Guest guest Posted June 3, 2006 Report Share Posted June 3, 2006 Mold continues to plague Dothan fire stations Dothan Eagle By Peggy Ussery / aussery@... June 1, 2006 http://www.dothaneagle.com/servlet/Satellite? pagename=DEA/MGArticle/DEA_BasicArticle & c=MGArticle & cid=1137836473123 & path=!news Dothan Fire Chief Sam Crawford began dealing with moldy fire stations within months of his appointment in 2001. Binders fill a bookcase shelf in his office with information about environmental health and workplace safety. One is marked " Mold Project. " City leaders thought they solved the problem two years ago with renovations to four fire stations. The Lakewood fire station, No. 2, was even torn down and rebuilt from the ground up. And things have been fine at Lakewood since. But, alas, mold reared its nasty head again. The same four fire stations renovated two years ago - No. 4 Southside, No. 6 Northside, No. 8 West End and No. 9 Northeast - all have had mold reappear. This time, Crawford said, the city plans to fix the problem once and for all. " I would hope the city could get a Christmas present of mold-free fire stations, " Crawford said. Past work done on the stations involved tearing out ceiling tiles and installing vent fans to help the flow of air between the stations' roofs and ceilings. All four stations were built in the mid to late 1990s and designed by the same architect, who is now out of business. What the city didn't do in the past to address the mold problems was change out the air conditioning systems, which are too large for the fire stations and lead to condensation and eventually mold. Dothan City Manager Mike West said city commissioners will be asked to enter a contract with Polyengineering to design renovations and oversee construction on each of the four stations. In the end, the project could cost more than $103,000. " I want it fixed once and for all, " West said. " We want to find a solution where we get it once and for all. We don't want the firemen who work in these stations to have to worry about their health and long-term repercussions. " Construction will likely take four to six weeks per station, which will be done one at a time. Fire crews will be moved to other stations during construction. Crawford said he'd rather spend the money on other capital needs, but correcting the situation at the fire stations takes precedent, especially since firefighters spend a third of their lives at the station house. " I think they know we've made every effort to minimize health risks, " Crawford said Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.