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Re: Digest Number 909

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Hi Debbie

thanks for the info. Do you know how Dr. B feels about the use of

flagyl---is it helpful etc.?

thank you

lea

<<

To Barb and Lea and Anyone Else....

Flagyl is an antibiotic used to treat the cyst form of Bb while other

antibiotics target the actual spirochete......it can be toxic to the

liver but is actually an older drug used rather effectively for other

things.......like any medication, some folk tolerate it better than

others......

Metronidazole is the generic version of Flagyl while tinidazole is a

European version of it (and supposedly less toxic) Tinidazole can be

gotten on ocassion in this country......

It is interesting that Atkinson-Barr advocates using Flagyl with

Tetracycline (Doxy is also in the tetracycline family) but I've just

recently heard that Dr. B has posted that Tetracycline inhibits some of

the properties of Flagyl and doesn't advise the combo.......hmmmmmmmm, I

suppose all of this needs more research.

Many folk report good effects from Flagyl, if you can get over some of

the herxes and limited side effects of the drug (such as bad taste in

the mouth and neuropathies although the latter may be more related to

Flagyl attacking infections than drug sensitivity in a traditional

sense)

Hope this helps.

Debi

>>

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To Barb and Lea and Anyone Else....

Flagyl is an antibiotic used to treat the cyst form of Bb while other

antibiotics target the actual spirochete......it can be toxic to the

liver but is actually an older drug used rather effectively for other

things.......like any medication, some folk tolerate it better than

others......

Metronidazole is the generic version of Flagyl while tinidazole is a

European version of it (and supposedly less toxic) Tinidazole can be

gotten on ocassion in this country......

It is interesting that Atkinson-Barr advocates using Flagyl with

Tetracycline (Doxy is also in the tetracycline family) but I've just

recently heard that Dr. B has posted that Tetracycline inhibits some of

the properties of Flagyl and doesn't advise the combo.......hmmmmmmmm, I

suppose all of this needs more research.

Many folk report good effects from Flagyl, if you can get over some of

the herxes and limited side effects of the drug (such as bad taste in

the mouth and neuropathies although the latter may be more related to

Flagyl attacking infections than drug sensitivity in a traditional

sense)

Hope this helps.

Debi

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Hi All,

Has anyone had an experience with mold causing the following symptoms:

1-severe itching

2-feeling of mosquito bites every 3 to 4 seconds, all over

3-sensation of a strand of hair falling on the skin, especially on the face

region, every few seconds.

These are the main physical symptoms we have experienced with mold in a

previous home. We have since moved into a new home with no leaks and a

concrete foundation. We are experiencing severe itching again in our new

place after throwing everything we owned away and salvaging only things like

non porous items(flat ware, glass items, etc..). Extreme caution was taken

in decontamination of the few items that we did feel safe trying to

save(wash, rinse, treat with biocide, rinse, then dry in the sun outside for

3 to 4 days).

My question: Has ANYONE experienced these symptoms and is there anything or

anyone that can help us successfully get rid of this itching?? We are not

sleeping because the itching is so severe and it's driving us nuts....help.

Thanx guys....chaughton.

----- Original Message -----

From: < >

< >

Sent: Tuesday, June 26, 2001 4:56 AM

Subject: [] Digest Number 909

There are 24 messages in this issue.

Topics in this digest:-

1. Fw: The Effects of Glutathion (whey)and/or guaifenesin on GWS, CFS

and MCS and fibromyalgia

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

2. Fwd: Suddenly, it's personal...

From: RLLIPSEY87@...

3. Fwd: [ToxicMoldSurvivors] Digest Number 31

From: RLLIPSEY87@...

4. Fwd: PBS

From: RLLIPSEY87@...

5. HOBB Opposes Insurance Exclusion of Mold Coverage

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

6. Toxic mold/Asperger's Syndrome Link? Mom Looking for Answers

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

7. Molds are hazards in variety of ways

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

8. PORTABLE CLASSROOMS TO BECOME LESS TOXIC

From: cavegrl777@...

9. Is the fungus in your floorboards making you sick? With no clear

answers, panic and lawsuits abound

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

10. Insurance companies seek to head off homeowner claims for mold

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

11. As mold grows, so do health worries

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

12. Mastering mold: how to get control

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

13. Answers about mold

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

14. Family abandons home after mold moves in

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

15. Mold, filth and broken fixtures plague schools, civic audit finds

(Middle Tennessee)

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

16. FDA Plans To Make Allergen Inspections

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

17. Mold can create wall of frustration

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

18. Woman Says House Is Making Her Sick

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

19. on practicing mold avoidance and PTSS

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

20. Breathe Free Coupon officer

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

21. Re: Can anyone recommend Michigan doctor?

From: Angel MCS <jap2bemc@...>

22. Re: Remediation: Is chlorine dioxide safe?

From: " Gil Vice " <gilvice@...>

23. Keep deleting those e-mails

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

24. Re: Remediation: Is chlorine dioxide safe?

From: " Gil Vice " <gilvice@...>

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 1

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 07:03:43 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Fw: The Effects of Glutathion (whey)and/or guaifenesin on GWS, CFS

and MCS and fibromyalgia

----- Original Message -----

From: " " <erikj6@...>

" bherk " <bherk@...>

Sent: Sunday, June 24, 2001 9:49 PM

Subject: Re: The Effects of Glutathion (whey)and/or guaifenesin on GWS, CFS

and MCS and fibromyalgia

: Hi Barbara, I've been on the undenatured whey protein for 4 years now and

I

: agree that it has been the supplement that seems to do me the most good.

: Definitely not a cure and it didn't wipe out the mycoplasma, but it seems

to

: help. Lots of people have been using both the whey and guaifenesin stuff

for

: a while now. I haven't heard that it's a magic bullet. I've tried every

damn

: thing that I could afford and nothing has done much more than help a

little

: bit until I tried this crazy mold avoidance thing. I just got back from

: climbing Jobs peak, about a 5,000 ft. altitude gain. After 13 years of

: godawful living hell, I never dared hope that I could recover to the

extent

: that I have. Let me ask you this. If toxins are the prime mover of CFS and

: GWI how do wives and children get it? There is a smouldering infection

just

: waiting to blaze with a toxic exposure, surgury, mold, stress or any other

: thing that pushes you over the edge. You wouldn't have a glutathione

: depletion if there wasn't something that used up everything you got and

: more. You've seen the huge increase of people complaining about stachy.

: That's just the beginning. Uncontrollable fungal infection and chemical

: sensitivity come next. Oh well, I've been screaming about this since 1985

: and it's pretty much been a waste of time. -

:

:

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 2

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 08:42:07 EDT

From: RLLIPSEY87@...

Subject: Fwd: Suddenly, it's personal...

In a message dated 6/25/2001 8:18:48 AM Eastern Daylight Time, Rllipsey87

writes:

> Subj: Re: Suddenly, it's personal...

