Guest guest Posted October 21, 2005 Report Share Posted October 21, 2005 I'm forwarding Marti 's message . . . some of you know her. This is a very sad story with no apparent answer! Marti is a long-time implant survivor who was hit, not just by breast implants, but mold! Rogene > Note: forwarded message attached. > > From: " Marti " <forjustus@...> > <Undisclosed-Recipient:;> > Subject: " Mold Attack " - (male) school teacher sick > and so is the school's building! > Date: Fri, 21 Oct 2005 12:48:31 -0700 > > Sharing this new news article with my friends > in case of you are interested, or know anyone > dealing with mold in their home, workplace, or > schools. I grabbed on to this article because this > man impressed me with his story. It seems to me > that men (G*d love 'em, and I do too) seem to hide > their ills and tend to avoid connecting the dots as > to the cause when it comes to systemic problems, but > this male school teacher sure does. At the end of > this article, I've patched in a short description of > what happened to my home and my SUGGESTIONS OF > PRECAUTION FOR YOU. Here is the article with more > photos at the end: > > > From www.phoenixnewtimes.com > Originally published by Phoenix New Times 2005-10-13 > ©2005 New Times, Inc. All rights reserved. > > Mold Attacks! > If Gilbert school officials had played straight, > Mesquite Junior High > > kids and teachers would've run for their lives. > > > > By > > Jeff Corn didn't have a doctor before 1988. Never > needed one. > > Scanlon > > > > Jeff Corn says the school building made him deathly > ill. > > He may have been the healthiest health nut in > Gilbert. The former collegiate runner coached > Gilbert's junior high and high school cross-country > teams by running out ahead of his athletes, playing > rabbit to make his greyhounds stronger. He ate > smart; he was a cauldron of positive energy. In > physical-education class, his students loved him > because he was a walking runner's high. > > In 1987, a new Gilbert High School was built. That > year, Corn and the other junior-high teachers moved > into the old high school, a collection of > 24-year-old buildings just south of Gilbert's > downtown. > > And all of a sudden, the 40-year-old superhuman > needed a doctor. > > He began having sinus infections and high blood > pressure. He began getting fungus growths on his > body. Through the 1990s, he was visiting the doctor > almost monthly -- sinus infection, fungal growth, > fatigue, pneumonia, eye ulcers, cysts. > > In 2000, he was diagnosed with testicular cancer, > and 13 lymph nodes were removed. Several months > later, new cancer was found, which led to more > chemotherapy. Again, he beat the cancer. > > Corn kept returning to work, kept coaching. But by > 2003, he was barely making it through the school > day. When he wasn't at school, he was usually > asleep. > > In August 2003, Corn returned to school after the > summer break. What he found in his office, he says, > explained everything: > > It was the building that was killing him. > > When he arrived, men in hazard suits were tearing > out parts of the gymnasium's ceilings and walls. > Most of the gym was cordoned off and locked up, but > teachers and students could still walk through the > girls' and boys' locker rooms. > > After one student walked past a worker in a hazard > suit, he asked Corn, " How come we don't have to wear > those suits, if they do? " > > Great question. And Corn had no answer. Like all the > teachers, he wasn't told what the workers were doing > or why they were treating the gym like a Superfund > site. > > When teachers asked why parts of the gym were being > torn apart, their principal, Marti Farmer, said it > was just routine maintenance. > > That wasn't true. > > The truth was, the gym was full of mold and > asbestos. It had been that way for years. > > And the wall against which Corn's desk sat for 17 > years was one of the worst spots. > > What Corn discovered from speaking with other > employees, and a New Times investigation seems to > confirm, is that Mesquite Junior High had been a > breeding ground for black mold since at least the > early 1990s. > > For years, though, school officials essentially told > maintenance crews to just paint over the problem, > not fix it. And school officials spent that time > ignoring staff concerns that the buildings might be > toxic. > > The health effects of their actions on students and > teachers can never be fully known. > > However, anecdotal evidence, and a review of teacher > and student illnesses while in the buildings, would > suggest that Mesquite Junior High was -- and, to a > lesser extent, continues to be -- a sick complex of > buildings. > > For his part, Jeff Corn is a broken man. > > He continues to be plagued with odd ailments, so > much so that he felt he could no longer work by > autumn 2004. He can't sleep, then he sleeps for days > at a time. His memory is hit-and-miss; he has > trouble concentrating. He now has no medical > insurance and no job. He recently sold his home to > free up money for living and medical costs. > > Gilbert school officials contend there is no > scientific proof that links Corn's illnesses to > toxic mold at the school. They say the medical > pathologist -- who says Corn is full of mold toxins > -- could be wrong and definitely can't prove Corn > was exposed at work. > > " How do we know he wasn't exposed at home? " the > Gilbert Public School District's attorney asked New > Times. > > Therefore, Corn is on his own. > > Over the past few years, officials say, they have > removed the swamp coolers and faulty plumbing > responsible for any mold problems at Mesquite. Air > tests in 1998, 2003 and 2004 show the school is now > free of mold, they contend. > > In fact, though, this isn't what the tests say. > > In addition, a Mesquite custodial employee says the > officials' assessment doesn't fit with the reality > of the aging buildings involved. > > " We're still chasing the problem, " he told New > Times, on condition of anonymity. " The mold is like > a cancer in these buildings. " > > Now, Corn says, his only interest is in making sure > that Mesquite Junior High doesn't destroy anyone > else. > > " I know that building did this to me, " he says. " So > how many others have been affected, how many more > will be affected? The district administrators don't > care about those questions. All they care about is > finding a way to avoid liability. " > > He is concerned that the same game may be being > played at schools across the Valley. > > " All you need is a leaky old building, a district > strapped for money and [school officials] trying to > keep things running at all costs, " he says. " It's a > deadly combination. " > > But the story of Mesquite Junior High shows how > difficult it is to identify an unhealthy building. > Here, students come and go in two years; staffers, > looking for better jobs in better facilities, leave > almost as quickly. > > New Times' investigation found that numerous > students, teachers and maintenance workers believe > they were made ill by the building. The problem is, > in the transient society of a large junior high > school, nobody stayed long enough to make any solid > connection between their illness and the mold. > > Nobody except school old-timer Jeff Corn. > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Marti Farmer, the longtime Mesquite principal who > left the school last year for a new job, didn't > return telephone calls from New Times. > > Although Farmer was the official with whom school > employees dealt, she reported to the school district > and presumably the school superintendent, who must > have known what was going on at the junior high and > sanctioned her actions. Even now, the district's > lawyer -- to whom all questions about black mold are > referred -- refuses to admit that the mold was a > health threat to teachers and children. > > Therefore, it becomes difficult to know when Farmer > first became aware that her school had a serious > problem with black mold. > > What is known, though, is that teachers were > complaining about black mold outbreaks as far back > as the early 1990s. > > One of them was Tim Rutt, now a teacher and football > coach at Hamilton High School in the Chandler > Unified School District. > > Rutt taught P.E. and coached basketball and football > at Mesquite from 1991 to 1998. Rutt says he was > " coughing constantly " through his time at Mesquite. > And during that time, he was continually finding > mold growing in the gymnasium, locker rooms, P.E. > offices and storage rooms. > > " It was especially bad at the beginning of the > school year, " Rutt says. " Every August, you'd come > in there and everything would be covered with mold. > Every year we'd take the equipment in to Marti > [Farmer] and every year she'd just say 'clean it > up.' The walls would be covered so they'd come throw > up some new drywall. Like clockwork, after a few > months, the mold was back. " > > In the fall of 1997, Rutt again arrived at school to > a pile of mold-covered sports equipment. Again, he > says, he took it in to Farmer complaining that > something was " seriously wrong with this building. " > > Same thing. She again told him to clean it up. > > But this time, something strange happened, Rutt > says. He left the equipment with her and told her it > needed to be tested. > > " She calls me at night a little later and asks, > 'Tim, you didn't touch any of that equipment, did > you?' I said, Of course I touched it. I've been > touching it for years.' She said, 'Well, stop.' > > " She said she was ordering us all new equipment. > That led to the obvious question, 'So what were the > results of the test?' I can still remember [that she > said]: 'I can't tell you.' > > " It was crazy. At that point, I knew I had to get > out of that environment. " > > And so, a year later, he did. And once he arrived at > Hamilton High School, the wheezing and coughing > stopped. > > " I know it was that building, " he says. " I knew if I > taught there long enough, it was really going to > destroy my [immune] system. " > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Ashlie Perro never had breathing problems in > elementary school. But once she reached Mesquite > Junior High, she spent much of the next two years > carrying inhalers. > > She was a runner, but running became increasingly > difficult for her in junior high. At cross-country > meets, she would run with asthma inhalers in each > hand. Her coach, Jeff Corn, joked that he would need > to get her holsters for her inhalers. > > She was known as " Wheezer " by the other kids. > > " It was really scary, " says Perro, now 23. " It would > just be, all of a sudden, I couldn't breathe. " > > Once, during a race in Coolidge, Perro had such a > severe attack that Corn called 911. Perro spent the > night in the emergency room, with Corn at her side, > trying to get her breathing stabilized. > > During her eighth-grade year, Perro tested positive > for an allergy to mold. Mold couldn't be the > problem, her mother thought, because they had just > moved into a new home with no signs of mold or water > damage. > > " I never associated it with the school, " Perro's > mother, Corina Noirfalise says. " That seems stupid > now, but I just didn't. " > > And once Ashlie left Mesquite, the breathing > problems slowly disappeared. By her sophomore year, > Ashlie and her mom had forgotten about those > problems back in junior high. > > Another student, Steve Granados, remembers > collapsing from an apparent asthma attack in a > Mesquite classroom, which was later discovered to > have heavy water damage. The teacher, who later died > of cancer, had to call 911. Granados had forgotten > the incident until last year, when he happened to be > over repairing Jeff Corn's air conditioning. > > " When your lives are so busy, once a problem ends, > you forget about it, " says Betty Penn, whose son and > daughter both went to Mesquite. " You just move on > with your lives. That's what happened with us. " > > Penn's daughter le started at Mesquite in > 1997. Soon after, she began having intense asthma > attacks at the school. > > Through le's seventh- and eighth-grade years, > Penn says, she was frequently called to go pick up > her daughter at the nurse's office. Penn says that > every time she went to the office, there were " seven > or eight other kids wheezing just like her. > > " I did say something to the nurse because they were > all in there with these croupy coughs, " she says. > " It was just weird. I've never seen another nurse's > office that crowded. But [school officials] said > they were just normal colds. > > " I guess, " she says with a wry smile, " it was always > the cold season there or something. " > > Then le graduated. Then le stopped > needing inhalers. > > Then Penn went to Mesquite. Then he suddenly > needed an inhaler. > > Penn would have breathing attacks that would cause > him to miss many days of school at a time. Doctors > put him on cortisol steroids that made him bloat. > > " He was miserable, " Penn says. > > Then he left Mesquite. Then he got better. > > " You'd think we all would have thought something > [was going on], " Penn says. " But you're so busy with > your lives. You just never put two and two > together. " > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Mesquite Junior High was run down when Ninfa > was a student there back in 1991. > > By the time she started working at the school as a > custodian 10 years later, " it was a disaster, " she > says. > > sees the degraded condition of Mesquite in > racial colors. > > Mesquite serves the old central core of Gilbert, > where