-year-old grandson, says they now cannot use the bathroom.

The super tells News 12 he is going to put some sheet rock over where the ceiling fell, and someone came to fix the damage.

Janet says putting some sheet rock over the mold and damage just isn’t enough.

News 12 reached out to the landlord of the building on the Grand Concourse for response.

 

source http://bronx.news12.com/story/41299288/ceiling-collapses-after-tenants-say-management-failed-to-fix-bathroom-leaks-in-bedford

Think your home has mold? Here’s what to do — WTSP.com

TAMPA, Fla. — Here are some easy things you can do right now to look for the warning signs of mold.

In your bathroom:

  • Check moisture issues near plumbing areas. Look around shower and in between shower tiles.
  • Under the sink, look for water staining and water damage.

In your kitchen:

  • Look under the sink. If there have been several repairs, check for water damage or leaks.
  • Check cabinets for water damage.

On ceilings:

  • Look for staining, changes in color or texture. Those are red flags.
  • A roof leak could start as a little stain and then will progress over a few months.
  • If staining hasn’t changed, the leak may have been corrected. But you still need to check to see if there’s moisture, which could lead to mold.

Humidity and Mold

Humidity is always high in Florida. It’s always a good idea to keep the humidity down. Keeping it below 60 percent will ensure you don’t have mold. Whenever you start to see mold forming on your belongings, on the air condition vents, on the window frames, anything that would sweat if there’s high humidity, that’s a red flag there’s a moisture issue.

How to use a moisture meter

A moisture meter is used to look for moisture, so look for inconsistencies. Behind tile in a bathroom for example, there’s potential for moisture.

At your hardware store

Grab a moisture meter. It’s less than $50 and is an early detection tool. Anywhere you have water stains or discoloration, the moisture meter will let you know if it’s moisture related. It will help you decide if you need to call a professional.

Grab a hydrometer. It’s less than $10. It can stick on your fridge. If you notice it’s high, you can adjust your air conditioning.

If you find mold, what can you do here in Florida?

If you’re a renter: 

  • Talk to your landlord or complex management.
  • Get documentation.
  • If you’re not satisfied with their response, you can file a complaint with the Division of Business of Professional Regulation.

 If you own your home: 

  • You’re on your own.
  • Use the videos and tools we’ve shown you to identify where the moisture is coming from.
  • Call a professional to get it remediated as soon as possible. It needs to be taken care of quickly.

Click here for tips from the Better Business Bureau on hiring a mold remediation or mold assessment contractor in Florida.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) offers a guide to mold and moisture in homes. Click here to learn more.

If you’d like to learn more about the assignment of benefits, click here.

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source https://www.wtsp.com/article/money/consumer/what-to-do-home-mold/67-2560c9b1-7c33-45f2-a77c-95b7a0288de5

Mold Plagues ‘Virtually All Buildings,’ Dean Says After Dunster Mold Outbreak | News — Harvard Crimson

Dunster House

Dunster House is located in the River East neighborhood, between Leverett House and Mather House.

Harvard administrators relocated several Dunster House affiliates into temporary accommodations after discovering an outbreak of mold in September, according to several affected students.

Kazi Tasnim ’22, who lives in Dunster, said House administrators moved residents of two separate suites to “emergency singles” and empty spots in suites throughout the house for more than two weeks. Harvard brought in an outside contractor to clean up the mold during that time, according to Zachary M. Gingo, associate dean for physical resources and planning for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

“We were out of the room for like two and a half weeks,” Tasnim said. “They initially said it would take like a month, but they fixed it — they got rid of the issue sooner.”

Maintenance staff discovered the mold — located on the east side of Dunster’s second floor — while investigating a “minor leak” in the ceiling Sept. 3, Gingo wrote in an emailed statement. They found the fungus growing between layers of the walls after opening them up to make necessary repairs.