> Date: 6/25/2001 8:18:48 AM Eastern Daylight Time

> From: <A HREF= " mailto:Rllipsey87 " >Rllipsey87</A>

> <A

HREF= " mailto:lisarolanda@... " >lisarolanda@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:ToxicMoldSurvivors " >ToxicMoldSurvivors@gro

ups.com</A>

> CC: <A HREF= " mailto:toxtalk@... " >toxtalk@...</A>

> BCC: <A HREF= " mailto:sbldf@... " >sbldf@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:wpfaff@... " >wpfaff@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:dp18@... " >dp18@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:info@... " >info@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:krhoda@... " >

> krhoda@...</A>, <A HREF= " mailto:HeartsNUni " >HeartsNUni</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:lallen@... " >lallen@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:NJTOXICS " >NJTOXICS</A>, <A HREF= " mailto:will@... " >

> will@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:hferreir@... " >hferreir@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:masspirg@... " >masspirg@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:txpeer@... " >txpeer@...

> </A>, <A HREF= " mailto:ezh1@... " >ezh1@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:tburke@... " >tburke@...</A>

>

>

>

> LISA........

> Kilz anti-microbial paint is a Band-Aid approach to mold control and

> will not solve your mother's mold problem. The black mold is either A.

niger

> or Stachybotrys..................both highly pathogenic.

> I do not recommend that you use tape in baggies. Your mother's life is

> worth more than saving a few dollars. Hire a professional or call the

> health dept.

> Aspergillus versicolor has been linked to brain tumors...............

in

> rats.

>

> DR. R. LIPSEY

> UNIV OF NORTH FLORIDA

> PROFESSOR AND TOXICOLOGIST

> <A HREF= " http://www.richardlipsey.com/index.htm " >RESUME, 2001--DR. R.

LIPSEY (www.richardlipsey.com)</A>

[This message contained attachments]

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 3

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 08:42:40 EDT

From: RLLIPSEY87@...

Subject: Fwd: [ToxicMoldSurvivors] Digest Number 31

In a message dated 6/25/2001 8:10:25 AM Eastern Daylight Time, Rllipsey87

writes:

> Subj: Re: [ToxicMoldSurvivors] Digest Number 31

> Date: 6/25/2001 8:10:25 AM Eastern Daylight Time

> From: <A HREF= " mailto:Rllipsey87 " >Rllipsey87</A>

> <A

HREF= " mailto:ToxicMoldSurvivors-owner " >ToxicMoldSurvivors-ow

ner </A>

> CC: <A HREF= " mailto:toxtalk@... " >toxtalk@...</A>

>

>

>

>

> Yes, an air level of 10,400 cfu's/M3 is a hazardous level for any

> pathogenic Aspergillus species of mold.

>

> There are no federal or state standards or guidelines for any mold

at

> any level, but Aspergillus versicolor is occasionally pathogenic that is

> associated with two mycotoxins that can cause diarrhea, nausea, etc. It

has

> also been associated with liver and kidney cancer. Any level of 300

> cfu's/M3 should be considered toxic for normal healthy people, but the

> first to get sick will be infants, the elderly and weak immune systems and

> asthma. My suggestion to you is find out if the spores have spread inside

> your home and have a professional decontamination done which would include

> the ripping out of all the wallboard and insulation in the contaminated

> wall and then washing the remaining wood with a bleach solution of 1 cup

or

> 1.5 cups of bleach in a gallon of water.

>

> DR. RICHARD LIPSEY

> PROFESSOR AND TOXICOLOGIST

> UNIV OF NORTH FLORIDA

> <A HREF= " http://www.richardlipsey.com/index.htm " >RESUME, 2001--DR. R.

LIPSEY (www.richardlipsey.com)</A>

[This message contained attachments]

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 4

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 08:43:13 EDT

From: RLLIPSEY87@...

Subject: Fwd: PBS

In a message dated 6/25/2001 7:59:02 AM Eastern Daylight Time, Rllipsey87

writes:

> Subj: Re: PBS

> Date: 6/25/2001 7:59:02 AM Eastern Daylight Time

> From: <A HREF= " mailto:Rllipsey87 " >Rllipsey87</A>

> <A HREF= " mailto:coolgram@... " >coolgram@...</A>

> CC: <A HREF= " mailto:Chatboards@... " >Chatboards@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:ToxicMoldSurvivors " >ToxicMoldSurvivors@gro

ups.com</A>

> BCC: <A HREF= " mailto:toxtalk@... " >toxtalk@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:sbldf@... " >sbldf@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:wpfaff@... " >wpfaff@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:dp18@... " >

> dp18@...</A>, <A HREF= " mailto:info@... " >info@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:krhoda@... " >krhoda@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:HeartsNUni " >HeartsNUni</A>, <A HREF= " mailto:lallen@... " >

> lallen@...</A>, <A HREF= " mailto:NJTOXICS " >NJTOXICS</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:will@... " >will@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:hferreir@... " >hferreir@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:masspirg@... " >

> masspirg@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:txpeer@... " >txpeer@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:ezh1@... " >ezh1@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:tburke@... " >tburke@...</A>

>

>

>

> The PBS program on MOLD POISONING is being produced this

week........but

> no date on the date of the airing of the program. I will post it when I

> know.

>

> DR. R. LIPSEY

> PROFESSOR AND TOXICOLOGIST

> UNIV OF NORTH FLORIDA

> <A HREF= " http://www.richardlipsey.com/index.htm " >RESUME, 2001--DR. R.

LIPSEY (www.richardlipsey.com)</A>

[This message contained attachments]

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 5

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 10:28:51 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: HOBB Opposes Insurance Exclusion of Mold Coverage

: HOMEOWNERS FOR BETTER BUILDING

: E-mail: president@... * Website: www.hobb.org

: / FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE /

: MOLD ALERT: Insurance Coverage Public Hearing

: " Silent Killer and Sick Building Syndrome "

: 9:30 June 26, 2001,A.M.

: LBJ Library Auditorium - 2313 Red River in Austin

: Austin, Texas, June 25, 2001 -- Texas insurance

: companies are requesting that the Texas Insurance Commission exclude mold

: coverage from homeowner policies. HomeOwners for Better Building is

: opposed to this effort to eliminate coverage.

: Recent news accounts of health issues have given attention to the

: nationwide crisis of dangerous Toxic Molds that are invading homes,

: offices, and schools. Faulty construction, faulty air conditioning,

: plumbing leaks, careless building practices and defective building

: materials are identified as the major contributing factors to the growth

: of molds. If the Texas Insurance Commission allows insurance companies

: to delete mold coverage from homeowner policies, then health care cost

: will most certainly increase, which does not solve the dilemma.

: What is the answer? Construction Defects are the major cause of the

: growth of these toxic molds, leaving families facing a crisis without

: answers or help. The mold issue should be handled in the same manner as

: any other health issue. HomeOwners for Better Building will recommend

: that the insurance industry concentrate on the identification and

: prevention of construction defect in homes rather than eliminating " mold "

: from insurance coverage. This should be a wakeup call for the Insurance

: Industry to start addressing prevention as a way to cut their losses,

: instead of refusing to help victims. The industry has an obligation to

: insist that builders of new homes adhere to standards that insure homes

: are built free of construction defects that contribute to the growth of

: mold.