the majority of the booming city's poorer > Hispanics live. As Gilbert has grown, she says, " all > the money has gone out to build new schools for the > new wealthier suburbanites. > > " It was considered the old dump for Hispanic kids > back when I went there, " she says. " The district > just has never given it much attention. " > > In 1998, after years of mold caking the school's > locker rooms, school officials conducted the first > " mold remediation. " > > An industrial hygiene survey by Hutzel and > Associates found extremely elevated levels of fungal > growth in the gym's locker and equipment rooms. One > fresh-air vent showed fungi counts 1,000 times > higher than a typical clean wall in the building, > while one racquetball racket had a count more than > 10,000 times higher than a clean surface. > > In November of that year, a company cleaned the > locker room and storage room, tested for fungi and, > finding none, reported that the problem was solved. > > Rutt, then the P.E. Department head, was told that > any mold problems the school might have had were > gone. > > Which was a sick joke. > > Within months, the mold was back. > > And even if it had been eradicated, research on > toxic mold's long-term effects suggests it might > have already done damage to the immune systems of > teachers and students. > > School officials never tested teachers or students > for toxins in their bodies. Never have. Indeed, most > were never told there was even a problem. > > In 2001, transferred from her job at > Highland High School to take a custodial position at > Mesquite Junior High. The school was closer to her > home. > > " That was a huge mistake, " she says. " Highland was a > good school. " > > At Mesquite, she says, she learned how the school's > administration dealt with what she called " an > epidemic " of toxic mold. > > " I'd see mold growing on pipes or whatever, I'd put > in a work order and somebody would come wipe the > pipe off and tape it, " she says. " I started going to > [Principal Farmer] saying, 'We've got to do > something.' And she made it real clear: Gilbert > isn't going to do anything about this school. She > just said, 'Clean it up as best you can.' " > > says she knew it was toxic black mold > because the district had given custodians seminars > in how to identify it. > > " It was sad. We were trained to identify problems > and then told to ignore them. " > > Both summers she worked at the school, she and the > other custodians were asked to go into the buildings > and clean them before the teachers and students got > there. > > " In some places, mold covered the walls and the > floors; it was amazing, " she says. " One of the sinks > was just full of it. We literally took pressure > washers to some of the areas. That was the only > thing that would work. " > > The sewer would back up often in the buildings, she > says. She would try to suck it up with a shop > vacuum, then disinfect. Time and time again, it > would happen. > > She began to have health problems, she says. A > nephew who went to school at that time had > respiratory problems. > > During the 2002 school year, she says, she would ask > Farmer to contact district officials to plead with > them that something had to be done to fix the > school. > > " If you saw that place day in and day out, it made > you crazy knowing that teachers and students were in > there, " says. " But the principal was more > upset that I kept making an issue out of it. > > " By the end of that second year, I just had to get > out of there, " she says. " It was just too much. " > > A year later, school administrators and district > officials apparently decided it was finally time to > attempt to clean up the gymnasium again. > > Again, though, they didn't tell teachers what they > were doing. > > For years, in the entry of the gymnasium, water had > been seeping through the ceiling, creating two large > fetid puddles at the gym's entrance. > > When a maintenance employee climbed up into the > ceiling, he found a blanket of mold covering a > blanket of asbestos. > > The school's teachers learned about the mold and > asbestos from building and custodial staff. At the > time, though, teachers say, Marti Farmer kept > telling them the gym would be blocked off during the > summer of 2003 for routine maintenance. > > The locks on the gymnasium were changed. But when > P.E. teachers peeked in the windows, they saw a sign > warning of asbestos. > > When one P.E. teacher asked the principal about the > sign, the teacher says, Farmer told her she was > wrong. She hadn't seen an asbestos sign. > > The asbestos sign was gone the next day, the teacher > says. > > Frustrated, the P.E. teachers banded together in > September 2003 and wrote a letter to Farmer and > other administrators. > > " We feel we have gone through the proper channels in > trying to resolve our concerns -- with no results. > We have two staff members who are continually sick, > with one being diagnosed with cancer. Supposedly, > our mold situation was taken care of years ago. Yet, > on numerous occasions, we have had equipment thrown > out due to the mold. This is how the problem is > remedied. We had a teacher who mysteriously > contracted a rash. The rest of us are continually > working through our ailments, which include sinus > congestion, chronic colds, dry coughs, eyes, nose > and throat irritation, rashes, arthritic pains and > aches. > > " We believe that our health and that of our students > are in jeopardy, if not now, in the future. " > > The letter was signed by six teachers and coaches, > including Jeff Corn. > > Following the writing of that letter, Corn began > trying to compile a list of other teachers at > Mesquite Junior High who had contracted odd ailments > since working there. > > " That's when it finally started making sense to me > what was happening, " he says. > > He says he found seven other teachers or aides at > the school who were suffering from diseases often > associated with a failure of the autoimmune system, > one of the hallmarks of toxic mold poisoning. > > Two teachers had died of lung cancer. Corn says > those teachers were non-smokers, a statement that > New Times couldn't independently confirm. > > Then, he took his information to the principal, who, > he says, told him he was crazy. > > And since that time, this is how district officials > have treated Jeff Corn. > > " For 18 years, they say I'm this wonderful teacher > and coach, " he says. " Then I bring this up, so now > I'm crazy. It's shocking how quickly these people > turn on a person, how quickly they'll turn on the > teachers and students. " > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > The science of mold isn't terribly complex. > > And everyone knows mold's habitat -- any wet, warm > place. > > Like New Orleans. > > Or, any wet wall in an otherwise dry, warm place, > like Phoenix or Gilbert. > > Indeed, if given water, mold loves Arizona just as > much as Louisiana. > > What is complex, though, is trying to tie toxic mold > to human health problems. > > The first question: Are molds present in the > person's environment? > > In Corn's case, in Mesquite Junior High, the answer > is yes. > > The district's air-quality tests, even as spotty and > incomplete as they were, confirmed that. > > The 1998 tests showed extremely high levels of mold. > > > In the summation of a May 2004 air-quality test of > the P.E. building, inspectors noted that fungal > spore counts were much higher in tests of outside > air than inside air. > > True, but the numerous outside spores were all > harmless. Buried deep in the test results was the > fact that Stachybotrys chartarum, the most notorious > of toxic molds, showed up in both the " East Gym " and > " West Gym " samples. > > In November 2004 -- after officials again claimed to > have taken care of the mold problem -- more testing > of the gymnasium by Health Effects Group, Inc. > showed four rooms with elevated spore counts of > toxic molds. The inspectors noted " water staining > and sporadically located drywall deterioration in > the boys' locker room. There was evidence of > corroded plumbing systems throughout the gymnasium > facility. " > > The building, the inspectors said, " should be > considered for renovation activities. " > > But here's where that question gets complicated. > > Were the toxic molds present when the person was > there? Was it possible for the toxins from those > molds to reach humans? How long were the humans > exposed to the toxins? > > Beyond that, scientists continue to argue two > critical points in assessing mold damage to humans: > > What signs in the human body indicate damage from > toxic molds? > > What are the effects of long-term exposure versus > short-term exposure? > > After Corn left Mesquite, a former student who is > now a physician suggested he contact a medical > pathologist named Dr. Croft, a longtime > professor of environmental toxicology at the > University of Wisconsin before starting his own > toxicology lab. > > Croft asked Corn for a urine sample as well as a > tissue sample taken during Corn's treatments for > cancer. > > Croft, who, since the 1980s, has examined more than > 7,000 cases of potential toxic mold poisoning, > determined that Corn's urine sample showed that he > had been exposed to " moderate levels of > Trichothecene Mycotoxins, " the toxic byproduct of > certain molds. > > Croft continued, " There is no safe level of > Trichothecene Mycotoxins. This mycotoxin can affect > every cell in the body, but the brain, lungs, > immune, gastrointestinal and reproductive organs are > especially susceptible. " > > Besides the show of mycotoxins in the urine, Corn's > tissue sample, Croft said, " clearly demonstrates the > chronic exposure to trichothecene mycotoxins to this > subject. " > > The report Croft sent to Corn included hundreds of > pages of medical literature supporting his > conclusion. > > Earlier this year, armed with Croft's diagnosis, > along with numerous photos he had taken in 2003 of > black mold in many locations at Mesquite Junior > High, Corn went to Gilbert district officials > seeking $675,000 in damages, an amount, he says, > that he would invest so he could live out his life > on the interest. > > He also asked for assurance that Mesquite Junior > High would be made genuinely mold-free as soon as > humanly possible. > > District officials said Mesquite already was > mold-free. > > They said Corn's request was absurd. > > The district hired a University of Arizona > toxicologist, Dr. Sullivan, to review both the > conclusions of Corn's doctor and the air-quality > test results taken from Mesquite in 1998, 2003 and > 2004. > > Sullivan concluded that with the evidence provided, > there was no way to link Corn's cancer to his > workplace. Oddly, Sullivan didn't address any of > Corn's myriad other illnesses. Sullivan brought into > question, too, Croft's methodology in determining > that Corn's body showed evidence of mold poisoning. > > Sullivan's report was thrown back at Corn in late > September. The district's offer: Three months' pay. > Take it or leave it. > > The only real conclusion reached in the standoff was > that much more testing needed to be done on Jeff > Corn's body. > > But Jeff Corn has run out of money. He sold his > house recently, a move that he hopes will cover some > of his medical and living expenses. > > More tests would strap him financially. He can't > afford what would be a very expensive legal fight. > > And the school district isn't going to pay for any > tests because it argues it is not responsible. > > Heck, Sullivan claimed, health-nut Corn might have > gotten sick from the foods he ate. > > So, the district wins. And Corn is left out in the > cold. > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > By February of this year, Jeff Corn was on the verge > of suicide. His sleeping problems were at a zenith. > He was in pain. His memory was failing. He was > deeply depressed at the thought of life with a > chronically collapsing immune system. > > In 2003, he had been struck by a drunk driver. After > that, doctors put him on antidepressants. > > In December 2004, his school insurance was > discontinued. He no longer could afford the > antidepressants. > > In April, a friend of Corn's, seeing that he was > slipping, asked a psychologist friend to evaluate > Corn at no cost. > > The psychologist noted the frightening collapse of > Corn's physical and mental well-being. > > The man once named by the Arizona Republic as the > state's " Coach of the Year " was now " unable to get > out of bed four days out of the week, " the > psychologist wrote in his report of Corn's > condition. " Corn is suffering from frequent crying > and suicidal ideations. He is having difficulty with > concentration and memory. " The psychologist also > noted that Corn suffered from nervousness, > trembling, headaches, dizziness, pains in the chest, > heart pounding, pains in the lower back, nausea, > sore muscles, hot and cold spells, numbness and " the > feeling of being trapped. " > > Clyde Dangerfield, the attorney for the school > district, noted in his interview with New Times that > Corn also told him " he was hearing voices. " > > The implication being that Corn is too unstable to > know that mold from his workplace made him unstable. > > > The psychologist determined that Corn was > permanently disabled. > > Croft, the medical pathologist who determined Corn > was full of mycotoxins, said the best treatment for > Corn would be at the facility of an expert in toxic > mold poisoning in Dallas. > > Great idea. But can Corn afford it, even with > proceeds from the sale of his house? > > Most