Guest guest Posted March 1, 2006 Report Share Posted March 1, 2006 6NEWS Investigators: Home sick home pt. 3 06:11 AM EST on Tuesday, February 21, 2006 By JEFF SONIER / 6NEWS E-mail Jeff: JSonier@... 6NEWS House inspector King said the mold problems in Hunter Oaks were more severe than what the builder reported. 6NEWS investigators were back in the neighborhood where several families said mold in their houses made them sick and forced them to move out. Now 6NEWS talked with a home inspector who said what he saw made him afraid of getting sick himself. The neighborhood is Hunter Oaks, off Rea Road in Union County, just over the Mecklenburg County line. The area we're talking about in Hunter Oaks is Mossington Lane. So far, 6NEWS talked with the former home owners, we've talked with the home builder, and we’ve talked with the soil experts about it. Now the home inspector who's actually been underneath and seen it for himself says the problem with mold was a lot worse than we were told. King was looking for trouble. That's what a home inspector does. But after what this inspector saw at homes in Hunter Oaks last year -- the moldy crawl spaces of the houses here, the health problems of the families here King started worrying about his own health. " And you can't help but think in the back of your mind if it's doing this to somebody else, if I continue to put myself in this environment, is it going to do it to me, too? " King said. King investigated for mold in three different houses at Hunter Oaks. The same houses where whole families got sick. The same houses Ryland homes bought back from the families for more than $1 million. The same houses where Ryland told 6NEWS the mold was limited. " It was less than one square foot of mold in the crawl space, " said Ryland Homes President . “And how does that compare with what you saw? " 6NEWS asked King. " There was definitely more than one square foot of mold, " said King. " If you have a mold level in a house that's causing somebody living in that house to be sick, you have a problem " King said it's all right here in his home inspection report for one Hunter Oaks house -- pictures from the crawl space and all. " On the bottom of these joists you can see a fuzzy like substance,” said King. " All that fuzz there is some mold. " " How unusual is it to find that much growth in so many places? " 6NEWS asked. " With a house with that much water under it, it's not unusual at all, " King said. Other findings from King's report show a virtual breeding ground for mold with humidity above 90 percent in the crawl space, and standing water in the foundation. 6NEWS: " Grading, poor. Gutters, poor. Crawl space, poor, " KING: " Yeah, actually (the home) have a large pond of water sitting up against the side of the house, near the crawl space door, " King said. " (And) you're pulling whatever's in the crawl space up in the house. " Video on Demand VIDEO: Watch this story Build your own newscast Related Stories 6NEWS Investigators: Mold problems at one Charlotte area neighborhood 6NEWS Investigators: Home sick home King's inspection report also differs with how Ryland describes mold levels inside the homes. " There were no elevated levels of mold inside the homes at all, " said. But King showed 6NEWS the equipment he used to measure mold inside those Hunter Oaks homes, and the numbers he got -- mold numbers a lot higher than Ryland's. “And if the numbers are high?” 6NEWS asked. " If the numbers are high, then it's glaringly apparent that you've got a problem that's not going to affect just one person, but affect several people, " said King. And while Ryland has denied, from the beginning, that these rashes and other health problems were mold-related… " You don't see any connection between the illnesses of the families and the time they lived in those houses with the mold in the crawl space, " 6NEWS asked. " We've seen no evidence of that, Jeff, " said. This 6NEWS investigation has already shown handwritten notes and letters from doctors that say the neighbors they treated really did get sick from mold in their home. King said it's what home inspectors call sick building syndrome. " If you have a mold level in a house that's causing somebody living in that house to be sick, you have a problem, " King said. Ryland, meanwhile, said they haven't seen the inspectors report so they can't respond to it. They've also said from the beginning that whatever problems those houses did have with mold or moisture have since been fixed. 6NEWS also did a little research on sick building syndrome. The federal EPA's own website describes it as a situation where people get sick when they're in a building, and get better when they're away from the building, which is exactly how the families who lived in those houses described what happened to them. The EPA website also lists mold that grows near standing water as one possible cause of sick building syndrome. Online at: http://www.wcnc.com/news/local/stories/wcnc-ad-2_20_06-homesick_home.48fdde53.ht\ ml __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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