: Homebuilders are not licensed or regulated in the state of Texas, and the

: lack of accountability on the part of homebuilders is being recognized as

: the cause for the lack of quality control, resulting in substandard

: homes, that promotes the growth of toxic molds. Tort Reform and

: contractual advantage requirements designed by the home building industry

: prevent homeowners from suing the builder, leaving them with only their

: insurance coverage as a means of getting help.

: HomeOwners for Better Building will aslo be meeting with Lieutenant

: Governor Ratliff to discuss Interim Committee Hearings on the mold

: crisis, construction defects and a home lemon law that was introduced

: this last session by Senator Van de Putte.

: Contacts: Janet Ahmad, President, (210) 494-6404 or Gerding, (936)

321-5565

: HOBB National Board of Directors

: Janet Ahmad - San h Munoz - Austin h Judy Doyle -

: California h Tom Davey - Dallas l Armstrong - Florida

: Flo /Osteen & Tomlinson - Georgia hTahni Hutchins - Indiana

: h Cobarruvias - Houston

: & Ainslie Vice - Kentucky h Lorinda & Couch - North

: Carolina h Marie Crosby - New Jersey h Gloria - South Carolina

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 6

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 12:27:55 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Toxic mold/Asperger's Syndrome Link? Mom Looking for Answers

----- Original Message -----

From: " Peggy Chaves " <ToxicHomes@...>

<bherk@...>

Sent: Monday, June 25, 2001 11:54 AM

Subject: Research

Hi Barbara,

Seats thought I should e-mail you. I had e-mailed her this story and

she thought maybe you could help. I just want to try and get this query out

to has many people has I can that have been affected with toxic mold.

Thank you,

Peggy Chaves

In 1998 my son, who was 8 at the time, started developing strange behaviors

and unexplained outbursts. We searched for two years for a diagnosis. We

were told of a Dr. at UCLA, California, that could possibly help us. We took

him to UCLA where he was diagnosed with Asperger Syndrome. We recently found

out in Feb. '01 that we have been exposed to toxic molds for a good 3-4

years and didn't know it. I believe these toxins directly affected my son's

nervous system.

I have found a couple of families who have experienced the same thing. I'm

asking for everyone's help, if you believe your children may have been

exposed to toxic mold and are autistic, or have an autism spectrum disorder,

I need to hear from you. I need to gather this information for research

purposes. You can send me your story or contact me, Peggy, at

ToxicHomes@...

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 7

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 12:32:34 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Molds are hazards in variety of ways

http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/business/buggs/951334

June 25, 2001, 9:48AM

Molds are hazards in variety of ways

By SHANNON BUGGS

Copyright 2001 Houston Chronicle

The flood sicced mosquitoes and mold on homes all over Houston.

Both can carry germs harmful to your health, but the mold also could be

hazardous to your insurance claim.

Molds are microscopic organisms that are so lightweight they can travel

through the air. They use moisture to multiply and spread to any available

surface. If left unchecked, mold can cause structural damage to a home.

Federal flood insurance policies specify payment can be denied on claims if

" water, moisture, mildew or mold damage " results from a homeowner failing to

" inspect and maintain the property after a flood recedes. "

Flood insurance covers the repair and replacement of most items touched by

floodwaters, but coverage for mold cleanup depends on homeowners actively

working to kill mold.

Clean and keep cleaning

It's not enough to rip out wet carpet, stack up destroyed possessions on the

curb and shut your home's windows and doors while you wait for an insurance

adjuster to come assess the damage.

If you do just that, when the adjuster finally arrives, your home will be

infested with mold and mildew.

And since you did nothing to stop its spread, you run the risk of your

adjuster refusing to recommend coverage for removing the mold and mildew.

To make sure you don't lose out on some insurance money, clean and keep

cleaning until the repair work begins.

By this time, you should have discarded all ruined clothes and possessions,

washed and disinfected anything salvageable and dried out your home and

belongings using fans, air conditioners and sunshine.

If you haven't, get started today.

For most flood cleanup jobs, a bleach solution combining a quarter cup of

liquid chlorine bleach, such as Clorox or Purex, for each gallon of water

will kill mold and mildew.

Tear out and throw away Sheetrock or drywall rotten with mold, so spores

won't jump to other walls and ceilings.

Further protect your home's interior by removing all the Sheetrock at least

12 inches above the high water mark.

Remove water-soaked insulation. If it's rigid foam, you may be able to

disinfect it, dry it out and reuse it. But other insulation materials must

be destroyed.

If you properly clean and air out everything, you should eliminate the

moisture mold needs to spread.

In case you missed a spot, stay vigilant. Continue to wipe down interior and

exterior walls with disinfectant or the bleach solution every few days.

Insurance issue intense

As much of a hassle as all of this may seem, the standard federal flood

policy at least provides mold coverage. There's an effort now to cut mold

coverage in the Texas standard homeowners policy.

Farmers Insurance Group has asked state regulators to allow it to modify all

of its Texas homeowners policies to limit its liability for losses caused by

wet or dry rot, mold, rust or fungus.

Farmers wants to cover only mold damage stemming from a sudden or accidental

burst of water, such as a broken pipe, and exclude mold claims resulting

from an old leak that a homeowner failed to repair or from faulty

construction.

The standard homeowners policy already excludes mold and other damage caused

by flooding. Federal flood insurance covers that.

Farmers' request came in the midst of the Los Angeles-based insurer's court

battle with an Austin-area couple.

Earlier this month, a jury decided Farmers committed fraud by delaying

payment to repair a plumbing leak in the couple's home and awarded them $32

million.

Without discussing the specifics of the case, Ray of the Southwestern

Insurance Information Service said, " Premiums were not written to cover

these types of claims. A year ago, mold wasn't even heard of. "

The insurance industry expects mold claims to mount into the billions of

dollars, with claims ranging from $10,000 to $100,000.

Ray predicts insurance companies will go bankrupt if state rules don't

change to limit mold coverage or create separate policies for mold damage.

TDI will hold a public hearing at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday in Austin. The location

was changed from the Commissioner's Hearing Room in the department to the

1,000-seat LBJ Library Auditorium.

Interest in mold insurance coverage is just that intense.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

----

Buggs invites comments and column ideas, but cannot offer specific

financial advice about individual situations. E-mail her at

shannon.buggs@... or call 713-220-2000, access code 1003.

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 8

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 12:50:44 EDT

From: cavegrl777@...

Subject: PORTABLE CLASSROOMS TO BECOME LESS TOXIC

PORTABLE CLASSROOMS TO BECOME LESS TOXIC

SAN FRANCISCO, California, June 22, 2001 (ENS) - In a major victory for

California school children, manufacturers and distributors of portable

classrooms have agreed to use less toxic materials in their buildings.

The change could slash exposures to airborne chemicals known to cause

cancer,

asthma and other illnesses.