likely, the Gilbert school district is free of > Jeff Corn. > > The problem is, Jeff Corn may not be a medical > anomaly. > > Corn's problems began with respiratory ailments that > seemingly advanced to a host of debilitating > conditions. > > According to a recent study by University of > Southern California researchers, Corn's progression > of ailments closely mirrors the problems experienced > by 65 patients who had been exposed to mold in > California, Texas and Arizona. > > The mold-exposed patients first complained of > asthma-like symptoms, followed by persistent > flu-like illnesses, severe fatigue, and impaired > memory and concentration. > > Compared to more than 200 non-exposed patients, the > mold-exposed patients showed sometimes profound > decreases in cognitive ability. Balance, motor > skills, verbal recall and long-term memory were all > damaged. Several patients suffered from severe > depression after their mold exposure. > > What is most frightening, though, is what happened > when researchers gave eight of the patients the same > battery of tests more than a year later, long after > they had left the mold-contaminated buildings that > caused their problems. > > None of the eight patients showed improved > functioning. > > In fact, seven of the eight had gotten worse. > > " Absent additional mold exposure, function in 88 > percent of these patients had deteriorated during > the course of the year, " the study's author, Dr. > Kaye Kilburn, wrote. > > The point: > > If Corn is dying because of toxic mold exposure at > Mesquite Junior High, he may not be alone. > > Which means that instead of making fun of Jeff Corn, > Gilbert officials might want to provide testing for > students or teachers who have shown symptoms of > toxic mold exposure during their time at Mesquite. > > For now, though, everyone involved with Mesquite > Junior High is looking to the upcoming Gilbert > schools bond issue. If voters approve the bond > proposal, more than $4.5 million will go toward > renovating the Mesquite complex. > > Corn is trying a renovation of his own. > > Amid bouts with pain and depression, he says he's > regained the strength to " earnestly try to fight > this stuff in my body. " He plans to use some of the > money from selling his house to place himself in > that toxin treatment center in Dallas. > > Meantime, he is self-medicating. For example, one > basic treatment attempted by some toxicologists for > purging the body of toxins is frequent saunas. > > So, when he's up for it, Corn has begun running > again -- in the heat of the day. > > " I've got to try to fight this, " he says. " It may > not work, but I'm going to give it my best shot. " > > As for his old school, Corn simply hopes that > Gilbert officials will finally give their best shot > to helping other teachers and students who were made > ill by years of moldering decay at Mesquite. > > " I have this terrible fear it's going to start > catching up with others who came into that school > later than I did, " Corn says. " What makes me so mad > is this could have been stopped a long time ago. But > instead, [the school district] just let the problem > grow. " > > Scanlon > > > > Mesquite Junior High in Gilbert. Black mold could've > become the school's mascot. > > > > > > > > > > > Water and mold damage have been common at Mesquite. > > > > > > > > > > Medical pathologist Dr. Croft says > mycotoxins from mold " can affect every cell in the > body. " > > ________________________________________________________________________ > > > A short synopsis of what happened to me as wells as > suggestions for You: > > > > I'm finally on a positive track toward the future, > but ... > > My life has been devasted for 5 years now and > will never be the same in ways most people wouldn't > think of. I have lived in alternative housing, > borrowing money against the damaged house to pay for > the double-housing (displaced and harmed in many > ways similar to those who lost their homes from > hurricanes, but without the public understanding and > without any government support). One former > neighbor of mine, who is a psychologist, rebutted > the negative remarks of the people who bought my > home, saying back to them, if she was *...*... (I'll > skip the word) about the mold, why did the insurance > company pay on the claims? This was only about 1/3 > of the value of what was actually destroyed, and > then what I received was negated by the fact that I > had to battle the insurance company at an appraisal > hearing, and then a mediation hearing, and then a > pre-trial settlement. I won at every stage of the > battle, YET the costs of battle matched whatever I > was eventually awarded. Important point here: > Insurance DID pay on airborne mold, not just where > water and mold were visibly growing on things. That > says something powerful about validating the dangers > of mold as to toxic contamination! > > My home and all of it's contents were > destroyed, and that sure changed my desire and > ability to buy a new home. Only recently, I have > been able to go shopping at malls without being > ripped up emotionally for the loss of family > treasurers and all the sweet things one collects > over the years, which makes no sense to re-acquire > at my stage in life, if I could afford to. Now, the > cost of new homes is through the roof, especially in > Arizona (way more than elsewhere in the U.S.) where > homes have DOUBLED in value within a six month time > frame. The housing market shot up just three months > AFTER I sold my house for only $65,000, which I had > to use to pay off debts over the lack of > reimbursement from insurance and the costs to battle > them. I had no ability to rebuild it. If I had any > money left to rebuild it, I would be liable to the > new owners, even with full disclosure. My house is > now listed for $199,000 after it was rebuilt by the > people who buy " ugly houses, " where they rebuilt it > at wholesale rates, and they don't have to disclose > about the mold when they resell it to people they > don't give a da*m about harming. > My WARNINGS for YOU: Make sure you have enough > insurance on your home and personal contents. When > an insurance agent has you fill out a form where you > list your key items in your home, my rule of thumb > is to take that amount and double it as to the > limits of your insurance for personal contents. You > would not believe how valuable all the additional > items in your home add up to. Keep your receipts > off-site, in a safe deposit box or storage unit and > video every single thing in your home, even inside > of drawers, describing the brands and models, and if > you recall what you paid for it, you might state > that you believe that is what you paid for it > (you'll have to verify it any way, but it helps). > And finally (although this was not my situation), > NEVER neglect standing water, or leaking pipes for > more than 24 to 48 hours. If you suspect mold > damage, at LEAST start with some minimal, initial > laboratory testing BEFORE you allow, for example, > your walls to be opened up, doing repairs without > proper " mold remediation, " which includes > quarantining off the area or room to protect the > rest of your belongings. In a Jim Carrey kind of > tone, I would say, That stuff is NASTY! > > Needless to say, I REALLY couldn't stop crying for > everyone at the Gulf Coast. At the mention of every > sad story, I instantly began choking back tears and > crying, and finally called counselors to help get > over it. > > Lastly, regarding the controversy and all that > surrounds that, this was like the silicone issue ... > all over again ... in practically every way. > > Marti > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2005 Report Share Posted October 21, 2005 Thank you Rogene for this. We have just sploken to our mold specialist and he is worried because and I both have headaches today. He will help us and he will be calling some of his friends who might help to seal off the dangerous areas. He will have them come in on Sunday. Love you..........Lea ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~``` " Mold Attack " - (male) school teacher sick >> and so is the school's building! >> Date: Fri, 21 Oct 2005 12:48:31 -0700 >> >> Sharing this new news article with my friends >> in case of you are interested, or know anyone >> dealing with mold in their home, workplace, or >> schools. I grabbed on to this article because this >> man impressed me with his story. It seems to me >> that men (G*d love 'em, and I do too) seem to hide >> their ills and tend to avoid connecting the dots as >> to the cause when it comes to systemic problems, but >> this male school teacher sure does. At the end of >> this article, I've patched in a short description of >> what happened to my home and my SUGGESTIONS OF >> PRECAUTION FOR YOU. Here is the article with more >> photos at the end: >> >> >> From www.phoenixnewtimes.com >> Originally published by Phoenix New Times 2005-10-13 >> ©2005 New Times, Inc. All rights reserved. >> >> Mold Attacks! >> If Gilbert school officials had played straight, >> Mesquite Junior High >> >> kids and teachers would've run for their lives. >> >> >> >> By >> >> Jeff Corn didn't have a doctor before 1988. Never >> needed one. >> >> Scanlon >> >> >> >> Jeff Corn says the school building made him deathly >> ill. >> >> He may have been the healthiest health nut in >> Gilbert. The former collegiate runner coached >> Gilbert's junior high and high school cross-country >> teams by running out ahead of his athletes, playing >> rabbit to make his greyhounds stronger. He ate >> smart; he was a cauldron of positive energy. In >> physical-education class, his students loved him >> because he was a walking runner's high. >> >> In 1987, a new Gilbert High School was built. That >> year, Corn and the other junior-high teachers moved >> into the old high school, a collection of >> 24-year-old buildings just south of Gilbert's >> downtown. >> >> And all of a sudden, the 40-year-old superhuman >> needed a doctor. >> >> He began having sinus infections and high blood >> pressure. He began getting fungus growths on his >> body. Through the 1990s, he was visiting the doctor >> almost monthly -- sinus infection, fungal growth, >> fatigue, pneumonia, eye ulcers, cysts. >> >> In 2000, he was diagnosed with testicular cancer, >> and 13 lymph nodes were removed. Several months >> later, new cancer was found, which led to more >> chemotherapy. Again, he beat the cancer. >> >> Corn kept returning to work, kept coaching. But by >> 2003, he was barely making it through the school >> day. When he wasn't at school, he was usually >> asleep. >> >> In August 2003, Corn returned to school after the >> summer break. What he found in his office, he says, >> explained everything: >> >> It was the building that was killing him. >> >> When he arrived, men in hazard suits were tearing >> out parts of the gymnasium's ceilings and walls. >> Most of the gym was cordoned off and locked up, but >> teachers and students could still walk through the >> girls' and boys' locker rooms. >> >> After one student walked past a worker in a hazard >> suit, he asked Corn, " How come we don't have to wear >> those suits, if they do? " >> >> Great question. And Corn had no answer. Like all the >> teachers, he wasn't told what the workers were doing >> or why they were treating the gym like a Superfund >> site. >> >> When teachers asked why parts of the gym were being >> torn apart, their principal, Marti Farmer, said it >> was just routine maintenance. >> >> That wasn't true. >> >> The truth was, the gym was full of mold and >> asbestos. It had been that way for years. >> >> And the wall against which Corn's desk sat for 17 >> years was one of the worst spots. >> >> What Corn discovered from speaking with other >> employees, and a New Times investigation seems to >> confirm, is that Mesquite Junior High had been a >> breeding ground for black mold since at least the >> early 1990s. >> >> For years, though, school officials essentially told >> maintenance crews to just paint over the problem, >> not fix it. And school officials spent that time >> ignoring staff concerns that the buildings might be >> toxic. >> >> The health effects of their actions on students and >> teachers can never be fully known. >> >> However, anecdotal evidence, and a review of teacher >> and student illnesses while in the buildings, would >> suggest that Mesquite Junior High was -- and, to a >> lesser extent, continues to be -- a sick complex of >> buildings. >> >> For his part, Jeff Corn is a broken man. >> >> He continues to be plagued with odd ailments, so >> much so that he felt he could no longer work by >> autumn 2004. He can't sleep, then he sleeps for days >> at a time. His memory is hit-and-miss; he has >> trouble concentrating. He now has no medical >> insurance and no job. He recently sold his home to >> free up money for living and medical costs. >> >> Gilbert school officials contend there is no >> scientific proof that links Corn's illnesses to >> toxic mold at the school. They say the medical >> pathologist -- who says Corn is full of mold toxins >> -- could be wrong and definitely can't prove Corn >> was exposed at work. >> >> " How do we know he wasn't exposed at home? " the >> Gilbert Public School District's attorney asked New >> Times. >> >> Therefore, Corn is on his own. >> >> Over the past few years, officials say, they have >> removed the swamp coolers and faulty plumbing >> responsible for any mold problems at Mesquite. Air >> tests in 1998, 2003 and 2004 show the school is now >> free of mold, they contend. >> >> In fact, though, this isn't what the tests