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The College and the University’s Environmental Health and Safety department contacted an outside contractor that stripped wet material and mold out of the walls, according to Gingo. After the completing the clean-up, maintenance staff repaired and repainted the walls so residents could return.

Tasnim said that knowledge of the mold situation was “just between us” — the affected students, Resident Dean Michael S. Uy, and other Dunster staff — and not shared with fellow House residents.

“Our tutor had, I think, emailed the entryway … construction’s going on, it’s going to be a little loud,” Tasnim said. “But I don’t think anyone said anything to the House.”

Dunster Faculty Deans Cheryl K. Chen and Sean D. Kelly, Building Manager Lucia Baldock, and Uy did not respond to requests for comment.

Though mold and mildew can have adverse health effects, Gingo noted that Harvard was not notified of any health issues related to the “isolated incident” of mold in Dunster.

Exposure to mold can cause cold-like symptoms as well as itchy eyes or skin for some people, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Those with allergies to mold or asthma may experience more severe reactions, which can include fever and shortness of breath.

Mold spores are likely to grow indoors in moist areas, and standard building materials form a particularly nutritious breeding ground, according to the CDC.

Gingo added in his email that mold is common in buildings and that the University is focused on mitigating mold and water damage. He noted that though residents were displaced, the clean-up is complete and will not need any follow-up.

“It is important to know that mold and mildew are present in virtually all buildings,” Gingo wrote.

Mold, however, is not the only public health hazard plaguing Harvard’s undergraduate houses. Seveal students say they have faced pest infestations in their suites.

Quincy House resident Keshav M. Rastogi ’21 said that toward the beginning of the semester, one of his suitemates’ singles was “sort of infested with mice.”

“I think he spotted probably four to five different mice over the span of two weeks,” Rastogi said. “They captured a few and let them out at various places that were far away from Quincy, and they still kept getting more.”

Rastogi said house maintenance staff responded quickly and set up glue mouse traps around the room. Though these traps didn’t catch any mice, he and his roommates set up a device that emits high-frequency sounds that deter rodents.

Eliot House resident Kaitlyn M. Rabinovitz ’20 said she has noticed a number of cockroaches in her suite this semester.

“Eliot’s known for having a lot of roaches,” she said. “We’ve seen quite a few of those even though we don’t keep any food or anything out.”

Rabinovitz said she blames insect-related dust for serious respiratory problems that began when she moved into Eliot.

“Since living in Eliot, every single semester I’ve been at Harvard, I’ve been diagnosed with bronchitis or pneumonia, which is, like, not normal,” Rabinovitz said.

Eliot Faculty Dean Gail A. O’Keefe wrote in an email that she had not been made aware of the pest issue.

“No one has brought this to my attention, nor to the attention of our building manager,” she wrote.

House administrators and resident deans for Eliot and Quincy did not respond to requests for comment, nor did Quincy Faculty Deans Deborah J. Gehrke and Lee Gehrke.

Gingo wrote that, despite concerted efforts to eradicate rodent and insect populations in the houses, such uninvited guests are inevitable in Cambridge.

“In an urban environment, pests are always present,” Gingo wrote. “Our maintenance practices focus on excluding them, and we have been making steady progress on this front both through routine maintenance and House Renewal.”

—Staff writer Delano R. Franklin can be reached at delano.franklin@thecrimson.com. Follow him on Twitter @delanofranklin_.

—Staff writer Samuel W. Zwickel can be reached at samuel.zwickel@thecrimson.com. Follow him on Twitter @samuel_zwickel.

source https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2019/11/8/dunster-mold-outbreak/

Yogurt Store Can’t Rehash Damage Claims Against Roofer — Law360

Law360 (November 7, 2019, 3:29 PM EST) — A frozen yogurt store can’t bring claims against a roofing company over alleged damage to its store because both were part of an earlier lawsuit over the same issue, a New Jersey state appeals court said Thursday.