A settlement was reached last month in a lawsuit brought by As You Sow, a

San

Francisco based environmental group, against 14 makers and suppliers of

modular buildings, including many of the estimated 85,000 portable

classrooms

in use in California. As You Sow sued under Proposition 65, a state law that

says products containing chemicals that cause cancer or reproductive harm

must carry warning labels.

The portable classroom companies did not admit liability, but paid As You

Sow

$150,000 in restitution funds, which will be redistributed as grants to

other

nonprofit groups working to reduce chemical exposures and raise public

awareness of toxic chemicals' health effects. The portables companies also

paid all of As You Sow's legal fees and costs, and $10,000 in civil

penalties.

In 1999, an Environmental Working Group (EWG) analysis of state and federal

data found that more than two million California children attend school in

portable classrooms that can expose them to harmful levels of toxic

chemicals

and molds. EWG calculated that long term exposure to known levels of

formaldehyde, benzene and other chemicals emitted inside portables could

increase some children's lifetime risk of developing cancer by a factor of

two.

The EWG study, " Reading, Writing and Risk, " is available at:

http://www.ewg.org/pub/home/reports/readingwritingrisk/pressrelease.html

" Two years ago the modular building industry vehemently denied that the

toxic

materials used in portable classrooms posed a health hazard to children, "

said Bill , EWG's California director. " They still won't admit it, but

they've agreed to use safer materials, and that means kids will be healthier

at school. "

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 9

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 14:58:32 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Is the fungus in your floorboards making you sick? With no clear

answers, panic and lawsuits abound

http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,165155,00.html

Sunday, Jun. 24, 2001

Beware:Toxic Mold

Is the fungus in your floorboards making you sick? With no clear answers,

panic and lawsuits abound

BY ANITA HAMILTON

Sharyn Iler, 52, of the Woodlands, Texas, an upscale suburb of Houston,

couldn't figure out what was wrong. Every time she went into her bathroom to

put on makeup, her eyes started burning. She felt constantly exhausted, her

vision was blurry and she had a dry cough that just wouldn't quit. Diagnosed

with breast cancer in 1998, Iler feared the worst. Perhaps after two years

of remission, the disease had returned. She never imagined that the source

of her troubles might lie buried within the walls of her $300,000 home--or

that she and her husband Bruce would be forced to flee for health reasons

with nothing but their dog and cat in tow.

Yet that is exactly what happened one ill-fated afternoon last February.

Inspectors had found a thick black mold growing between the stucco and the

drywall of the master bedroom, bath, study and dining room. After some of it

was identified as stachybotrys atra--a fungus that has been linked to

everything from sinus infections to brain damage--an industrial hygienist

warned the Ilers to evacuate. Thirty minutes later, they abandoned their

home forever. " I thought, This can't be happening to me, " says Sharyn. " This

is my sanctuary. This is where I come when everything else is wrong. "

Like some sort of biblical plague, toxic mold has been creeping through

homes, schools and other buildings across the U.S. Although press reports

have focused on stachybotrys, strains of aspergillus, chaetomium and

penicillium have also triggered their share of grief. At least two families

have burned their homes to rid themselves of the contamination. Thousands

more, including antipollution crusader Brockovich, are suing home

builders, landlords and insurers for damages to their property and their

health. Last month the California state senate approved the country's first

mold bill, which would set standards for acceptable levels indoors and

require home sellers to disclose mold problems.

Amid the frenzy, a cottage industry of fungus busters, mold lawyers and

support groups is growing. On June 4 a jury found that Farmers Insurance

should pay Melinda Ballard of Dripping Springs, Texas, $32 million for mold

damage to her 22-room, hilltop mansion and for her ensuing mental anguish.

In May the Delaware Supreme Court upheld a $1 million jury award to

Stroot of Wilmington, Del., who claimed that moldy water leaking

into the bathroom of her apartment aggravated her asthma and caused

cognitive disorders.

Faced with a rising number of claims, insurers and home builders are looking

for ways to minimize their liability. Farmers, which estimates that in Texas

alone it will have to shell out $85 million in mold claims, has simply

eliminated coverage in some 30 states. Says Janet Bachman, vice president of

the American Insurance Association: " We are not the guarantors of public

health. " The California building industry tried and failed to push through a

" home warranty " bill, under which homeowners could be required to enter

binding arbitration instead of suing for defects.

How much of the crisis is based on hard science and how much stems from

plain old hysteria--fanned by news reports and plaintiffs' lawyers--is a

hotly contested issue. Mold, after all, is everywhere, from the tasty

Roquefort cheese in your salad dressing to the nasty black stuff clinging to

the grout in your bathroom. Doctors know that certain strains can trigger

allergic reactions, asthma and other respiratory ailments. They have

discovered that toxins produced by aspergillus molds can cause cancer. But

proving that a mold in this house caused this person's nosebleeds or mental

confusion is a notoriously difficult task.

Among the skeptics, Dr. Emil Bardana, of Oregon Health & Science University,

argues that most people will experience little more than " transient

irritations, " such as a runny nose or teary eyes, that clear up once the

mold is removed.

Others are not so sure. In a study published in 1999, Mayo Clinic

researchers concluded that mold causes most chronic sinus infections. Even

more alarming, several researchers believe that molds can cause some types

of brain damage. Wayne Gordon, a neuropsychologist, and Dr. Eckardt

Johanning, both of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City, have

seen enough patients whose problems with memory, learning and concentration

occurred only after exposure to stachybotrys to convince them there is a

relationship. Still, they concede, more research is needed.

Lawyers don't require such absolutes. " For science to prove something, it

has to be 100% certain. In a civil lawsuit, it has to be proved only 51%, "

says Guy Vann, a New York City attorney who has won mold trials. The

Department of Housing and Urban Development has shelled out some $5 million

to clean up mold problems in low-income homes.

The biggest winners are the industries feeding off mold mania. " Six years

ago, people laughed in my face, " says Ed Cross, a lawyer in Santa Ana,

Calif. Since then, he has won mold settlements as large as $978,000 and says

he gets 50 calls a week from potential clients. Steve Temes, an industrial

hygienist in Red Bank, N.J., charges $150 an hour for mold inspections. " I

used to do radon and lead testing, " he says. " But there was no demand. "

The losers are people like Mark and Jane O'Hara of Eugene, Ore. In

February they had the local fire department burn their home to the ground

after doctors attributed the family's chronic nosebleeds, flulike symptoms

and severe headaches to mold. The O'Haras figured it would cost more to

repair the house than to rebuild it from scratch. Others, like Carol Cherry

of Hazlet, N.J., can't afford the $5,000-to-$10,000 retainer that lawyers

often require to take on a mold case. Stranded in her moldy home, Cherry

says, " I can't have guests over. I can't even invite children over to play

with my nine-year-old son. " Yet Cherry, who has spent the past year looking

for help, is not ready to give up the fight. " My children and I were

wronged, " she says, " and I will do everything in my power to right that

wrong. "

With reporting by Dan Cray/Los Angeles, Hylton/ Austin,

McCalope/Houston and Maggie Sieger/Chicago

The EPA's Mold Resources page

Mold Remediation

Information provided for commercial buildings that's also applicable to

homes

Center for Disease Control

Questions and nswers on Stachybotrys chartarum and other molds

Clearing the Air

A report on asthma and mold from the National Academy of Science Institute

of Medicine

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 10

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:01:41 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Insurance companies seek to head off homeowner claims for mold

http://www.nj.com/newsflash/index.ssf?/cgi-free/getstory_ssf.cgi?n4889_BC_LA

-TX--BlackMold & & news & newsflash-financial

Insurance companies seek to head off homeowner claims for mold

By DAVID KOENIG

The Associated Press

6/24/01 1:46 PM

DALLAS (AP) -- The spiderlike crack in the breakfast-room wall didn't look

serious, but when a workman removed the wallboard, the insulation and back

of the board were covered with black fuzz.