say. >> >> In addition, a Mesquite custodial employee says the >> officials' assessment doesn't fit with the reality >> of the aging buildings involved. >> >> " We're still chasing the problem, " he told New >> Times, on condition of anonymity. " The mold is like >> a cancer in these buildings. " >> >> Now, Corn says, his only interest is in making sure >> that Mesquite Junior High doesn't destroy anyone >> else. >> >> " I know that building did this to me, " he says. " So >> how many others have been affected, how many more >> will be affected? The district administrators don't >> care about those questions. All they care about is >> finding a way to avoid liability. " >> >> He is concerned that the same game may be being >> played at schools across the Valley. >> >> " All you need is a leaky old building, a district >> strapped for money and [school officials] trying to >> keep things running at all costs, " he says. " It's a >> deadly combination. " >> >> But the story of Mesquite Junior High shows how >> difficult it is to identify an unhealthy building. >> Here, students come and go in two years; staffers, >> looking for better jobs in better facilities, leave >> almost as quickly. >> >> New Times' investigation found that numerous >> students, teachers and maintenance workers believe >> they were made ill by the building. The problem is, >> in the transient society of a large junior high >> school, nobody stayed long enough to make any solid >> connection between their illness and the mold. >> >> Nobody except school old-timer Jeff Corn. >> >> >> > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >> >> Marti Farmer, the longtime Mesquite principal who >> left the school last year for a new job, didn't >> return telephone calls from New Times. >> >> Although Farmer was the official with whom school >> employees dealt, she reported to the school district >> and presumably the school superintendent, who must >> have known what was going on at the junior high and >> sanctioned her actions. Even now, the district's >> lawyer -- to whom all questions about black mold are >> referred -- refuses to admit that the mold was a >> health threat to teachers and children. >> >> Therefore, it becomes difficult to know when Farmer >> first became aware that her school had a serious >> problem with black mold. >> >> What is known, though, is that teachers were >> complaining about black mold outbreaks as far back >> as the early 1990s. >> >> One of them was Tim Rutt, now a teacher and football >> coach at Hamilton High School in the Chandler >> Unified School District. >> >> Rutt taught P.E. and coached basketball and football >> at Mesquite from 1991 to 1998. Rutt says he was >> " coughing constantly " through his time at Mesquite. >> And during that time, he was continually finding >> mold growing in the gymnasium, locker rooms, P.E. >> offices and storage rooms. >> >> " It was especially bad at the beginning of the >> school year, " Rutt says. " Every August, you'd come >> in there and everything would be covered with mold. >> Every year we'd take the equipment in to Marti >> [Farmer] and every year she'd just say 'clean it >> up.' The walls would be covered so they'd come throw >> up some new drywall. Like clockwork, after a few >> months, the mold was back. " >> >> In the fall of 1997, Rutt again arrived at school to >> a pile of mold-covered sports equipment. Again, he >> says, he took it in to Farmer complaining that >> something was " seriously wrong with this building. " >> >> Same thing. She again told him to clean it up. >> >> But this time, something strange happened, Rutt >> says. He left the equipment with her and told her it >> needed to be tested. >> >> " She calls me at night a little later and asks, >> 'Tim, you didn't touch any of that equipment, did >> you?' I said, Of course I touched it. I've been >> touching it for years.' She said, 'Well, stop.' >> >> " She said she was ordering us all new equipment. >> That led to the obvious question, 'So what were the >> results of the test?' I can still remember [that she >> said]: 'I can't tell you.' >> >> " It was crazy. At that point, I knew I had to get >> out of that environment. " >> >> And so, a year later, he did. And once he arrived at >> Hamilton High School, the wheezing and coughing >> stopped. >> >> " I know it was that building, " he says. " I knew if I >> taught there long enough, it was really going to >> destroy my [immune] system. " >> >> >> > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >> >> Ashlie Perro never had breathing problems in >> elementary school. But once she reached Mesquite >> Junior High, she spent much of the next two years >> carrying inhalers. >> >> She was a runner, but running became increasingly >> difficult for her in junior high. At cross-country >> meets, she would run with asthma inhalers in each >> hand. Her coach, Jeff Corn, joked that he would need >> to get her holsters for her inhalers. >> >> She was known as " Wheezer " by the other kids. >> >> " It was really scary, " says Perro, now 23. " It would >> just be, all of a sudden, I couldn't breathe. " >> >> Once, during a race in Coolidge, Perro had such a >> severe attack that Corn called 911. Perro spent the >> night in the emergency room, with Corn at her side, >> trying to get her breathing stabilized. >> >> During her eighth-grade year, Perro tested positive >> for an allergy to mold. Mold couldn't be the >> problem, her mother thought, because they had just >> moved into a new home with no signs of mold or water >> damage. >> >> " I never associated it with the school, " Perro's >> mother, Corina Noirfalise says. " That seems stupid >> now, but I just didn't. " >> >> And once Ashlie left Mesquite, the breathing >> problems slowly disappeared. By her sophomore year, >> Ashlie and her mom had forgotten about those >> problems back in junior high. >> >> Another student, Steve Granados, remembers >> collapsing from an apparent asthma attack in a >> Mesquite classroom, which was later discovered to >> have heavy water damage. The teacher, who later died >> of cancer, had to call 911. Granados had forgotten >> the incident until last year, when he happened to be >> over repairing Jeff Corn's air conditioning. >> >> " When your lives are so busy, once a problem ends, >> you forget about it, " says Betty Penn, whose son and >> daughter both went to Mesquite. " You just move on >> with your lives. That's what happened with us. " >> >> Penn's daughter le started at Mesquite in >> 1997. Soon after, she began having intense asthma >> attacks at the school. >> >> Through le's seventh- and eighth-grade years, >> Penn says, she was frequently called to go pick up >> her daughter at the nurse's office. Penn says that >> every time she went to the office, there were " seven >> or eight other kids wheezing just like her. >> >> " I did say something to the nurse because they were >> all in there with these croupy coughs, " she says. >> " It was just weird. I've never seen another nurse's >> office that crowded. But [school officials] said >> they were just normal colds. >> >> " I guess, " she says with a wry smile, " it was always >> the cold season there or something. " >> >> Then le graduated. Then le stopped >> needing inhalers. >> >> Then Penn went to Mesquite. Then he suddenly >> needed an inhaler. >> >> Penn would have breathing attacks that would cause >> him to miss many days of school at a time. Doctors >> put him on cortisol steroids that made him bloat. >> >> " He was miserable, " Penn says. >> >> Then he left Mesquite. Then he got better. >> >> " You'd think we all would have thought something >> [was going on], " Penn says. " But you're so busy with >> your lives. You just never put two and two >> together. " >> >> >> > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >> >> Mesquite Junior High was run down when Ninfa >> was a student there back in 1991. >> >> By the time she started working at the school as a >> custodian 10 years later, " it was a disaster, " she >> says. >> >> sees the degraded condition of Mesquite in >> racial colors. >> >> Mesquite serves the old central core of Gilbert, >> where the majority of the booming city's poorer >> Hispanics live. As Gilbert has grown, she says, " all >> the money has gone out to build new schools for the >> new wealthier suburbanites. >> >> " It was considered the old dump for Hispanic kids >> back when I went there, " she says. " The district >> just has never given it much attention. " >> >> In 1998, after years of mold caking the school's >> locker rooms, school officials conducted the first >> " mold remediation. " >> >> An industrial hygiene survey by Hutzel and >> Associates found extremely elevated levels of fungal >> growth in the gym's locker and equipment rooms. One >> fresh-air vent showed fungi counts 1,000 times >> higher than a typical clean wall in the building, >> while one racquetball racket had a count more than >> 10,000 times higher than a clean surface. >> >> In November of that year, a company cleaned the >> locker room and storage room, tested for fungi and, >> finding none, reported that the problem was solved. >> >> Rutt, then the P.E. Department head, was told that >> any mold problems the school might have had were >> gone. >> >> Which was a sick joke. >> >> Within months, the mold was back. >> >> And even if it had been eradicated, research on >> toxic mold's long-term effects suggests it might >> have already done damage to the immune systems of >> teachers and students. >> >> School officials never tested teachers or students >> for toxins in their bodies. Never have. Indeed, most >> were never told there was even a problem. >> >> In 2001, transferred from her job at >> Highland High School to take a custodial position at >> Mesquite Junior High. The school was closer to her >> home. >> >> " That was a huge mistake, " she says. " Highland was a >> good school. " >> >> At Mesquite, she says, she learned how the school's >> administration dealt with what she called " an >> epidemic " of toxic mold. >> >> " I'd see mold growing on pipes or whatever, I'd put >> in a work order and somebody would come wipe the >> pipe off and tape it, " she says. " I started going to >> [Principal Farmer] saying, 'We've got to do >> something.' And she made it real clear: Gilbert >> isn't going to do anything about this school. She >> just said, 'Clean it up as best you can.' " >> >> says she knew it was toxic black mold >> because the district had given custodians seminars >> in how to identify it. >> >> " It was sad. We were trained to identify problems >> and then told to ignore them. " >> >> Both summers she worked at the school, she and the >> other custodians were asked to go into the buildings >> and clean them before the teachers and students got >> there. >> >> " In some places, mold covered the walls and the >> floors; it was amazing, " she says. " One of the sinks >> was just full of it. We literally took pressure >> washers to some of the areas. That was the only >> thing that would work. " >> >> The sewer would back up often in the buildings, she >> says. She would try to suck it up with a shop >> vacuum, then disinfect. Time and time again, it >> would happen. >> >> She began to have health problems, she says. A >> nephew who went to school at that time had >> respiratory problems. >> >> During the 2002 school year, she says, she would ask >> Farmer to contact district officials to plead with >> them that something had to be done to fix the >> school. >> >> " If you saw that place day in and day out, it made >> you crazy knowing that teachers and students were in >> there, " says. " But the principal was more >> upset that I kept making an issue out of it. >> >> " By the end of that second year, I just had to get >> out of there, " she says. " It was just too much. " >> >> A year later, school administrators and district >> officials apparently decided it was finally time to >> attempt to clean up the gymnasium again. >> >> Again, though, they didn't tell teachers what they >> were doing. >> >> For years, in the entry of the gymnasium, water had >> been seeping through the ceiling, creating two large >> fetid puddles at the gym's entrance. >> >> When a maintenance employee climbed up into the >> ceiling, he found a blanket of mold covering a >> blanket of asbestos. >> >> The school's teachers learned about the mold and >> asbestos from building and custodial staff. At the >> time, though, teachers say, Marti Farmer kept >> telling them the gym would be blocked off during the >> summer of 2003 for routine maintenance. >> >> The locks on the gymnasium were changed. But when >> P.E. teachers peeked in the windows, they saw a sign >> warning of asbestos. >> >> When one P.E. teacher asked the principal about the >> sign, the teacher says, Farmer told her she was >> wrong. She hadn't seen an asbestos sign. >> >> The asbestos sign was gone the next day, the teacher >> says. >> >> Frustrated, the P.E. teachers banded together in >> September 2003 and wrote a letter to Farmer and >> other administrators. >> >> " We feel we have gone through the proper channels in >> trying to resolve our concerns -- with no results. >> We have two staff members who are continually sick, >> with one being diagnosed with cancer. Supposedly, >> our mold situation was taken care of years ago. Yet, >> on numerous occasions, we have had equipment thrown >> out due to the mold. This is how the problem is >> remedied. We had a teacher who mysteriously >> contracted a rash. The rest of us are continually >> working through our ailments, which include sinus >> congestion, chronic colds, dry coughs, eyes, nose >> and throat irritation, rashes, arthritic