Guest guest Posted May 12, 2006 Report Share Posted May 12, 2006 BOSTON UNION TEACHER _ MAY, 2006 _ 7 (Excerpts from BTU Member Ginny Tomasini Lane’s Testimony) Good Morning. My name is Ginny Tomasini Lane. I have aspergillosis. And a law degree. I got one because I got the other. I am a teacher. In September of 1998 I was sent with my class of 25 first graders to a classroom that had been closed for mold infestation. It was the beginning of the end of my health, stamina and quality of life as I then knew it. The school was the Oliver Hazard in South Boston. Still open for business. There have been 14 cases of breast cancer. Six were diagnosed in a span of 18 months. Some are dead. Others are dying. I am the lucky one. I was clueless and allergy free when I was sent to that sick classroom. Clueless as to the effects of mold on the human body. A career Kindergarten teacher, observation was my most prized tool. How could it be that the same biohazards of war, banned by the Geneva Convention of 1924, could be making me and the kids sick with asthma and worse. In a classroom. A purported safehaven. The now retired head of the World Health Organization, Dr. A.V. Constantini, and Lars Qvick, Medical Director for the World Health Organization in 1999 authored “The Prevention of Breast Cancer, Hope at Last: The Fungal/Mycotoxin Etiology of Breast Cancer,†only a year after my students and I were exposed to aspergillus fumigatus. After 3 years of sinus infections, pneumonia, hearing loss, hair loss, and other symptoms, in 2000, my diagnosis was confirmed by a lung wash and biopsy. It was an exact match to testing of materials from my classroom, requested by BTU president Stutman, by an MIT lab. I was lucky. No amount of personal bad-mouthing and disparagement could argue with the results. Others are not so lucky. Industrial Hygienists at both the city and state levels did not test for what made me sick, and then did nothing to extricate my students and me from our toxic gulag. The harassment I suffered and my personal outrage at being made sick led to my application to law school in an attempt to find some answers to this problem. I have testified at the city, state and for Congressman Conyers in Detroit in 2002, as the first teacher to take this mold problem out of a strictly residential context. It took me 5-1/2 years to do a 3 year law degree program because of my continuous pneumonia, sinus infections and intense fatigue. I am now retired from the Boston Public Schools on disability retirement. I was only a few years short of what I would have needed and preferred as a regular retired teacher. I gave 30 years of my life to other people’s children. It is what we teachers do. Every day was a gift and privilege. But, the salary could never compensate me for the 8 years of loss of energy, time in bed and quality time which came out of the hides of my own 3 kids. My prime concern with this bill is that the Department of Public Health and Department of Occupational Safety is charged with the responsibility for enforcement. As far as I am concerned, because of the tendency to be subject to political manipulation, there needs to be oversight. Those in Industrial Hygiene and the medical profession are held to a canon of ethics which is set forth by their profession, and hat is the standard to which they should be held. It cannot be, that willful chicanery in testing of classrooms will be tolerated or that the data collection process tampered with. I support this bill and urge its passage, but with this caveat; to closely oversee the Indoor Air Quality Testing, and the results, as if your own lives and those of your children depend upon it. Because they do. Thank you. (Ginny Tomasini Lane is a retired teacher.) Retired Teacher Supports Legislation Regarding Indoor Air Quality New Report Links High Rate of Asthma to Poor School Environmental Conditions in Boston Public Schools City Council Considers Resolutions Calling for School Building Audit Deadlines and Increased Funding As the Boston City Council considered resolutions that respond to the urgent state of disrepair in Boston’s public schools, representatives from two public health advocacy groups released a new report showing stronger evidence linking poor school conditions with high rates of asthma. Written and produced by the Massachusetts Coalition for Occupational Safety and Health (MassCOSH) and the Boston Urban Asthma Coalition (BUAC), “Who’s Sick at School: Linking poor school conditions and health disparities for Boston’s children†is the first report in the state to compare school environmental audits with asthma rates. “As a parent and MassCOSH Healthy Schools Coordinator, it is shocking to see the data that shows the number of schools with poor environmental conditions that can affect asthma. But when you actually see the conditions with your own eyes, it is a disgrace that we cannot find the resources to make our schools healthy learning places.†said Isabel , at a City Council hearing where the report was released. Asthma is the number one chronic illness of children in the Boston Public Schools and the number one childhood cause for hospitalizations in Boston. It accounts for an average of 14 million missed school days and results in $9 billion in health care costs nationwide. Nationally, inequities in health conditions, such as asthma, together may account for as much as a quarter of the racial gap in school readiness. The cause or causes of asthma are still unclear although research has found that exposure to pests, molds, diesel exhaust, and environmental tobacco smoke play key roles in asthma’s development and exacerbation. Poor school environmental conditions exacerbate already-existing student asthma and contribute to problems such as allergies, sinus infections and decreased student performance. “It’s imperative that we get funding to fix our schools immediately. We need to do something about the leaks and the mice. Students and teachers are getting sick,†said Nia Burke, Physical Education Teacher and Boston Teachers Union member. Using data from school environmental audits collected in 2004 - 2005, the report shows that those students attending the schools ranking worst on three major environmental factors for asthma (mold, pests, and leaks) also have high asthma rates. Eighty-five percent of Boston Public Schools reported leaks or water stains, 36 reported visible mold growth, 63 percent reported overt pest signs, 83 percent reported repairs needed and 61 percent reported improper chemical storage. Over 80 percent reported one or more of these problems. The schools with the highest percentages are often located in the lowest income areas and those with the highest incidences of asthma – some double the state average. White, BUAC Parent Leader and parent of two Boston Public School students said, “We know what the problem is and we have the findings, so why does it take so long to get repairs done? It should be about the health of our children, yet why does it take so long? The money should be in the budget to fix our schools.†In presenting this report, the Coalitions call for the Mayor and City Council to support them in raising the $200 million needed for capital repairs that would bring these top offenders up to safe and healthy standards and to ensure that the Mayor’s Green Building Initiative prioritizes work in the schools. They also emphasized that the health of children of color and low income families are disproportionately impacted: 85% of Boston’s student population are children of color and 74% qualify for free or reduced-rate meals. “The city can address many of these problems now. While we would like to see the state and federal government add their support, we can’t wait forever. We have known about the problems long enough – it is time to see some changes made.†said Zotter, Executive Director of the Boston Urban Asthma Coalition. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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