Frozen yogurt shop operator TLC Services LLC should have brought a direct claim against Devine Roofing and Construction LLC in its first lawsuit over the leaks and mold that allegedly sprang up while Devine was repairing the building’s roof, the unpublished opinion said. Instead, Devine was a third-party defendant in that suit and won a court judgment dismissing TLC’s claims.

Under New Jersey’s entire…

source https://www.law360.com/retail/articles/1217915/yogurt-store-can-t-rehash-damage-claims-against-roofer

Preventing mold is more important than painting over it — GW Hatchet

Getting sick because of mold is a pretty universal experience for freshmen living in Thurston Hall. But it does not need to be.

The University of Maryland, College Park was plagued by mold and common viruses that destroyed buildings, belongings and residence halls and caused sickness and the death of a student last semester. Officials responded to the incident by installing 50 moisture detectors that alert the school when a space was likely to grow mold. The University collects data from the sensors every 48 hours and plans on installing “smart sensors” that will notify facility workers in real time about potential mold outbreaks.

At GW, students have complained and dealt with mold, crumbling infrastructure and water damage issues in residence halls for years. Thurston mold has become part of the first-year experience for some freshmen, and students have been displaced from their residence hall rooms because of mold outbreaks. On one occasion, the quality of University buildings became so bad that D.C. fined GW.

In response to these instances, officials have hired an outside maintenance company to wipe down Thurston walls to remove mold and gave students a stipend after they were removed from the affected residence hall. But these actions inappropriately respond to the issue and do not fix the actual problem – mold will continue to grow without a proper prevention system.

The University should invest in moisture detectors similar to the ones implemented at UMD instead of spending money on maintenance every time there is a mold outbreak. A preventative measure like UMD’s would decrease the number of student complaints because officials would be able to detect mold before it becomes a larger issue. The University could enable facilities workers to become notified of mold and wipe down walls before they cause mold infestations and harm a student’s health.

Investing in preemptive measures would also help reduce the amount of money officials invest in renovations and pay off fines. Instead of spending millions on renovations for aging buildings and worrying about potential lawsuits, administrators can reassure students that the buildings they live in are mold-free.

Hearing jokes about catching an illness because a student has caught the “Thurston plague” might be funny, but the jokes are grounded in the reality that residence halls and buildings run rampant with mold that cause unsanitary and unhealthy living conditions for students. The University should care about the health and safety of their students and become more proactive in addressing mold outbreaks, especially if it could harm a student’s health.

The University needs to prioritize stopping problems before they become costly for both the University and for students.

Hannah Thacker, a sophomore majoring in political communications, is the contributing opinions editor.

source https://www.gwhatchet.com/2019/11/07/preventing-mold-is-more-important-than-painting-over-it/

Cornered by mold, a St. Louis mother holds her baby tight — STLtoday.com

ST. LOUIS — Displaced by a fire last winter, Amanda Jackson and her infant son, Marquise, needed a place to land fast. She chose Southwest Crossing Apartments, a T.E.H. Realty property off Interstate 55 in far south St. Louis.

Jackson liked the one-bedroom apartment that management showed her. It was cozy enough, in a good location and affordable: $550 a month, including water, trash and sewer.

But soon after she settled, a neighbor on the top floor moved out. Then the people in units directly above and beside her. They were fed up with ceiling collapses and shoddy repairs. Then, the fire department showed up early one morning a few weeks ago after a swath of the roof finally collapsed.

Still, she stays. Even though Marquise, 1, is allergic to mold, which is a trigger for his asthma. He gets multiple breathing treatments a day. She’s rushed him to the hospital lots of times.

“I don’t want to stay here because it’s making my son sick, but I can’t afford to just pick up and move without getting my security deposit,” Jackson, 34, a construction worker, said Wednesday.

Since late 2014, the firm gobbled up as many as 12 large low-income housing apartment complexes in the region that have generated numerous complaints from residents, housing officials and attorneys. Earlier this year, a bank foreclosed on Park Ridge Apartments in Ferguson. On Wednesday, a new management company took over control of Northwinds Apartments, also in Ferguson, and Crown Manor Apartments in unincorporated north St. Louis County.