The mildewing substance stretched around a corner and into the adjoining

den. A biochemist came in to take samples of the rot. A month later, in

early 1999, homeowner Harold Hobbs got a call from his insurance company's

staff engineer.

" She said the biochemist strongly recommends you don't go into the house

without a respirator, a moon suit, gloves and boots, " Hobbs said. " It scared

the hell out of me. "

Tests showed the mold growing behind the walls in Hobbs' Houston home was

Stachybotrys chartarum, which some scientists have linked to everything from

rashes to fatal pulmonary bleeding -- conclusions disputed by other

scientists and insurers.

Hobbs, who moved his family into a hotel and then a leased house, was on the

cutting edge of an apparently growing trend: Mold growing in homes and other

buildings. In the past few months, a Dallas apartment complex was evacuated,

a courthouse in Denton was closed and a construction company agreed to pay a

school district $3 million, all in cases involving mold.

There's nothing new about mold -- it's mentioned in the Bible -- but concern

about its effect on people living in infested homes is growing faster than

the fungus itself. Homeowners, contractors and attorneys are looking for

someone to pay for expensive mold removal and home repairs.

That would be insurance companies.

Worried insurers say mold claims, if unchecked, soon could rival the

billions they have paid for asbestos-related claims.

" The number of claims is growing exponentially, " said Bob Huxel, a lobbyist

for Farmers Insurance, the largest underwriter of homeowner policies in

Texas. " We anticipate the losses coming in very rapidly. "

Farmers, which sells 10 percent of the homeowner policies in Texas, will

testify before state regulators this week that claims this year in Texas

alone could conservatively approach $130 million and require a 40 percent

increase in homeowner premiums.

Farmers has petitioned the state insurance commissioner to exclude coverage

of mold claims. If the request is granted, other insurers are expected to

follow suit or seek to require homeowners to buy separate policies for mold

damage.

" It's going to cost homeowners thousands of dollars in repairs if the

insurance companies don't cover this, " said Joe Cole, a contractor who does

mold-abatement work in Corpus Christi. " We have some houses that are only

worth $100,000 and the cleanup is $300,000. People are just going to walk

away from the houses and turn them over to the lenders. "

Insurers say that the public -- encouraged by media reports -- has become

hysterical about mold. The Environmental Protection Agency says molds are

everywhere and grow easily on just about any damp surface. EPA says there is

no practical way to eliminate mold inside buildings and the best defense is

to control moisture.

Insurance officials also suggest that not all mold claims are on the level.

" There are legitimate instances of mold having an effect on a person's

health, but we've seen cases where people develop what we call opportunistic

illness, " said Jerry s, spokesman for an industry group, the

Southwestern Insurance Information Service.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says links between mold and

conditions such as memory loss and lung damage haven't been proved, although

the agency says people with lowered immune systems or lung disease might be

at increased risk for infection from mold.

Homeowners who have moved out of mold-infested homes say their suffering is

far from phony.

Melinda Ballard sued Farmers when it delayed repairing water-soaked sub

flooring in her 22-room, 11,500-square-foot dream house in the Hill Country

town of Dripping Springs. She said a water leak in late 1998 allowed

Stachybotrys chartarum, also called black mold, to spread wildly throughout

the home.

Ballard said she suffered no ill effects but her husband still suffers

blackouts and had to quit his job as an investment banker. She said her

5-year-old son has scarred lung tissue, asthma and learning problems because

of exposure to the mold.

Two weeks ago, an Austin jury awarded Ballard $32 million in actual and

punitive damages -- a judge is scheduled to review the verdict Monday.

" They could've fixed the house for less than $1 million in April of 1999.

They opted not to, " Ballard said. " That was pure stupidity and arrogance. "

Ballard vows to sue again over her son's health problems, which were not an

issue in the trial. " Farmers hasn't seen the last of us by a long shot, " she

said.

Hobbs, the Houston man forced out of his home, is also suing Farmers. He

claims adjusters didn't take the time to examine the house when the mold and

sources of moisture could have been treated.

Farmers declined to comment on the cases. Its lawyers have hinted they will

appeal the Ballard verdict if the state district court judge doesn't

overturn it.

Insurers usually order toxicology tests when mold is found in a home. If

it's Stachybotrys, abatement crews are called in, and EPA guidelines tell

them to wear full protective suits and masks. Contents, from shoes to sofas,

are often double-wrapped in plastic and hauled away.

The cost of such a job adds up quickly. s, the Texas insurance industry

group official, said the average claim is about $30,000.

In January, Farmers petitioned Texas Insurance Commissioner Montemayor

to approve a new form for its Texas homeowner policies that would exclude

coverage for " any loss consisting of, caused by, contributed to, or

aggravated by rust, mold, fungus, or wet or dry rot. "

The proposal has raised a furor among homeowners with mold claims.

Montemayor called a Tuesday hearing, and interest on the subject forced him

to move it from a 150-seat room to an auditorium that holds 1,000.

No one claims to know how the insurance commissioner will rule on Farmers'

request, but Huxel, the company's Texas lobbyist, acknowledged that growing

public concern about mold could make it harder for the insurer to get its

way.

" My fear is it's such an emotional issue that facts may not carry the day, "

he said.

------

On the Net:

Texas Department of Insurance: www.tdi.state.tx.us

CDC site: http://www.cdc.gov/nceh/asthma/factsheets/molds/default.htm

EPA: http://www.epa.gov/iaq/pubs/moldresources.html

Copyright 2001 Associated Press.

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 11

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:07:49 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: As mold grows, so do health worries

http://enquirer.com/editions/2001/06/24/loc_as_mold_grows_so_do.html

Sunday, June 24, 2001

As mold grows, so do health worries

Toxic threat or overblown fear?

By Peggy O'Farrell

The Cincinnati Enquirer

Mold, the fungus that gave us the wonder drug penicillin, is now being

blamed for everything from asthma to cancer to immune deficiencies.

An industrial hygenist wearing a respirator suit inspects a Tristate home

with mold-covered walls.