pains and >> aches. >> >> " We believe that our health and that of our students >> are in jeopardy, if not now, in the future. " >> >> The letter was signed by six teachers and coaches, >> including Jeff Corn. >> >> Following the writing of that letter, Corn began >> trying to compile a list of other teachers at >> Mesquite Junior High who had contracted odd ailments >> since working there. >> >> " That's when it finally started making sense to me >> what was happening, " he says. >> >> He says he found seven other teachers or aides at >> the school who were suffering from diseases often >> associated with a failure of the autoimmune system, >> one of the hallmarks of toxic mold poisoning. >> >> Two teachers had died of lung cancer. Corn says >> those teachers were non-smokers, a statement that >> New Times couldn't independently confirm. >> >> Then, he took his information to the principal, who, >> he says, told him he was crazy. >> >> And since that time, this is how district officials >> have treated Jeff Corn. >> >> " For 18 years, they say I'm this wonderful teacher >> and coach, " he says. " Then I bring this up, so now >> I'm crazy. It's shocking how quickly these people >> turn on a person, how quickly they'll turn on the >> teachers and students. " >> >> >> > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >> >> The science of mold isn't terribly complex. >> >> And everyone knows mold's habitat -- any wet, warm >> place. >> >> Like New Orleans. >> >> Or, any wet wall in an otherwise dry, warm place, >> like Phoenix or Gilbert. >> >> Indeed, if given water, mold loves Arizona just as >> much as Louisiana. >> >> What is complex, though, is trying to tie toxic mold >> to human health problems. >> >> The first question: Are molds present in the >> person's environment? >> >> In Corn's case, in Mesquite Junior High, the answer >> is yes. >> >> The district's air-quality tests, even as spotty and >> incomplete as they were, confirmed that. >> >> The 1998 tests showed extremely high levels of mold. >> >> >> In the summation of a May 2004 air-quality test of >> the P.E. building, inspectors noted that fungal >> spore counts were much higher in tests of outside >> air than inside air. >> >> True, but the numerous outside spores were all >> harmless. Buried deep in the test results was the >> fact that Stachybotrys chartarum, the most notorious >> of toxic molds, showed up in both the " East Gym " and >> " West Gym " samples. >> >> In November 2004 -- after officials again claimed to >> have taken care of the mold problem -- more testing >> of the gymnasium by Health Effects Group, Inc. >> showed four rooms with elevated spore counts of >> toxic molds. The inspectors noted " water staining >> and sporadically located drywall deterioration in >> the boys' locker room. There was evidence of >> corroded plumbing systems throughout the gymnasium >> facility. " >> >> The building, the inspectors said, " should be >> considered for renovation activities. " >> >> But here's where that question gets complicated. >> >> Were the toxic molds present when the person was >> there? Was it possible for the toxins from those >> molds to reach humans? How long were the humans >> exposed to the toxins? >> >> Beyond that, scientists continue to argue two >> critical points in assessing mold damage to humans: >> >> What signs in the human body indicate damage from >> toxic molds? >> >> What are the effects of long-term exposure versus >> short-term exposure? >> >> After Corn left Mesquite, a former student who is >> now a physician suggested he contact a medical >> pathologist named Dr. Croft, a longtime >> professor of environmental toxicology at the >> University of Wisconsin before starting his own >> toxicology lab. >> >> Croft asked Corn for a urine sample as well as a >> tissue sample taken during Corn's treatments for >> cancer. >> >> Croft, who, since the 1980s, has examined more than >> 7,000 cases of potential toxic mold poisoning, >> determined that Corn's urine sample showed that he >> had been exposed to " moderate levels of >> Trichothecene Mycotoxins, " the toxic byproduct of >> certain molds. >> >> Croft continued, " There is no safe level of >> Trichothecene Mycotoxins. This mycotoxin can affect >> every cell in the body, but the brain, lungs, >> immune, gastrointestinal and reproductive organs are >> especially susceptible. " >> >> Besides the show of mycotoxins in the urine, Corn's >> tissue sample, Croft said, " clearly demonstrates the >> chronic exposure to trichothecene mycotoxins to this >> subject. " >> >> The report Croft sent to Corn included hundreds of >> pages of medical literature supporting his >> conclusion. >> >> Earlier this year, armed with Croft's diagnosis, >> along with numerous photos he had taken in 2003 of >> black mold in many locations at Mesquite Junior >> High, Corn went to Gilbert district officials >> seeking $675,000 in damages, an amount, he says, >> that he would invest so he could live out his life >> on the interest. >> >> He also asked for assurance that Mesquite Junior >> High would be made genuinely mold-free as soon as >> humanly possible. >> >> District officials said Mesquite already was >> mold-free. >> >> They said Corn's request was absurd. >> >> The district hired a University of Arizona >> toxicologist, Dr. Sullivan, to review both the >> conclusions of Corn's doctor and the air-quality >> test results taken from Mesquite in 1998, 2003 and >> 2004. >> >> Sullivan concluded that with the evidence provided, >> there was no way to link Corn's cancer to his >> workplace. Oddly, Sullivan didn't address any of >> Corn's myriad other illnesses. Sullivan brought into >> question, too, Croft's methodology in determining >> that Corn's body showed evidence of mold poisoning. >> >> Sullivan's report was thrown back at Corn in late >> September. The district's offer: Three months' pay. >> Take it or leave it. >> >> The only real conclusion reached in the standoff was >> that much more testing needed to be done on Jeff >> Corn's body. >> >> But Jeff Corn has run out of money. He sold his >> house recently, a move that he hopes will cover some >> of his medical and living expenses. >> >> More tests would strap him financially. He can't >> afford what would be a very expensive legal fight. >> >> And the school district isn't going to pay for any >> tests because it argues it is not responsible. >> >> Heck, Sullivan claimed, health-nut Corn might have >> gotten sick from the foods he ate. >> >> So, the district wins. And Corn is left out in the >> cold. >> >> >> > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >> >> By February of this year, Jeff Corn was on the verge >> of suicide. His sleeping problems were at a zenith. >> He was in pain. His memory was failing. He was >> deeply depressed at the thought of life with a >> chronically collapsing immune system. >> >> In 2003, he had been struck by a drunk driver. After >> that, doctors put him on antidepressants. >> >> In December 2004, his school insurance was >> discontinued. He no longer could afford the >> antidepressants. >> >> In April, a friend of Corn's, seeing that he was >> slipping, asked a psychologist friend to evaluate >> Corn at no cost. >> >> The psychologist noted the frightening collapse of >> Corn's physical and mental well-being. >> >> The man once named by the Arizona Republic as the >> state's " Coach of the Year " was now " unable to get >> out of bed four days out of the week, " the >> psychologist wrote in his report of Corn's >> condition. " Corn is suffering from frequent crying >> and suicidal ideations. He is having difficulty with >> concentration and memory. " The psychologist also >> noted that Corn suffered from nervousness, >> trembling, headaches, dizziness, pains in the chest, >> heart pounding, pains in the lower back, nausea, >> sore muscles, hot and cold spells, numbness and " the >> feeling of being trapped. " >> >> Clyde Dangerfield, the attorney for the school >> district, noted in his interview with New Times that >> Corn also told him " he was hearing voices. " >> >> The implication being that Corn is too unstable to >> know that mold from his workplace made him unstable. >> >> >> The psychologist determined that Corn was >> permanently disabled. >> >> Croft, the medical pathologist who determined Corn >> was full of mycotoxins, said the best treatment for >> Corn would be at the facility of an expert in toxic >> mold poisoning in Dallas. >> >> Great idea. But can Corn afford it, even with >> proceeds from the sale of his house? >> >> Most likely, the Gilbert school district is free of >> Jeff Corn. >> >> The problem is, Jeff Corn may not be a medical >> anomaly. >> >> Corn's problems began with respiratory ailments that >> seemingly advanced to a host of debilitating >> conditions. >> >> According to a recent study by University of >> Southern California researchers, Corn's progression >> of ailments closely mirrors the problems experienced >> by 65 patients who had been exposed to mold in >> California, Texas and Arizona. >> >> The mold-exposed patients first complained of >> asthma-like symptoms, followed by persistent >> flu-like illnesses, severe fatigue, and impaired >> memory and concentration. >> >> Compared to more than 200 non-exposed patients, the >> mold-exposed patients showed sometimes profound >> decreases in cognitive ability. Balance, motor >> skills, verbal recall and long-term memory were all >> damaged. Several patients suffered from severe >> depression after their mold exposure. >> >> What is most frightening, though, is what happened >> when researchers gave eight of the patients the same >> battery of tests more than a year later, long after >> they had left the mold-contaminated buildings that >> caused their problems. >> >> None of the eight patients showed improved >> functioning. >> >> In fact, seven of the eight had gotten worse. >> >> " Absent additional mold exposure, function in 88 >> percent of these patients had deteriorated during >> the course of the year, " the study's author, Dr. >> Kaye Kilburn, wrote. >> >> The point: >> >> If Corn is dying because of toxic mold exposure at >> Mesquite Junior High, he may not be alone. >> >> Which means that instead of making fun of Jeff Corn, >> Gilbert officials might want to provide testing for >> students or teachers who have shown symptoms of >> toxic mold exposure during their time at Mesquite. >> >> For now, though, everyone involved with Mesquite >> Junior High is looking to the upcoming Gilbert >> schools bond issue. If voters approve the bond >> proposal, more than $4.5 million will go toward >> renovating the Mesquite complex. >> >> Corn is trying a renovation of his own. >> >> Amid bouts with pain and depression, he says he's >> regained the strength to " earnestly try to fight >> this stuff in my body. " He plans to use some of the >> money from selling his house to place himself in >> that toxin treatment center in Dallas. >> >> Meantime, he is self-medicating. For example, one >> basic treatment attempted by some toxicologists for >> purging the body of toxins is frequent saunas. >> >> So, when he's up for it, Corn has begun running >> again -- in the heat of the day. >> >> " I've got to try to fight this, " he says. " It may >> not work, but I'm going to give it my best shot. " >> >> As for his old school, Corn simply hopes that >> Gilbert officials will finally give their best shot >> to helping other teachers and students who were made >> ill by years of moldering decay at Mesquite. >> >> " I have this terrible fear it's going to start >> catching up with others who came into that school >> later than I did, " Corn says. " What makes me so mad >> is this could have been stopped a long time ago. But >> instead, [the school district] just let the problem >> grow. " >> >> Scanlon >> >> >> >> Mesquite Junior High in Gilbert. Black mold could've >> become the school's mascot. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Water and mold damage have been common at Mesquite. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Medical pathologist Dr. Croft says >> mycotoxins from mold " can affect every cell in the >> body. " >> >> > ________________________________________________________________________ >> >> >> A short synopsis of what happened to me as wells as >> suggestions for You: >> >> >> >> I'm finally on a positive track toward the future, >> but ... >> >> My life has been devasted for 5 years now and >> will never be the same in ways most people wouldn't >> think of. I have lived in alternative housing, >> borrowing money against the damaged house to pay for >> the double-housing (displaced and harmed in many >> ways similar to those who lost their homes from >> hurricanes, but without the public understanding and >> without any government support). One former >> neighbor of mine, who is a psychologist, rebutted >> the negative remarks of the people who bought my >> home, saying back to them, if she was *...