The fate of other complexes in the region was unclear Wednesday. Owner Eliram Rabin, executive Shlomo Lerner or other T.E.H. associates could not be reached for comment. A manager who didn’t want to be named said T.E.H. is trying to get out of the St. Louis market.

The challenges at Southwest Crossing are the same at nearly all the T.E.H. Realty properties, according to numerous visits by the Post-Dispatch over the past year and a half.

And Jackson’s situation of being trapped by poverty isn’t unique, either.

Last summer, following advice from her pediatrician, Jackson said she called the city Health Department because her son was getting sick from mold at home. She said property management would only spot treat her apartment with bleach.

“If there is mold in the other units, they aren’t dealing with all the problems,” she said. “They just wanted to put a Band-Aid on things. They didn’t want to actually fix them.”

According to Leilani Liddell, the recent property manager at Southwest Crossing, 25 to 50 of the occupied units have water damage or mold; about 50 vacant units have either mold or plumbing issues.

“I just think it’s a superiority thing,” Liddell said of T.E.H. Realty’s lack of investment. “It’s impossible to run it better if they don’t value people as much as they value themselves.”

“They would say,” she added about high-level management at the firm, “people choose to live this way.”

Liddell, who was fired this week after she and other employees blocked in one of the owners for not paying them, confirmed that a roof recently collapsed in Jackson’s building. Liddell said there is mold in the vacant units surrounding Jackson’s apartment. She said she has tried to move Jackson to a different unit.

Jackson said that was true, but that Jackson feared moving would be a major disruption and that the next unit wouldn’t be any better.

On Wednesday, her living room was piled with clothing and toys for Marquise. She said they mainly stay in the living room because she fears the mold is worse in other areas.

“We stay in here and keep the bedroom doors closed,” she said.

Harold Bailey, public information officer for the health department, said the city received two internal mold complaints at Southwest Crossing in 2019.

“We can’t cite them for mold,” he said. “There is no ordinance. If we did do something, it might have been just giving them some advice about that probably being the result of a water problem.”

He said an inspector who visited the property Wednesday was probably going to cite Southwest Crossing for excessive trash, and possibly other matters. He said the full report wasn’t complete.

Southwest Crossing has a private contract for trash pickup, a bill that apparently hasn’t been paid. A recent maintenance worker told the Post-Dispatch that he saw a notice that the water was also supposed to be cut off in the next few business days. Liddell said the water bill rose to about $63,000 over the summer.

Jacob Long, a spokesman for Mayor Lyda Krewson, said Wednesday that the city was not going to cut off the water though the apartment complex is behind “several thousand dollars in payment.”

Heather Dixon, 26, feels like she dodged a bullet. She changed her mind about moving into Southwest Crossing this week. Still, she’d like the $700 back that she paid to have her application processed. On Wednesday, the front office was closed and she wasn’t getting anywhere with T.E.H. Realty.

Dixon has an 11-month-old baby. She wants to move somewhere soon.

“We need stability,” she said, “and that’s what I am trying to create for my daughter.”

Big apartment owner faces complaints across St. Louis area

T.E.H. Realty acquired a dozen big apartment complexes here since 2014. Those apartments are an important provider of affordable housing in the St. Louis area, but many are in bad shape. The Post-Dispatch has chronicled efforts by tenants and others to address those conditions. 

Ferguson apartment complex tenants seek class action lawsuit against T.E.H. Realty

They want the firm to make repairs. 

St. Louis County housing officials sever ties with T.E.H. Realty

The authority has paid the firm more than $1.25 million in rental subsidies since 2015. 

Why St. Louis County can’t keep up with T.E.H. Realty’s problem properties

Here’s what happens when local code enforcement inspectors are overwhelmed and property owners avoid making costly improvements.