(M.S. Crandall Group Inc. photo)

Increasingly, Americans are worrying - some experts say panicking -

about getting sick from the black fuzz that can grow, unseen and unchecked,

behind walls in our homes, schools and offices.

So how big a problem is it?

Some scientists call mold a potentially new, serious health threat.

Others say concern is overblown. But whatever their belief, more people are

paying attention.

For the first time, the Ohio Department of Health is working with

federal and local officials to clean up mold and improve air quality in

schools. In the Tristate, tens of thousands of dollars are being spent to

clean up mold in buildings where we work, play and sleep.

And while national experts debate how bad the problem really is,

Cincinnati researchers for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency may have

developed a way to find answers.

A hidden menace

The Vanden Bosch family in West Chester is one of perhaps hundreds

of Tristate households facing costs of cleaning up mold that grew,

unbeknownst to them, in their own homes.

WARNING SIGNS

. Visible mold

. Visible water damage to building materials, carpet, furniture, etc.

. A musty, damp odor

. Unexplained symptoms such as runny nose, congestion, watery nose,

sneezing and cough, headache or skin rashes.

Vanden Bosch and her son, , were starting a home

improvement project early in March at their 23-year-old, trilevel house.

When they began peeling back wallpaper in the downstairs bathroom, they

discovered unsightly fuzz underneath.

The growth was so thick, it had eaten holes in the drywall.

Mrs. Vanden Bosch's husband, Tom, discovered the fuzz was even more

widespread when he investigated after work. So horrified was the family that

they called a contractor.

" He put on an a spacesuit and a respirator " before going into the

house to do testing, Mrs. Vanden Bosch says. " I'd never seen anything like

it. "

The Vanden Bosch family - , and Tom - in the West Chester home

they had to leave for monthws because of mold.

(Craig Ruttle photo)

| ZOOM |

The contractor found even more mold. It was upstairs as well - under

carpet and behind wallpaper in all three bathrooms. It had eaten holes in

the wooden sub-flooring.

Lab results were even more dismaying: Mold samples in the Vanden

Bosch home came back positive for Stachybotrys and Aspergillus, two common

indoor molds linked to numerous health problems, including some forms of

cancer, skin irritation, systemic infections, hemorrhage and convulsions.

The family hired a company to clean up their house and moved into a

hotel in April. Insurance is covering most of the cost to replace drywall

and paint and carpet - estimated at $30,000 so far.

While test results answered some questions, the Vanden Bosches

wonder what health effects may linger.

Mrs. Vanden Bosch and , now nearly 8, had suffered many upper

respiratory infections, coughs, headaches and sore throats. was having

trouble in school because he was sick so often.

After they tore the wallpaper off, some of those symptoms got worse,

Mrs. Vanden Bosch says. She developed a severe rash and was " covered in

hives " at one point.

Many of their symptoms eased after they moved out of the house.

is in better health, although Mrs. Vanden Bosch still has a cough she

can't seem to shake.

She's also still waiting on tests taken from a skin lesion to find

out if it's cancer and another to see whether the mold and its toxins are in

her bloodstream.

Thriving in the dark

Experts blame escalating complaints about mold on contemporary

construction techniques that emphasize air-tight energy conservation.

Moisture provides a perfect breeding ground for mold, especially in houses

that allow little air in or out.

MORE ABOUT MOLD

.. How to get control

.. Answers to common questions

That's because mold feeds on rotting organic matter. And it grows

everywhere - on building materials, grass, dead leaves, newspapers, books,

firewood, grain, fruit, bread and soil. Under a microscope, mold looks like

a vibrant mixture of red, orange, yellow or green.

It's routine to find mold on shower walls or around window

air-conditioners where moisture condenses. Usually, people clean these areas

regularly. But mold thrives where it is hidden away - inside walls, under

carpet and in damp attics and basements.

Its ill effects can include allergic reactions, resulting in runny

noses, itchy eyes, rashes and asthma.

It also can be infectious, meaning people can inhale mold spores,

which then begin growing in the body, resulting in permanent tissue and

organ damage. Histoplasmosis is a common form of mold infection in the Ohio

Valley.

In its worst form, molds produce mycotoxins, which can interfere

with cellular and DNA function, resulting in cancers and other problems.

Mike Crandall, a certified industrial hygienist and owner of M.S.

Crandall Group Inc. in Norwood, frequently lectures on the best way to

prevent and clean up mold damage.

" Everyone, it seems, has an interest in mold these days, " Mr.

Crandall says. Last month, a Texas jury awarded $32 million to a woman who

sued her insurance company for not covering mold damage claims. That verdict

" got everybody talking and thinking about mold, particularly if you own

buildings. "

Mold in schools has been in the headlines here.

In April, a classroom in E. Lucas Intermediate School in the

Princeton school district was closed for the rest of the school year because

of mold.

Maple Dale Elementary School in Blue Ash was closed for two days in

February after officials discovered potentially dangerous mold on a single

ceiling tile in a storage closet.

And at Lawrenceburg, Ind., High School, several rooms were closed in

March while heating and cooling systems were cleaned and wallpaper and

water-damaged ceilings were removed.

Gayetsky, an industrial hygienist with the Ohio Department of

Health, has helped officials at 10 area schools identify potential problems

affecting the air that students breathe. Flat roofs, for example, can

contribute to a problem if rain can't easily run off, he says.

Mr. Gayetsky is working with schools to implement the " Tools for

Schools " program, an EPA training program that emphasizes improving indoor

air quality in school buildings. State and federal funding funding for the

program totaled $44,000 for 2000-2001.

The Vanden Bosches blame a leaky water pipe for their mold problem.

They discovered the leak and had it fixed soon after they moved into the

home in 1997, but the damage was already done.

Mold 101

Baby boomers were taught that living things are divided into two

kingdoms, plants and animals. Now, science students learn that fungi are a

kingdom of their own. Types of fungi include mushrooms, mildew and mold.

There are hundreds of kinds of mold; scientists can't even agree on

how many. One kind - Penicillium - gives us the antibiotic penicillin.

But the bigger debate is how big a public health threat mold poses.

Dr. Eckhart Johanning, an Albany, N.Y., mold expert and the head of

the Fungal Research Group, is concerned.

" Mold has great public health impact. If we can make a small dent in

this, I think we will make a great difference in people's quality of life, "

Dr. Johanning says.

Dr. Gots disagrees. An environmental health and toxicology

expert, he's the head of the International Center for Toxicology and

Medicine in Washington, D.C.

" People abandon houses and close schools, and there's no reason for

it, " he says. " It's just out of control. It's totally out of control. "

Dr. Gots blames a number of factors for what he calls undue panic

over indoor mold, including high-profile lawsuits and more advertising from

contractors who specialize in testing for or cleaning up mold.

" I'm getting brochures every day that are titled, How to Make Money

in Mold. There are plaintiff's lawyers who are filing lawsuits every day, "

he says.