*... (I'll >> skip the word) about the mold, why did the insurance >> company pay on the claims? This was only about 1/3 >> of the value of what was actually destroyed, and >> then what I received was negated by the fact that I >> had to battle the insurance company at an appraisal >> hearing, and then a mediation hearing, and then a >> pre-trial settlement. I won at every stage of the >> battle, YET the costs of battle matched whatever I >> was eventually awarded. Important point here: >> Insurance DID pay on airborne mold, not just where >> water and mold were visibly growing on things. That >> says something powerful about validating the dangers >> of mold as to toxic contamination! >> >> My home and all of it's contents were >> destroyed, and that sure changed my desire and >> ability to buy a new home. Only recently, I have >> been able to go shopping at malls without being >> ripped up emotionally for the loss of family >> treasurers and all the sweet things one collects >> over the years, which makes no sense to re-acquire >> at my stage in life, if I could afford to. Now, the >> cost of new homes is through the roof, especially in >> Arizona (way more than elsewhere in the U.S.) where >> homes have DOUBLED in value within a six month time >> frame. The housing market shot up just three months >> AFTER I sold my house for only $65,000, which I had >> to use to pay off debts over the lack of >> reimbursement from insurance and the costs to battle >> them. I had no ability to rebuild it. If I had any >> money left to rebuild it, I would be liable to the >> new owners, even with full disclosure. My house is >> now listed for $199,000 after it was rebuilt by the >> people who buy " ugly houses, " where they rebuilt it >> at wholesale rates, and they don't have to disclose >> about the mold when they resell it to people they >> don't give a da*m about harming. >> My WARNINGS for YOU: Make sure you have enough >> insurance on your home and personal contents. When >> an insurance agent has you fill out a form where you >> list your key items in your home, my rule of thumb >> is to take that amount and double it as to the >> limits of your insurance for personal contents. You >> would not believe how valuable all the additional >> items in your home add up to. Keep your receipts >> off-site, in a safe deposit box or storage unit and >> video every single thing in your home, even inside >> of drawers, describing the brands and models, and if >> you recall what you paid for it, you might state >> that you believe that is what you paid for it >> (you'll have to verify it any way, but it helps). >> And finally (although this was not my situation), >> NEVER neglect standing water, or leaking pipes for >> more than 24 to 48 hours. If you suspect mold >> damage, at LEAST start with some minimal, initial >> laboratory testing BEFORE you allow, for example, >> your walls to be opened up, doing repairs without >> proper " mold remediation, " which includes >> quarantining off the area or room to protect the >> rest of your belongings. In a Jim Carrey kind of >> tone, I would say, That stuff is NASTY! >> >> Needless to say, I REALLY couldn't stop crying for >> everyone at the Gulf Coast. At the mention of every >> sad story, I instantly began choking back tears and >> crying, and finally called counselors to help get >> over it. >> >> Lastly, regarding the controversy and all that >> surrounds that, this was like the silicone issue ... >> all over again ... in practically every way. >> >> Marti >> >> >> >> >> >> > > > > Opinions expressed are NOT meant to take the place of advice given by > licensed health care professionals. Consult your physician or licensed > health care professional before commencing any medical treatment. > > " Do not let either the medical authorities or the politicians mislead you. > Find out what the facts are, and make your own decisions about how to live > a happy life and how to work for a better world. " - Linus ing, > two-time Nobel Prize Winner (1954, Chemistry; 1963, Peace) > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 25, 2005 Report Share Posted October 25, 2005 This makes me so angry and so sad that I don't which is the stronger emotion. My heart goes out to these people. We live in such a stupid irresponsible society. I often wish I could go to some pure place in some small town and live---but I doubt such a place exists anymore. I remember when I was pregnant with my son that the office I worked in did a remodel. The glue under the carpets made me feel so sick. To this day, I can't stand to be in a place that just put in new carpet (where it is glued to the floor). kathy > > I'm forwarding Marti 's message . . . some of you > know her. This is a very sad story with no apparent > answer! > > Marti is a long-time implant survivor who was hit, not > just by breast implants, but mold! > > Rogene > > > > Note: forwarded message attached. > > > From: " Marti " <forjustus@c...> > > <Undisclosed-Recipient:;> > > Subject: " Mold Attack " - (male) school teacher sick > > and so is the school's building! > > Date: Fri, 21 Oct 2005 12:48:31 -0700 > > > > Sharing this new news article with my friends > > in case of you are interested, or know anyone > > dealing with mold in their home, workplace, or > > schools. I grabbed on to this article because this > > man impressed me with his story. It seems to me > > that men (G*d love 'em, and I do too) seem to hide > > their ills and tend to avoid connecting the dots as > > to the cause when it comes to systemic problems, but > > this male school teacher sure does. At the end of > > this article, I've patched in a short description of > > what happened to my home and my SUGGESTIONS OF > > PRECAUTION FOR YOU. Here is the article with more > > photos at the end: > > > > > > From www.phoenixnewtimes.com > > Originally published by Phoenix New Times 2005-10-13 > > ©2005 New Times, Inc. All rights reserved. > > > > Mold Attacks! > > If Gilbert school officials had played straight, > > Mesquite Junior High > > > > kids and teachers would've run for their lives. > > > > > > > > By > > > > Jeff Corn didn't have a doctor before 1988. Never > > needed one. > > > > Scanlon > > > > > > > > Jeff Corn says the school building made him deathly > > ill. > > > > He may have been the healthiest health nut in > > Gilbert. The former collegiate runner coached > > Gilbert's junior high and high school cross-country > > teams by running out ahead of his athletes, playing > > rabbit to make his greyhounds stronger. He ate > > smart; he was a cauldron of positive energy. In > > physical-education class, his students loved him > > because he was a walking runner's high. > > > > In 1987, a new Gilbert High School was built. That > > year, Corn and the other junior-high teachers moved > > into the old high school, a collection of > > 24-year-old buildings just south of Gilbert's > > downtown. > > > > And all of a sudden, the 40-year-old superhuman > > needed a doctor. > > > > He began having sinus infections and high blood > > pressure. He began getting fungus growths on his > > body. Through the 1990s, he was visiting the doctor > > almost monthly -- sinus infection, fungal growth, > > fatigue, pneumonia, eye ulcers, cysts. > > > > In 2000, he was diagnosed with testicular cancer, > > and 13 lymph nodes were removed. Several months > > later, new cancer was found, which led to more > > chemotherapy. Again, he beat the cancer. > > > > Corn kept returning to work, kept coaching. But by > > 2003, he was barely making it through the school > > day. When he wasn't at school, he was usually > > asleep. > > > > In August 2003, Corn returned to school after the > > summer break. What he found in his office, he says, > > explained everything: > > > > It was the building that was killing him. > > > > When he arrived, men in hazard suits were tearing > > out parts of the gymnasium's ceilings and walls. > > Most of the gym was cordoned off and locked up, but > > teachers and students could still walk through the > > girls' and boys' locker rooms. > > > > After one student walked past a worker in a hazard > > suit, he asked Corn, " How come we don't have to wear > > those suits, if they do? " > > > > Great question. And Corn had no answer. Like all the > > teachers, he wasn't told what the workers were doing > > or why they were treating the gym like a Superfund > > site. > > > > When teachers asked why parts of the gym were being > > torn apart, their principal, Marti Farmer, said it > > was just routine maintenance. > > > > That wasn't true. > > > > The truth was, the gym was full of mold and > > asbestos. It had been that way for years. > > > > And the wall against which Corn's desk sat for 17 > > years was one of the worst spots. > > > > What Corn discovered from speaking with other > > employees, and a New Times investigation seems to > > confirm, is that Mesquite Junior High had been a > > breeding ground for black mold since at least the > > early 1990s. > > > > For years, though, school officials essentially told > > maintenance crews to just paint over the problem, > > not fix it. And school officials spent that time > > ignoring staff concerns that the buildings might be > > toxic. > > > > The health effects of their actions on students and > > teachers can never be fully known. > > > > However, anecdotal evidence, and a review of teacher > > and student illnesses while in the buildings, would > > suggest that Mesquite Junior High was -- and, to a > > lesser extent, continues to be -- a sick complex of > > buildings. > > > > For his part, Jeff Corn is a broken man. > > > > He continues to be plagued with odd ailments, so > > much so that he felt he could no longer work by > > autumn 2004. He can't sleep, then he sleeps for days > > at a time. His memory is hit-and-miss; he has > > trouble concentrating. He now has no medical > > insurance and no job. He recently sold his home to > > free up money for living and medical costs. > > > > Gilbert school officials contend there is no > > scientific proof that links Corn's illnesses to > > toxic mold at the school. They say the medical > > pathologist -- who says Corn is full of mold toxins > > -- could be wrong and definitely can't prove Corn > > was exposed at work. > > > > " How do we know he wasn't exposed at home? " the > > Gilbert Public School District's attorney asked New > > Times. > > > > Therefore, Corn is on his own. > > > > Over the past few years, officials say, they have > > removed the swamp coolers and faulty plumbing > > responsible for any mold problems at Mesquite. Air > > tests in 1998, 2003 and 2004 show the school is now > > free of mold, they contend. > > > > In fact, though, this isn't what the tests say. > > > > In addition, a Mesquite custodial employee says the > > officials' assessment doesn't fit with the reality > > of the aging buildings involved. > > > > " We're still chasing the problem, " he told New > > Times, on condition of anonymity. " The mold is like > > a cancer in these buildings. " > > > > Now, Corn says, his only interest is in making sure > > that Mesquite Junior High doesn't destroy anyone > > else. > > > > " I know that building did this to me, " he says. " So > > how many others have been affected, how many more > > will be affected? The district administrators don't > > care about those questions. All they care about is > > finding a way to avoid liability. " > > > > He is concerned that the same game may be being > > played at schools across the Valley. > > > > " All you need is a leaky old building, a district > > strapped for money and [school officials] trying to > > keep things running at all costs, " he says. " It's a > > deadly combination. " > > > > But the story of Mesquite Junior High shows how > > difficult it is to identify an unhealthy building. > > Here, students come and go in two years; staffers, > > looking for better jobs in better facilities, leave > > almost as quickly. > > > > New Times' investigation found that numerous > > students, teachers and maintenance workers believe > > they were made ill by the building. The problem is, > > in the transient society of a large junior high > > school, nobody stayed long enough to make any solid > > connection between their illness and the mold. > > > > Nobody except school old-timer Jeff Corn. > > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- > > > > Marti Farmer, the longtime Mesquite principal who > > left the school last year for a new job, didn't > > return telephone calls from New Times. > > > > Although Farmer was the official with whom school > > employees dealt, she reported to the school district > > and presumably the school superintendent, who must > > have known what was going on at the junior high and > > sanctioned her actions. Even now, the district's > > lawyer -- to whom all questions about black mold are > > referred -- refuses to admit that the mold was a > > health threat to teachers and children. > > > > Therefore, it becomes difficult to know when Farmer > > first became aware that her school had a serious > > problem with black mold. > > > > What is known, though, is that teachers were > > complaining about black mold outbreaks as far back > > as the early 1990s. > > > > One of them was Tim Rutt, now a teacher and football > > coach at Hamilton High School in the Chandler > > Unified School District. > > > > Rutt taught P.E. and coached basketball and football > > at Mesquite from 1991 to 1998. Rutt says he was > > " coughing constantly " through his time at Mesquite. > > And during that time, he was continually finding > > mold growing in the gymnasium, locker rooms, P.E. > > offices and storage rooms. > > > > " It was especially bad at the beginning of the > > school year, " Rutt says. " Every August, you'd come > > in there and everything would be covered with mold. > > Every year we'd take the equipment in to Marti > > [Farmer] and every year she'd just say 'clean it > > up.' The walls would be covered so they'd come throw > > up some new drywall. Like clockwork, after a few > > months, the mold was back. " > > > > In the fall of 1997, Rutt again arrived at school to > > a pile of mold-covered sports equipment. Again, he > > says, he took it in to Farmer complaining that > > something was " seriously wrong with this building. " > > > > Same thing. She again told him to clean it up. > > > > But this time, something strange