Bank forecloses on T.E.H. Realty’s Park Ridge Apartments in Ferguson

It was one of 12 low-income apartment complexes the firm has purchased in the region since late 2014. 

St. Louis County officials won't offer subsidized housing at some T.E.H. Realty properties

T.E.H has been on the radar in recent years following publicity over poor living conditions primarily at Springwood Apartments in Bel-Ridge, the first of at least a dozen properties that affiliates of the firm purchased in the area since late 2014.

Official in Bel-Ridge weighs mountain of complaints at Springwood Apartments

The hearing Monday night was the latest in a series of events to address poor living conditions at the troubled apartment complex. 

Hammered by complaints, T.E.H. Realty pledges to provide high-quality housing

For the first time, a co-founder of fast-growing apartment company responds to criticism, and discusses plans for the St. Louis region.  

At rundown apartment complex in Bel-Ridge, complaints fly about mold, heating and plumbing

Affiliates of T.E.H. Reality purchased more than 2,400 apartment units in the St. Louis area since late 2014. Many of them are falling apart. 

Confusion reigns at Ferguson apartments where tenants were ordered out

Some residents fear they will be homeless soon because of letters sent by the complexes’ owner.

Ferguson apartment complex tells some low-income tenants to leave, but housing authority says they can stay

Residents of Park Ridge Apartments were left wondering whether they needed to follow the orders of their landlord, T.E.H. Realty.

With only 24-hour notice, residents scramble to move out of condemned Ferguson apartments

Residents of one building in Park Ridge Apartments are under orders from the city to clear clear out by 2 p.m. Wednesday after a chunk of concrete fell from a second floor balcony.

Trouble deepens for St. Louis-area apartment complex facing dozens of citations

Rent is cheap at Springwood Apartments, but Bel-Ridge officials are finding lots of problems.  

Residents of rundown St. Louis area apartment complex trapped by poverty, indifference

Springwood Apartments in Bel-Ridge was the first of 10 large complexes that affiliates of T.E.H. Realty have purchased in the St. Louis region since December 2014. Village inspectors recently wrote the firm at least 167 building code citations.  

Troubled Ferguson apartment complexes change hands, but owners' plans are unknown

Residents cite crime and maintenance issues at the Park Ridge and Northwinds complexes, whose owners have benefited from millions in low-income housing tax credits.

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source https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/metro/cornered-by-mold-a-st-louis-mother-holds-her-baby/article_74346c7e-1d50-58cb-b757-6c8ebf9d0a6e.html

Hidden Toxic Mold Lurking In Schools: Why No One Is Testing — CBS Pittsburgh

WEAVERVILLE (CBS13) —  It’s rare that a school superintendent asks a reporter to investigate his district, but Jamie Green was so desperate to protect California students that he came to CBS13 for help. It was only after hidden toxic mold devastated the Trinity Alps School District, that Green realized just how dangerous invisible mold spores could be.

Turns out there is no required mold testing in schools – or any indoor air quality regulations, protecting kids in classrooms.

Now the Trinity County Department of Public Health plans to set the nation’s first mold safety threshold for schools, and Superintendent Green is calling on lawmakers to protect students state-wide.

ALSO READ: What To Do If You Suspect Your Child Is Getting Sick From School?

HEALTH ISSUES

Alyssa Keyes and her son were both new to campus at Weaverville Elementary last year.

“I had an upper respiratory infection last year, my son had pneumonia, we had respiratory issues throughout the classroom for three full months,” recalled the preschool teacher, who goes by Miss Aly. “I was the sickest I’d ever been,” she added.

Chyann Giddings’ son was also new and suffered from headaches and respiratory issues. “We actually had an attendance meeting because he was out of school a lot sick,” Giddings said.

Mom, Hanah Parkenson, says her older daughters had suffered from chronic bronchitis and migraines on campus for years.

Like the other parents, she chalked it up to normal kid stuff. Then, last summer, everything changed.

DISCOVERING HIDDEN MOLD

School superintendent Jamie Green was just as shocked as the parents to learn that there was toxic mold lurking in his schools.