" There's media hype. There is a wildly active and very chaotic

industry made up of all sorts of people with varying expertise about what to

test and how to test and how much cleanup is necessary. And there's very

little medical input. "

Dr. Malcolm Adcock, health commissioner for the city of Cincinnati,

calls references to toxic mold " an overstatement. " He says that for most

people, mold is simply an allergen, not a deadly poison.

" I'm not downplaying it, but I think it's been raised to more of a

concern than it warrants, given the types of problems that it normally

causes, " Dr. Adcock says. " People don't think a thing at all about taking a

walk in the woods. If you're out walking through the woods with decaying

material on the floor of the forest, you're being exposed to literally

thousands of kinds of mold. "

Questions remain

For all their differences, the experts do agree that many questions

need to be answered. Among them:

. How much mold is too much? There are national maximum exposure

standards for chemicals but none for mold. It's unlikely a mold standard

could be established, Dr. Johanning says. Molds are allergens, and some

individuals are much more sensitive to them than others.

And since molds are so common, it's nearly impossible to establish a

mold-free environment.

Dr. Gots is working with other researchers to compile existing

background levels of molds in different settings - households, office

buildings, manufacturing plants, lumberyards and other places. He's

correlating that data with information on health complaints that might be

related.

. How toxic is toxic? Lab tests show mycotoxins - poisons produced

by molds - cause serious health problems, including cancers, in animals. But

it's difficult to detect mycotoxins in humans because they remain in the

body for such short times.

Researchers can find antigens - protein " markers " for a few

mycotoxins and mold. But several different types of mold can produce the

same markers, making it difficult to trace toxic effects.

. What else may be causing health problems? Mold isn't the only

thing that likes wet, dark environments. So do bacteria. It's possible that

toxic effects being attributed to molds are really being caused by toxins

produced by bacteria.

Science in Cincinnati

Cincinnati researchers are at the forefront of research trying to

answer some of those questions.

At the EPA's Office of Research and Development's National Exposure

Research Laboratory, molecular microbiologists Haugland and

Vesper have developed a way to rapidly identify different strains of mold

using DNA sequencing. They're also working to determine how much mold is

present from a particular sample.

The researchers have collected DNA markers for Stachybotrys and more

than 100 other problem molds.

Currently, mold samples are sent to labs and grown - a process that

can take weeks. Some molds can be identified by physical characteristics,

but that method isn't always accurate.

The method developed at the EPA's Cincinnati lab gives fast and

accurate results, making it easier to tie specific molds to health

complaints, and to determine " which molds are a problem and at what levels

they are a problem, " Dr. Haugland says. " We hope that this can be a big

piece of the puzzle. "

The EPA is licensing the technology, and one firm in Arizona is

using it commercially.

Are we ever safe?

With so many unanswered questions, it's difficult for people and

their doctors to determine the risks of mold exposure. But whether it causes

a runny nose or lung infection or cancer, mold should be limited indoors.

" It really doesn't matter what kind of mold it is,'' says Mandy

Burkett, chief of the Ohio Department of Health's indoor environment

section. " You need to get rid of it. "

Members of the Vanden Bosch family hope they can move back home in

another week or two, and they're adapting to life in the hotel.

But Mrs. Vanden Bosch wonders what's next. Will her medical tests be

OK? How many other families are getting sick because they don't realize mold

is in their homes? Will mold re-infest her home?

" I wonder if I'll ever feel safe there again. "

Mastering mold: how to get control

Answers about mold

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 12

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:12:21 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Mastering mold: how to get control

http://enquirer.com/editions/2001/06/24/loc_mastering_mold_how.html

Sunday, June 24, 2001

Mastering mold: how to get control

By Peggy O'Farrell

The Cincinnati Enquirer

Experts say it's almost a certainty that there's some mold in your

house, since mold spores can be found almost everywhere. The key is to keep

mold from growing so much it can damage your home and your health.

If you can see or smell mold, you know it's there. The little bit

growing in the shower or around the window air-conditioner isn't harmful.

The black fuzz eating away your attic could be.

If your house has suffered water damage from a flood, burst pipe or

leaky roof, it's at risk for mold intrusion. If you or your family -

especially your children - suffer allergy symptoms (runny nose, congestion,

itchy eyes), cough, headaches or repeated colds and upper respiratory

infections only at home, that could be a sign there's a mold problem.

And if you can see a significant amount of mold - more than several

inches in diameter - it's time to call a professional to find out how bad

things might be. A little mold isn't a problem. But when it starts taking

over carpets and walls and adds up to square feet, it could reach toxic

levels.

To keep mold from running rampant in your home or office, follow

these steps:

. Keep water out of the building. Look for leaks from pipes,

foundations, basements, roofs and attics. Plug the leaks and clean up any

standing water.

. Clean up visible mold. If it's the stuff turning the grout in the

bathroom black, a household cleaner, or a sponge soaked in liquid bleach and

water, will do it.

. Control the humidity. Try to keep the humidity at or below 50

percent, and consider installing a humidity gauge in the basement, which

tends to be damper than other parts of the house.

. Remove water- or mold-damaged materials, including carpet and

other floor coverings, wallpaper, drywall, wood, sheetrock, paper, yard

waste and plants.

. Get it where it lives: Check mold-friendly areas regularly for

intrusion: Potting soil, piles of old newspapers, laundry rooms, the sills

and molding around window air-conditioning units, insulation and carpet.

As mold grows, so do health worries

Mastering mold: how to get control

Answers about mold

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 13

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:16:17 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Answers about mold

http://enquirer.com/editions/2001/06/24/loc_answers_about.html

Sunday, June 24, 2001

Answers about mold

What is it?

Mold is one of the oldest life forms on Earth. Neither a plant nor

an animal, mold belongs to the fungi kingdom, along with mushrooms, rusts,

smuts and mildews. Fungi can't produce chlorophyll, as green plants do, and

rely on rotting organic material (wood, leaves, grass, paper, etc.) for

food. There are hundreds of types of mold. (Penicillium, Aspergillus,

Stachybotrys, Fusarium and Alternaria are a few), and experts sometimes

disagree when identifying individual types of mold and on what criteria to

use to classify them.

How can it affect my health?

Mold can affect people's health in three ways:

. Allergic reactions: runny nose, asthma, hypersensitive

pneumonitis.

. Infectious: the growth of mold spores in or on the body.

Histoplasmosis is a common mold infection in the Tristate.

. Toxic: disruption of cellular and DNA function, including cancer.

What harm can mold-produced toxins do?

Molds produce mycotoxins, poisons that can harm people and animals

if they're eaten, inhaled or touched. There are plenty of data available

that indicate mycotoxins are harmful to animals and to some agricultural

workers. There's little information showing a direct link between mycotoxins

and health problems in people in non-agricultural, indoor settings. Molds

that produce mycotoxins include:

. Apergillus: These common molds produce aflatoxins, which can cause

miscarriage, birth defects, immunosuppression and cancer in animals. In

humans, aflatoxins have been implicated in cases of liver cancer and

hepatitis B, liver cirrhosis and Reye's syndrome. The toxin is regularly

found in moldy peanuts, peas, bread, cheese, rice, corn and other grains,

and some studies suggest that people who work in peanut processing have

higher cancer rates. Some lab workers who have inhaled aflatoxins have

reported lung disease and lung cancer.