happened, Rutt > > says. He left the equipment with her and told her it > > needed to be tested. > > > > " She calls me at night a little later and asks, > > 'Tim, you didn't touch any of that equipment, did > > you?' I said, Of course I touched it. I've been > > touching it for years.' She said, 'Well, stop.' > > > > " She said she was ordering us all new equipment. > > That led to the obvious question, 'So what were the > > results of the test?' I can still remember [that she > > said]: 'I can't tell you.' > > > > " It was crazy. At that point, I knew I had to get > > out of that environment. " > > > > And so, a year later, he did. And once he arrived at > > Hamilton High School, the wheezing and coughing > > stopped. > > > > " I know it was that building, " he says. " I knew if I > > taught there long enough, it was really going to > > destroy my [immune] system. " > > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- > > > > Ashlie Perro never had breathing problems in > > elementary school. But once she reached Mesquite > > Junior High, she spent much of the next two years > > carrying inhalers. > > > > She was a runner, but running became increasingly > > difficult for her in junior high. At cross-country > > meets, she would run with asthma inhalers in each > > hand. Her coach, Jeff Corn, joked that he would need > > to get her holsters for her inhalers. > > > > She was known as " Wheezer " by the other kids. > > > > " It was really scary, " says Perro, now 23. " It would > > just be, all of a sudden, I couldn't breathe. " > > > > Once, during a race in Coolidge, Perro had such a > > severe attack that Corn called 911. Perro spent the > > night in the emergency room, with Corn at her side, > > trying to get her breathing stabilized. > > > > During her eighth-grade year, Perro tested positive > > for an allergy to mold. Mold couldn't be the > > problem, her mother thought, because they had just > > moved into a new home with no signs of mold or water > > damage. > > > > " I never associated it with the school, " Perro's > > mother, Corina Noirfalise says. " That seems stupid > > now, but I just didn't. " > > > > And once Ashlie left Mesquite, the breathing > > problems slowly disappeared. By her sophomore year, > > Ashlie and her mom had forgotten about those > > problems back in junior high. > > > > Another student, Steve Granados, remembers > > collapsing from an apparent asthma attack in a > > Mesquite classroom, which was later discovered to > > have heavy water damage. The teacher, who later died > > of cancer, had to call 911. Granados had forgotten > > the incident until last year, when he happened to be > > over repairing Jeff Corn's air conditioning. > > > > " When your lives are so busy, once a problem ends, > > you forget about it, " says Betty Penn, whose son and > > daughter both went to Mesquite. " You just move on > > with your lives. That's what happened with us. " > > > > Penn's daughter le started at Mesquite in > > 1997. Soon after, she began having intense asthma > > attacks at the school. > > > > Through le's seventh- and eighth-grade years, > > Penn says, she was frequently called to go pick up > > her daughter at the nurse's office. Penn says that > > every time she went to the office, there were " seven > > or eight other kids wheezing just like her. > > > > " I did say something to the nurse because they were > > all in there with these croupy coughs, " she says. > > " It was just weird. I've never seen another nurse's > > office that crowded. But [school officials] said > > they were just normal colds. > > > > " I guess, " she says with a wry smile, " it was always > > the cold season there or something. " > > > > Then le graduated. Then le stopped > > needing inhalers. > > > > Then Penn went to Mesquite. Then he suddenly > > needed an inhaler. > > > > Penn would have breathing attacks that would cause > > him to miss many days of school at a time. Doctors > > put him on cortisol steroids that made him bloat. > > > > " He was miserable, " Penn says. > > > > Then he left Mesquite. Then he got better. > > > > " You'd think we all would have thought something > > [was going on], " Penn says. " But you're so busy with > > your lives. You just never put two and two > > together. " > > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- > > > > Mesquite Junior High was run down when Ninfa > > was a student there back in 1991. > > > > By the time she started working at the school as a > > custodian 10 years later, " it was a disaster, " she > > says. > > > > sees the degraded condition of Mesquite in > > racial colors. > > > > Mesquite serves the old central core of Gilbert, > > where the majority of the booming city's poorer > > Hispanics live. As Gilbert has grown, she says, " all > > the money has gone out to build new schools for the > > new wealthier suburbanites. > > > > " It was considered the old dump for Hispanic kids > > back when I went there, " she says. " The district > > just has never given it much attention. " > > > > In 1998, after years of mold caking the school's > > locker rooms, school officials conducted the first > > " mold remediation. " > > > > An industrial hygiene survey by Hutzel and > > Associates found extremely elevated levels of fungal > > growth in the gym's locker and equipment rooms. One > > fresh-air vent showed fungi counts 1,000 times > > higher than a typical clean wall in the building, > > while one racquetball racket had a count more than > > 10,000 times higher than a clean surface. > > > > In November of that year, a company cleaned the > > locker room and storage room, tested for fungi and, > > finding none, reported that the problem was solved. > > > > Rutt, then the P.E. Department head, was told that > > any mold problems the school might have had were > > gone. > > > > Which was a sick joke. > > > > Within months, the mold was back. > > > > And even if it had been eradicated, research on > > toxic mold's long-term effects suggests it might > > have already done damage to the immune systems of > > teachers and students. > > > > School officials never tested teachers or students > > for toxins in their bodies. Never have. Indeed, most > > were never told there was even a problem. > > > > In 2001, transferred from her job at > > Highland High School to take a custodial position at > > Mesquite Junior High. The school was closer to her > > home. > > > > " That was a huge mistake, " she says. " Highland was a > > good school. " > > > > At Mesquite, she says, she learned how the school's > > administration dealt with what she called " an > > epidemic " of toxic mold. > > > > " I'd see mold growing on pipes or whatever, I'd put > > in a work order and somebody would come wipe the > > pipe off and tape it, " she says. " I started going to > > [Principal Farmer] saying, 'We've got to do > > something.' And she made it real clear: Gilbert > > isn't going to do anything about this school. She > > just said, 'Clean it up as best you can.' " > > > > says she knew it was toxic black mold > > because the district had given custodians seminars > > in how to identify it. > > > > " It was sad. We were trained to identify problems > > and then told to ignore them. " > > > > Both summers she worked at the school, she and the > > other custodians were asked to go into the buildings > > and clean them before the teachers and students got > > there. > > > > " In some places, mold covered the walls and the > > floors; it was amazing, " she says. " One of the sinks > > was just full of it. We literally took pressure > > washers to some of the areas. That was the only > > thing that would work. " > > > > The sewer would back up often in the buildings, she > > says. She would try to suck it up with a shop > > vacuum, then disinfect. Time and time again, it > > would happen. > > > > She began to have health problems, she says. A > > nephew who went to school at that time had > > respiratory problems. > > > > During the 2002 school year, she says, she would ask > > Farmer to contact district officials to plead with > > them that something had to be done to fix the > > school. > > > > " If you saw that place day in and day out, it made > > you crazy knowing that teachers and students were in > > there, " says. " But the principal was more > > upset that I kept making an issue out of it. > > > > " By the end of that second year, I just had to get > > out of there, " she says. " It was just too much. " > > > > A year later, school administrators and district > > officials apparently decided it was finally time to > > attempt to clean up the gymnasium again. > > > > Again, though, they didn't tell teachers what they > > were doing. > > > > For years, in the entry of the gymnasium, water had > > been seeping through the ceiling, creating two large > > fetid puddles at the gym's entrance. > > > > When a maintenance employee climbed up into the > > ceiling, he found a blanket of mold covering a > > blanket of asbestos. > > > > The school's teachers learned about the mold and > > asbestos from building and custodial staff. At the > > time, though, teachers say, Marti Farmer kept > > telling them the gym would be blocked off during the > > summer of 2003 for routine maintenance. > > > > The locks on the gymnasium were changed. But when > > P.E. teachers peeked in the windows, they saw a sign > > warning of asbestos. > > > > When one P.E. teacher asked the principal about the > > sign, the teacher says, Farmer told her she was > > wrong. She hadn't seen an asbestos sign. > > > > The asbestos sign was gone the next day, the teacher > > says. > > > > Frustrated, the P.E. teachers banded together in > > September 2003 and wrote a letter to Farmer and > > other administrators. > > > > " We feel we have gone through the proper channels in > > trying to resolve our concerns -- with no results. > > We have two staff members who are continually sick, > > with one being diagnosed with cancer. Supposedly, > > our mold situation was taken care of years ago. Yet, > > on numerous occasions, we have had equipment thrown > > out due to the mold. This is how the problem is > > remedied. We had a teacher who mysteriously > > contracted a rash. The rest of us are continually > > working through our ailments, which include sinus > > congestion, chronic colds, dry coughs, eyes, nose > > and throat irritation, rashes, arthritic pains and > > aches. > > > > " We believe that our health and that of our students > > are in jeopardy, if not now, in the future. " > > > > The letter was signed by six teachers and coaches, > > including Jeff Corn. > > > > Following the writing of that letter, Corn began > > trying to compile a list of other teachers at > > Mesquite Junior High who had contracted odd ailments > > since working there. > > > > " That's when it finally started making sense to me > > what was happening, " he says. > > > > He says he found seven other teachers or aides at > > the school who were suffering from diseases often > > associated with a failure of the autoimmune system, > > one of the hallmarks of toxic mold poisoning. > > > > Two teachers had died of lung cancer. Corn says > > those teachers were non-smokers, a statement that > > New Times couldn't independently confirm. > > > > Then, he took his information to the principal, who, > > he says, told him he was crazy. > > > > And since that time, this is how district officials > > have treated Jeff Corn. > > > > " For 18 years, they say I'm this wonderful teacher > > and coach, " he says. " Then I bring this up, so now > > I'm crazy. It's shocking how quickly these people > > turn on a person, how quickly they'll turn on the > > teachers and students. " > > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- > > > > The science of mold isn't terribly complex. > > > > And everyone knows mold's habitat -- any wet, warm > > place. > > > > Like New Orleans. > > > > Or, any wet wall in an otherwise dry, warm place, > > like Phoenix or Gilbert. > > > > Indeed, if given water, mold loves Arizona just as > > much as Louisiana. > > > > What is complex, though, is trying to tie toxic mold > > to human health problems. > > > > The first question: Are molds present in the > > person's environment? > > > > In Corn's case, in Mesquite Junior High, the answer > > is yes. > > > > The district's air-quality tests, even as spotty and > > incomplete as they were, confirmed that. > > > > The 1998 tests showed extremely high levels of mold. > > > > > > In the summation of a May 2004 air-quality test of > > the P.E. building, inspectors noted that fungal > > spore counts were much higher in tests of outside > > air than inside air. > > > > True, but the numerous outside spores were all > > harmless. Buried deep in the test results was the > > fact that Stachybotrys chartarum, the most notorious > > of toxic molds, showed up in both the " East Gym " and > > " West Gym " samples. > > > > In November 2004 -- after officials again claimed to > > have taken care of the mold problem -- more testing > > of the gymnasium by Health Effects Group, Inc. > > showed four rooms with elevated spore counts of > > toxic molds. The inspectors noted " water staining > > and sporadically located drywall deterioration in > > the boys' locker room. There was evidence of > > corroded plumbing systems throughout the gymnasium > > facility. " > > > > The building, the inspectors said, " should be > > considered for renovation activities. " > > > > But here's where that question gets complicated. > > > > Were the toxic molds present when the person was > > there? Was it possible for the toxins from those > > molds to reach humans? How long were the humans > > exposed to the toxins? > > > > Beyond that, scientists