“Until you test for it until you look for it, you just don’t know,” Green said.

After someone flagged a mold patch in a cafeteria, they decided to hire an Industrial Hygienist to test for airborne mold spores district-wide.

“It was very high, the highest I’ve seen,” recalled Kristalynne Anderson, Trinity County Director of Environmental health. “And this is not our first set of schools to have [a] mold issue.

Anderson immediately quarantined the buildings on both campuses after mold tests found spore counts ranging from a few hundred spores/m3 to hundreds of thousands. It was only then that they started searching for hidden mold and, across the district, they found it hiding under carpets, behind walls, and in the ceilings.

SWIPE TO SEE PICTURES OF THE MOLD FOUND INSIDE TRINITY ALPS:

MOLD CONCERNS STATE-WIDE

Anderson notes that Trinity County does not have a particularly humid climate. She, along with many others, believes there are schools across the state with hidden mold issues just as severe as theirs.

In fact, a state report to the legislature in 2004 found the majority of California schools surveyed reported signs of moisture or mold in their classrooms.

The report linked mold spores to allergies and asthma, noting asthma was the “number one cause of chronic school absences, accounting for as many as 3 million missed school days a year.”

Fifteen years later, there is still no required testing for mold in schools and no law that regulates air quality in schools. However, the Department of Education tells CBS13 that mold concerns are the most common complaint that they get.

The state reports the primary health hazards for mold in schools include asthma, allergies, respiratory infections, eye irritation, and rashes, like eczema.

However, more severe symptoms ranging from tremors to memory loss have been reported. 

NO MOLD LIMITS IN SCHOOLS

Weaverville Elementary school principal Katie Porpurko says she was shocked to learn there are no state or federal guidelines for airborne mold spores in schools.

My frustration came from, once those test results came back, What did they mean? I don’t know,” Porburko said. “We had to do research on our own.”

She struggled to provide guidance for parents and faculty, like Miss Aly and school secretary Deanna Briggs, who’s currently on chemo. Briggs’ doctors say she’s immune-compromised and at greater risk for infection. She worked in one of the buildings with the highest spore count.

“There just isn’t a guideline out there, and that’s what was shocking to me, Briggs said.

“As a teacher, our number one job is to keep them safe and if we don’t know what the harm is we can’t do our job,” Miss Aly added.

The California Department of Public Health (CDPH) insists they can’t set science-based exposure limits and the Center for Disease Control (CDC) notes that standards for acceptable or normal levels have not been established.

Both agencies recommend against the type of airborne mold spore testing done by Trinity Alps, noting that it can be expensive and difficult to interpret without established limits or standards. Unlike some other states, California does not require mold assessors and remediators to be licensed so the industry is largely unregulated here. There are no federal mold licensing regulations.

CDPH adds, “The establishment of health-based permissible exposure limits for indoor levels of mold would imply that some levels of mold are safe, when in fact, they may not be.”

Instead, both agencies say that any visible water damage, mold or musty odor is unhealthy and should be immediately addressed.

However, Green argues, It’s invisible unless you test for it!”

Trinity Alps Unified stresses that they didn’t know they had water damage or mold until they tested the air and started ripping open walls to look for the source.

“It’s an invisible toxin so you don’t know it’s there. “It grows in dark places so it’s not visible on the wall,” Green points out.

He notes that there is a set threshold for student safety when it comes to lead in the water and wildfire smoke outdoors, but there is nothing regulating the indoor air that students breathe for much of their eight-hour day.

Teachers do have some mold protections under the CAL/OSHA regulations for workers. In some countries, students are classified as workers, because they’re working in school, so they also have protections. But students have no indoor air quality protections here.

“It’s time for the state to look into the air quality of students in their buildings,” Green said.

NO TESTING IN SCHOOLS 

“If (schools) were tested on a regular basis you wouldn’t have these multi-million-dollar projects.” Green argues. “You would know that one classroom is at a high level you would simply abate that classroom and you would move on and keep student safety.”

