Guest guest Posted February 12, 2007 Report Share Posted February 12, 2007 First, eliminate the sources of moisture.. Then remediate. There is a very good pamphlet put out by the EPA " Mold Remediation in Schools and Commercial Buildings " that gives the whole process step by step. Its very good. The key issue is containment. (by, for example, using big sheets of plastic to create seals over openings and fans in windows to create negative air pressure in areas that are being worked on..READ THE EPA DOCUMENT...) And complete removal of moldy materials, not encapsulation. You need to contain the mold as you go so that you don't make the situation worse. Thats important. If you don't follow the proper procedure you could make your home much worse. Thats how a lot of buildings get so messed up, because people don't address the root moisture first and then try to clean but don't contain and/or don't do it completely. Otherwise you might as well give up now and save yourself the effort.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 13, 2007 Report Share Posted February 13, 2007 --- In , LiveSimply <quackadillian@...> wrote: > > First, eliminate the sources of moisture.. Then remediate. The primary moisture source has been taken care of. I dont know if there are others. Initial containment has gone by the board since a lot of stuff was stirred up before mold was even considered as a potential problem. Also the building has a forced air heating system that blows everything everywhere. I understand the principles around containment since I have a science and engineering background. Sadly, in the beginning I did not have any information that pointed to mold as a part of the problem. I was also brain fogged and left some things to other people who handled them poorly. I am too sick to do anything myself and have little support. I still do not know the best way to find out what is going on in the building. I figure that that is the first step and where I really need advice. > > There is a very good pamphlet put out by the EPA " Mold Remediation in > Schools and Commercial Buildings " that gives the whole process step by step. > > > Its very good. The key issue is containment. (by, for example, using big > sheets of plastic to create seals over openings and fans in windows to > create negative air pressure in areas that are being worked on..READ THE EPA > DOCUMENT...) And complete removal of moldy materials, not encapsulation. > > You need to contain the mold as you go so that you don't make the situation > worse. > > Thats important. If you don't follow the proper procedure you could make > your home much worse. Thats how a lot of buildings get so messed up, because > people don't address the root moisture first and then try to clean but don't > contain and/or don't do it completely. > > Otherwise you might as well give up now and save yourself the effort.. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 13, 2007 Report Share Posted February 13, 2007 Can you download the EPA pamphlet and give it a look through? It has the best free overview of how to clean up moldy buildings that I have seen. You need to find wherever there was water damage. That may involve looking inside of walls, etc. There is no way around it. Hopefully it wont be that complicated but its quite possible that it will. Nomatter what you do you need PPE. Or you could end up getting really sick. Take it from someone who knows. I was using N95 masks and it was not enough. I got really, really sick. Start with the obvious low hanging fruits first.. You mentioned that the primary moisture source has been taken care of.. What was that and what happened? Can you be more specific? Look, there are other people on here (Carl) who could probably be more helpful than me.. I am no one to give advice.. But honestly, you need to realize that one of the things mold does is cause this mental paralysis. (zombification, I used to call it) and FIGHT that because its really a matter of life or death.. Look, knowing what is involved and knowing how hard even just moving was for me when I was sick, I would strongly recommend that if you don't think you can deal with either doing this or paying somebody else to do it that you cut your losses, sell, with full disclosure, and move on.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 14, 2007 Report Share Posted February 14, 2007 SJH, Reading back through your post and thinking about my own experience, (It took me months to move out and I just kept getting sicker and sicker and although I have gotten a lot better in many ways, I am still sick now) Everyone here will tell you that they were in denial when they were still living in it but that in retrospect, they wish they had gotten out much sooner than they did. Nobody can deal with this situation. I lost 3/4 of what I owned.. and the rest that I kept ended up varying degrees of toxic even though I tried to clean it. And a lot of it still makes me sick. I think you should put together a plan and stick to it nomatter how hard it is and that plan needs to be based on ACTION nomatter how hard it is for you. ACT NOW.. The crucial thing is minimizing your hands on exposure to this toxic situation until it is fixed, bit also to start fixing it. And if it can't be fixed, GET OUT of there and don't look back. Chalk one up to experience. A lot of people are in this situation. You are not alone. Nomatter what you do, stay or go, you first need to get everything out of there. I would put ALL of your stuff in storage Pay someone else to just throw everything in boxes while wearing at least a N100 mask and gloves, and put it in plastic bags inside of cardboard boxes sealed twice with duct tape, uncleaned. Make an inventory as its going into the boxes and number every box so you will know where things are. Put it in storage somewhere DRY. Then when the house is empty, you need to figure out what is going on, which will be a lot easier when it is completely empty and you can have the windows wide open and fans airing it out..and then when you know if its a temporary issue or a nightmare either attempt to fix it or sell the house and move, leaving your stuff in storage for now..dealing with your stuff later, when you are MUCH BETTER.. (I am substantially better than when I was living in the place I got sick but I am still not able to deal with my old stuff, although I have tried, so go easy on yourself.. it could be a long time before its not toxic to you..THE KEY TO GETTING BETTER IS TO AVOID EXPOSURE...) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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