Guest guest Posted March 20, 2006 Report Share Posted March 20, 2006 Smyrna man battles Kent on renovation Delaware http://www.delawareonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article? AID=/20060319/NEWS/603190352/1006/RSS M. Maxey Sr. says botched work on home by contractor led to formation of mold M. Maxey Sr. has vowed to burn down the house his family has lived in for 14 years before he lets a certain contractor return to make repairs. Buy this photo The News Journal/GARY EMEIGH M. Maxey Sr. says his home was the location of Smyrna's first kindergarten. Powered by Topix.net By JAMES MERRIWEATHER The News Journal 03/19/2006 SMYRNA -- M. " Marty " Maxey Sr., has a lung ailment called chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, sleep apnea and big blobs of black mold growing behind a wall of his utility room. That combination could well be hastening his demise, he thinks. He's taken to sleeping with the aid of a breathing machine, but, so far, has made no move to get rid of the mold, which has been building up since last summer. It's not his responsibility, he says, and he intends to do nothing about roof leaks that spawned the health hazard until Kent County officials authorize him to call in somebody of his own choosing to fix them. He blames the mold on a botched renovation project by a contractor selected by the county, and he has vowed to burn down the house before he lets the same company come in for repairs. " I'll die before I let them in here, " Maxey, 48, said of his home on South Street in Smyrna's historic district. The abode is a candidate, he said, for the National Register of Historic Places as the location of the town's first kindergarten. His family has owned and lived in the house about 14 years. " They had their shot, and they messed it up, " he said of the original contractor. " I'm living in a mushroom factory, and nobody seems to care. " County officials, meanwhile, point to a contract between Maxey and 's General Contractors of Dover, calling particular attention to a clause that shields the county from liability for " claims related to breach of contract, negligence or faulty workmanship. " The county administers the federally funded Community Development Block Grant program, the source of an $18,951 grant for the renovation of Maxey's house. County attorney Fred A. Townsend III insists that Maxey's beef is with the contractor. " Our feeling is that the contractor should be entitled to an opportunity to return to the premises and correct any defect that he finds in his work, " Townsend said. Albert Biddle who runs the grant program for Kent County said renovation contracts go to the lowest responsible bidders on individual projects. As a prospective bidder, 's was required to be licensed and insured and to provide credit and work references, Biddle said. The company had generated only a few minor complaints while completing " multiple jobs " under the program. Maxey played a role in 's selection, Biddle said, in the sense that he signed a contract that authorized the company to work on his home. " They agreed to let that con-tractor come in, " he said. " It's still his house, and he had to agree to let us work on it. " managers could not be reached for comment. But Levy Court Commissioner P. Banta, D-Smyrna, said his understanding was that the company had agreed to make any needed repairs. He also disputed Maxey's claim that he had " blown off " Maxey's complaints to the county, saying he had taken lots of notes during his own 60-minute inspection of the work in question. " The bottom line was that the contractor was more than willing and able to return to the site and make the necessary repairs, " Banta said. " When I unveiled that to Mr. Maxey, he made comments to the effect that he didn't want that contractor back on his property, and that's where I left it. " If he has to go to court, Maxey says, he'll seek an order for the county to buy his house, as is, for $1.2 million or to settle his grievances with a payment of $750,000 and an agreement to let him choose a contractor to make the repairs without cost to him. After the situation is handled, he intends to move with his 45-year- old wife, LuAnn, to a Kentucky town near the Tennessee border with a lake full of fish nearby. Under the grant program, Maxey is obligated to hold onto the renovated house for at least 10 years. If he gets rid of it before then, he becomes responsible for paying back a prorated share of the grant. " I want the house fixed so I can sell out, move and buy another home, " he said. Maxey said the black mold developed as water leaked through a newly installed roof, which, he said, features particleboard rather than the preferred plywood as its base. He said his 20-year-old son, , who works for a heating and air-conditioning company, found the mold after moisture undermined the integrity of wall paneling and put a cabinet in jeopardy of falling. " The cabinet was hanging, so my son started working on it, " Maxey said. " He said, 'You get out of here right now. You got black mold growing here.' " Out-of-pocket costs According to Maxey, a subcontractor failed to insulate ductwork that came with new heating and air-conditioning units. Its unwrapped condition, he said, caused condensation that spawned a layer of green mold on ceiling tiles along the path of the ductwork. For whatever reason, Maxey said, workers also blocked off a chimney that had served as a vent for carbon monoxide generated by a water heater in the basement. A crew from Chesapeake Utilities, returning July 25 to restore gas service that had been shut down to accommodate the installation of a new kitchen range and flooring, detected the dangerous condition and refused to turn the gas back on until it was corrected. The Maxeys dug into their own pockets to pay for a new water heater and pipes to vent the poisonous gas outside. " If it had been in the wintertime, and we would have been closed up like we are now, we could have died, " said Maxey, who ran unsuccessfully last year for a seat on Town Council. 'It's going to be a war' Maxey retired from being a mechanic in December 2002, the victim of back problems that required two rounds of surgery that reduced his height, he said, from 6 feet 3 1/2 inches to 6 feet even. A Social Security disability pension now represents his income. His wife, who put in 25 years as purchasing administrator for the state Department of Correction, retired to take care of him. Now, a leg is threatening to conk out, but, even so, Maxey is promising a court fight to the finish to force the county to buy his house or pay for a contractor of his choosing to fix it up. So far, he has not found a pro bono lawyer to take up his cause, but he says he'll act as his own attorney if need be. " Yes, I'm mad, I'm upset and I get madder every day, " Maxey said. " It's going to be a war. I don't back down, and I don't lose. " Contact Merriweather at 678-4273 or jmerriweather@.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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