continue to argue two > > critical points in assessing mold damage to humans: > > > > What signs in the human body indicate damage from > > toxic molds? > > > > What are the effects of long-term exposure versus > > short-term exposure? > > > > After Corn left Mesquite, a former student who is > > now a physician suggested he contact a medical > > pathologist named Dr. Croft, a longtime > > professor of environmental toxicology at the > > University of Wisconsin before starting his own > > toxicology lab. > > > > Croft asked Corn for a urine sample as well as a > > tissue sample taken during Corn's treatments for > > cancer. > > > > Croft, who, since the 1980s, has examined more than > > 7,000 cases of potential toxic mold poisoning, > > determined that Corn's urine sample showed that he > > had been exposed to " moderate levels of > > Trichothecene Mycotoxins, " the toxic byproduct of > > certain molds. > > > > Croft continued, " There is no safe level of > > Trichothecene Mycotoxins. This mycotoxin can affect > > every cell in the body, but the brain, lungs, > > immune, gastrointestinal and reproductive organs are > > especially susceptible. " > > > > Besides the show of mycotoxins in the urine, Corn's > > tissue sample, Croft said, " clearly demonstrates the > > chronic exposure to trichothecene mycotoxins to this > > subject. " > > > > The report Croft sent to Corn included hundreds of > > pages of medical literature supporting his > > conclusion. > > > > Earlier this year, armed with Croft's diagnosis, > > along with numerous photos he had taken in 2003 of > > black mold in many locations at Mesquite Junior > > High, Corn went to Gilbert district officials > > seeking $675,000 in damages, an amount, he says, > > that he would invest so he could live out his life > > on the interest. > > > > He also asked for assurance that Mesquite Junior > > High would be made genuinely mold-free as soon as > > humanly possible. > > > > District officials said Mesquite already was > > mold-free. > > > > They said Corn's request was absurd. > > > > The district hired a University of Arizona > > toxicologist, Dr. Sullivan, to review both the > > conclusions of Corn's doctor and the air-quality > > test results taken from Mesquite in 1998, 2003 and > > 2004. > > > > Sullivan concluded that with the evidence provided, > > there was no way to link Corn's cancer to his > > workplace. Oddly, Sullivan didn't address any of > > Corn's myriad other illnesses. Sullivan brought into > > question, too, Croft's methodology in determining > > that Corn's body showed evidence of mold poisoning. > > > > Sullivan's report was thrown back at Corn in late > > September. The district's offer: Three months' pay. > > Take it or leave it. > > > > The only real conclusion reached in the standoff was > > that much more testing needed to be done on Jeff > > Corn's body. > > > > But Jeff Corn has run out of money. He sold his > > house recently, a move that he hopes will cover some > > of his medical and living expenses. > > > > More tests would strap him financially. He can't > > afford what would be a very expensive legal fight. > > > > And the school district isn't going to pay for any > > tests because it argues it is not responsible. > > > > Heck, Sullivan claimed, health-nut Corn might have > > gotten sick from the foods he ate. > > > > So, the district wins. And Corn is left out in the > > cold. > > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- > > > > By February of this year, Jeff Corn was on the verge > > of suicide. His sleeping problems were at a zenith. > > He was in pain. His memory was failing. He was > > deeply depressed at the thought of life with a > > chronically collapsing immune system. > > > > In 2003, he had been struck by a drunk driver. After > > that, doctors put him on antidepressants. > > > > In December 2004, his school insurance was > > discontinued. He no longer could afford the > > antidepressants. > > > > In April, a friend of Corn's, seeing that he was > > slipping, asked a psychologist friend to evaluate > > Corn at no cost. > > > > The psychologist noted the frightening collapse of > > Corn's physical and mental well-being. > > > > The man once named by the Arizona Republic as the > > state's " Coach of the Year " was now " unable to get > > out of bed four days out of the week, " the > > psychologist wrote in his report of Corn's > > condition. " Corn is suffering from frequent crying > > and suicidal ideations. He is having difficulty with > > concentration and memory. " The psychologist also > > noted that Corn suffered from nervousness, > > trembling, headaches, dizziness, pains in the chest, > > heart pounding, pains in the lower back, nausea, > > sore muscles, hot and cold spells, numbness and " the > > feeling of being trapped. " > > > > Clyde Dangerfield, the attorney for the school > > district, noted in his interview with New Times that > > Corn also told him " he was hearing voices. " > > > > The implication being that Corn is too unstable to > > know that mold from his workplace made him unstable. > > > > > > The psychologist determined that Corn was > > permanently disabled. > > > > Croft, the medical pathologist who determined Corn > > was full of mycotoxins, said the best treatment for > > Corn would be at the facility of an expert in toxic > > mold poisoning in Dallas. > > > > Great idea. But can Corn afford it, even with > > proceeds from the sale of his house? > > > > Most likely, the Gilbert school district is free of > > Jeff Corn. > > > > The problem is, Jeff Corn may not be a medical > > anomaly. > > > > Corn's problems began with respiratory ailments that > > seemingly advanced to a host of debilitating > > conditions. > > > > According to a recent study by University of > > Southern California researchers, Corn's progression > > of ailments closely mirrors the problems experienced > > by 65 patients who had been exposed to mold in > > California, Texas and Arizona. > > > > The mold-exposed patients first complained of > > asthma-like symptoms, followed by persistent > > flu-like illnesses, severe fatigue, and impaired > > memory and concentration. > > > > Compared to more than 200 non-exposed patients, the > > mold-exposed patients showed sometimes profound > > decreases in cognitive ability. Balance, motor > > skills, verbal recall and long-term memory were all > > damaged. Several patients suffered from severe > > depression after their mold exposure. > > > > What is most frightening, though, is what happened > > when researchers gave eight of the patients the same > > battery of tests more than a year later, long after > > they had left the mold-contaminated buildings that > > caused their problems. > > > > None of the eight patients showed improved > > functioning. > > > > In fact, seven of the eight had gotten worse. > > > > " Absent additional mold exposure, function in 88 > > percent of these patients had deteriorated during > > the course of the year, " the study's author, Dr. > > Kaye Kilburn, wrote. > > > > The point: > > > > If Corn is dying because of toxic mold exposure at > > Mesquite Junior High, he may not be alone. > > > > Which means that instead of making fun of Jeff Corn, > > Gilbert officials might want to provide testing for > > students or teachers who have shown symptoms of > > toxic mold exposure during their time at Mesquite. > > > > For now, though, everyone involved with Mesquite > > Junior High is looking to the upcoming Gilbert > > schools bond issue. If voters approve the bond > > proposal, more than $4.5 million will go toward > > renovating the Mesquite complex. > > > > Corn is trying a renovation of his own. > > > > Amid bouts with pain and depression, he says he's > > regained the strength to " earnestly try to fight > > this stuff in my body. " He plans to use some of the > > money from selling his house to place himself in > > that toxin treatment center in Dallas. > > > > Meantime, he is self-medicating. For example, one > > basic treatment attempted by some toxicologists for > > purging the body of toxins is frequent saunas. > > > > So, when he's up for it, Corn has begun running > > again -- in the heat of the day. > > > > " I've got to try to fight this, " he says. " It may > > not work, but I'm going to give it my best shot. " > > > > As for his old school, Corn simply hopes that > > Gilbert officials will finally give their best shot > > to helping other teachers and students who were made > > ill by years of moldering decay at Mesquite. > > > > " I have this terrible fear it's going to start > > catching up with others who came into that school > > later than I did, " Corn says. " What makes me so mad > > is this could have been stopped a long time ago. But > > instead, [the school district] just let the problem > > grow. " > > > > Scanlon > > > > > > > > Mesquite Junior High in Gilbert. Black mold could've > > become the school's mascot. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Water and mold damage have been common at Mesquite. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Medical pathologist Dr. Croft says > > mycotoxins from mold " can affect every cell in the > > body. " > > > > > _____________________________________________________________________ ___ > > > > > > A short synopsis of what happened to me as wells as > > suggestions for You: > > > > > > > > I'm finally on a positive track toward the future, > > but ... > > > > My life has been devasted for 5 years now and > > will never be the same in ways most people wouldn't > > think of. I have lived in alternative housing, > > borrowing money against the damaged house to pay for > > the double-housing (displaced and harmed in many > > ways similar to those who lost their homes from > > hurricanes, but without the public understanding and > > without any government support). One former > > neighbor of mine, who is a psychologist, rebutted > > the negative remarks of the people who bought my > > home, saying back to them, if she was *...*... (I'll > > skip the word) about the mold, why did the insurance > > company pay on the claims? This was only about 1/3 > > of the value of what was actually destroyed, and > > then what I received was negated by the fact that I > > had to battle the insurance company at an appraisal > > hearing, and then a mediation hearing, and then a > > pre-trial settlement. I won at every stage of the > > battle, YET the costs of battle matched whatever I > > was eventually awarded. Important point here: > > Insurance DID pay on airborne mold, not just where > > water and mold were visibly growing on things. That > > says something powerful about validating the dangers > > of mold as to toxic contamination! > > > > My home and all of it's contents were > > destroyed, and that sure changed my desire and > > ability to buy a new home. Only recently, I have > > been able to go shopping at malls without being > > ripped up emotionally for the loss of family > > treasurers and all the sweet things one collects > > over the years, which makes no sense to re-acquire > > at my stage in life, if I could afford to. Now, the > > cost of new homes is through the roof, especially in > > Arizona (way more than elsewhere in the U.S.) where > > homes have DOUBLED in value within a six month time > > frame. The housing market shot up just three months > > AFTER I sold my house for only $65,000, which I had > > to use to pay off debts over the lack of > > reimbursement from insurance and the costs to battle > > them. I had no ability to rebuild it. If I had any > > money left to rebuild it, I would be liable to the > > new owners, even with full disclosure. My house is > > now listed for $199,000 after it was rebuilt by the > > people who buy " ugly houses, " where they rebuilt it > > at wholesale rates, and they don't have to disclose > > about the mold when they resell it to people they > > don't give a da*m about harming. > > My WARNINGS for YOU: Make sure you have enough > > insurance on your home and personal contents. When > > an insurance agent has you fill out a form where you > > list your key items in your home, my rule of thumb > > is to take that amount and double it as to the > > limits of your insurance for personal contents. You > > would not believe how valuable all the additional > > items in your home add up to. Keep your receipts > > off-site, in a safe deposit box or storage unit and > > video every single thing in your home, even inside > > of drawers, describing the brands and models, and if > > you recall what you paid for it, you might state > > that you believe that is what you paid for it > > (you'll have to verify it any way, but it helps). > > And finally (although this was not my situation), > > NEVER neglect standing water, or leaking pipes for > > more than 24 to 48 hours. If you suspect mold > > damage, at LEAST start with some minimal, initial > > laboratory testing BEFORE you allow, for example, > > your walls to be opened up, doing repairs without > > proper " mold remediation, " which includes > > quarantining off the area or room to protect the > > rest of your belongings. In a Jim Carrey kind of > > tone, I would say, That stuff is NASTY! > > > > Needless to say, I REALLY couldn't stop crying for > > everyone at the Gulf Coast. At the mention of every > > sad story, I instantly began choking back tears and > > crying, and finally called counselors to help get > > over it. > > > > Lastly, regarding the controversy and all that > > surrounds that, this was like the silicone issue ... > > all over again ... in practically every way. > > > > Marti > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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