He points out that his district spent millions over the summer to build a temporary campus made up of portable classrooms until they can secure the state funding needed to safely clean and restore their buildings.

Green worries the funding could take years to get and fears other districts might be tempted to leave kids in contaminated classrooms as they wait.

State law does require that schools are “maintained in good repair” which includes being free from water damage and visible mold. Schools have access to a voluntary visual checklist, known as the “Facility Inspection Tool” (FIT), to help them document any signs of moisture or mold. The results are incorporated into the annual School Accountability Report Card (SARC). 

But the inspections are self-regulated by the districts themselves and, according to the state, “FIT was designed to be a visual inspection tool by a common person.” The Office of Public School Construction, which developed the tool, acknowledges the FIT would not have identified the issues in Trinity noting, “The mold in Trinity Alps case could not be seen until it penetrates the ceilings or walls.”

Green stresses that if schools were required to test for airborne mold spores earlier, they might have identified the hidden problem earlier and avoided this massive mitigation that could bankrupt the district.

SETTING THEIR OWN LIMIT

Tired of waiting for regulators to step in, Trinity county has decided to do what the state and Feds have not. The director of Trinity County Public Health disagrees with CDPH’s assertion that science-based mold exposure limits can not be established.

“I think that there is a way to set a limit. And here in Trinity, we are working on a way to do that,” Anderson said.

The Trinity County Department of Public Health plans to set the nation’s first mold safety threshold for schools. They plan to use the  naturally-occurring outdoor mold spores as a baseline, taking indoor and outdoor readings every day for a year, and using an average of the two to establish an indoor threshold for classrooms.

“So if the inside levels are much higher than the outside levels, you have something inside your building producing mold. Find it eradicate it move on,” Green explains.

They stress that they still intend to address any visible mold or moisture issues – regardless of the spore count. But setting an airborne baseline will alert them to when they may need to search for hidden mold that can’t be seen.

“I think we will be the first school in the country where we’re going to say we will not allow our students to breathe toxic air. And we’ll have a number… and it will be scientific and it will be data-driven,” Green points out.

ROAD TO RECOVERY

In the meantime, it’s not clear how long students will be stuck in temporary portables without a cafeteria, library or gym.

But teachers are optimistic that it will be a healthier year.

“I have to wonder if it’s not related,” Mrs. Aly said.

“It’ll be really interesting to see as the cleanup happens. Do our illnesses go down?” added Principal Porpurko

A neighboring school reported a drop in sick days and an increase in attendance after mitigating their campus for mold.

Hoopa High School reports their attendance increased from 82.2% during their mold remediation in the 2016/17 school year, to 94% last year, their first full year with the new facilities. They add that they are already on track to see even higher attendance this year.

Superintendent Green is now calling on lawmakers to require regular mold-spore testing in schools, making it his mission to shed light on what’s growing in the dark.

STATE & FEDERAL RESPONSE 

To date, no California or Federal health agency has been willing or able to set a mold threshold for students.

We spoke on background with five different agencies, but none would agree to an interview on the record.  Each agency did stress, however, that any level of mold can be dangerous, and that any building can be contaminated regardless of climate.

The EPA notes that indoor mold is generally due to water intrusion and leaks, related more to building materials and plumbing than climate. They also note that an increase in mold and “some moisture problems in buildings have been linked to changes in building construction practices during the 1970s, 80s, and 90s.”

There is a voluntary federal program to help schools identify and prevent indoor air quality problems, but the state found, at last check, in 2004, only 11% of California schools took part. Neither CDPH or the EPA could provide updated numbers.

SCHOOL MOLD RESOURCES

  • PARENTS:
  • NEW NEWS:
  • OTHER RESOURCES

source https://gooddaysacramento.cbslocal.com/2019/11/05/hidden-toxic-mold-lurking-schools-no-one-testing/