. Fusarium, Stachybotrys, Memnoniella and other strains: These molds

produce more than 100 compounds classified as tricothecenes. T-2 toxin, a

biological warfare agent, is probably the best known of the tricothecenes,

and is believed to be the mycotoxin responsible for some forms of aleukia

(the absence of white blood cells). T-2 toxin is believed to have killed

thousands of Soviets who ate mold-infested cereal grains toward the end of

World War II. Symptoms of tricothecene poisoning include skin irritation,

vomiting, anorexia, diarrhea, hemorrhage and convulsions, sometimes

resulting in death. Stachybotrys poisoning has been associated with fatal

hemorrhaging in horses and other livestock, and dermatitis, bloody rhinitis,

cough and severe respiratory tract irritation in people. Farm workers,

workers in cottonseed oil plants and grain elevators, textile mill works,

grain processing workers and binder twine factory workers report

occupational exposure to stachybotrys toxins.

. Penicillium produces several toxins, including ochratoxin A, which

has been shown to cause miscarriage, birth defects and kidney damage in

experimental animals. It has also been linked to a form of kidney disease

found in people in the Balkan Valley region of Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and

Romania, theoretically because they ate contaminated foods.

. Alternaria, a very common mold, produces more than 30 compounds

that are toxic to animals and cell cultures. Its toxicity to people is

unknown, though it can cause allergic reaction

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 14

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:25:29 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Family abandons home after mold moves in

http://www.caller.com/2001/june/24/today/localnew/3626.html

Sunday, June 24, 2001

Family abandons home after mold moves in

Couple believes water leak in A/C led to growth throughout the house

By Neal Falgoust

Caller-Times

What began for Dwight and Mercer as a simple renovation of their

Flour Bluff house turned into a flight from home, a nine-month exile and a

fight with their insurance company.

All the Mercers wanted was to add a room and spruce up the property, but

they soon found themselves swirling in a storm of mold.

The Mercers' battle with mold began in February of last year. 's

father, Cloud, wanted to move in with the family. They decided to

build him a room and to do some other renovations on the home that they had

lived in for more than a decade.

The home had been a fixer-upper. The family rented it for several years

before buying it in 1992, and since then made nearly $40,000 in

improvements.

The Mercers hired Gutmann Turn Key contractors to repair a deck

overlooking the water and to enclose part of the garage, where Cloud would

live. They expected the job to proceed in a timely fashion.

During an inspection of the home, Gutmann, president of the

contracting firm, found some soft spots in the floor that separated the

upstairs home from the downstairs garage. What Gutmann found underneath the

floor would change the Mercers' lives.

From beneath the floor

A leak in the air conditioning system had dampened the sub-floor and

frame of the house. Mold was growing in the moisture, feasting on the wood

and paper in the floor. The mold also had spread throughout the home's air

conditioning system and had contaminated the family's furniture,

Mercer said.

By March of last year, just a month after they found the mold, Dwight and

Mercer filed a claim with their insurance company and hoped to have

the mold problem resolved. Two independent air conditioning contractors

inspected the unit for the Mercers, and the insurance company hired a third

firm. All three concluded that there had been a leak, Mercer said.

But the insurance adjuster was not convinced that there was a problem,

Gutmann said.

" You can't smell it. You can't see it, " she said. " So the insurance

company goes in and says, 'There's nothing wrong with this.' "

'It doesn't cover this'

But something was wrong, the Mercers maintain. Dwight Mercer had

respiratory problems, and everyone in the house was feeling sick.

" We all thought we had the flu, " Mercer said.

But they couldn't afford to do anything about their problems without help

from the insurance company.

" We had the coverage, but for some reason they said it doesn't cover

this, " Mercer said.

Then, in September - eight months after the family discovered the mold

and after the family hired a lawyer - the insurance company agreed to pay

for relocation. The family left as soon as it got word that the insurance

company would pay. They took only their clothes.

Photos of relatives still hang on the moldy walls. Furniture that has not

been sat on in more than a year now shows signs of mold growth. And

Mercer's room looks like it was frozen in time - a pair of overturned tennis

shoes sits in the middle of the floor, the sheets on his bed still tousled.

" We assumed when we moved out that things would start moving and the work

would be done and we would be back home, " Mercer said.

Living in exile

Since then, the family has floated from a hotel to a rental property on

Padre Island. They had to buy an entire house full of furniture.

Mercer also had to adjust to a new life in a strange place, a place

where she feels uncomfortable.

" I get scared out here, " she said.

For now, the insurance company is paying only for the family's temporary

quarters - not for the furniture they needed to replace. There has been no

agreement about who should pay to fix the house.

The family's case is set for trial Nov. 5, and Mercer still hopes

that she will be able to move back home. She hopes the courts will be able

to settle the issue.

" It's a big hope, " she said. " But where else do you go? This is our

home. "

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

----

Contact Neal Falgoust at 886-4334 or_falgoustn@...

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 15

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:32:29 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Mold, filth and broken fixtures plague schools, civic audit finds

(Middle Tennessee)

http://www.tennessean.com/local/archives/01/04/06043037.shtml?Element_ID=604

3037

Sunday, 06/24/01

Mold, filth and broken fixtures plague schools, civic audit finds

JOHN PARTIPILO / STAFF

Missing ceiling tiles expose wiring and existing tiles reveal large

watermarks in the fourth-floor hallway, which lacks air conditioning, at

East Literature Magnet School.

By ANITA WADHWANI

Staff Writer

Students and staff in Metro schools face health and safety hazards that

include unsafe bleachers on sports fields, sewer odors permeating

classrooms, and mold so widespread that some teachers say it is causing

respiratory problems that are keeping staff and students home sick,

according to a community group's audit of 67 Metro schools. Members of the

group, Tying Nashville Together, say they are surprised at the conditions

children must face in trying to get an education and plan to begin a 60- to

90-day countdown today to demand that the most critical problems identified

in dozens of schools be fixed - despite the cost - in time for kids to

return to class.

Students and staff in Metro schools face health and safety hazards that

include unsafe bleachers on sports fields, sewer odors permeating

classrooms, and mold so widespread that some teachers say it is causing

respiratory problems that are keeping staff and students home sick,

according to a community group's audit of 67 Metro schools.

Members of the group, Tying Nashville Together, say they are surprised at

the conditions children must face in trying to get an education and plan to

begin a 60- to 90-day countdown today to demand that the most critical

problems identified in dozens of schools be fixed - despite the cost - in

time for kids to return to class.

''My thinking is that if you live in a house and the roof leaks, you fix

it,'' said Sneed, a TNT member and parent of a 16-year-old student

attending Hume-Fogg Magnet, a high school identified in the report as

needing emergency work to remove mold and fix heating and air-conditioning

systems.

''In Metro schools that doesn't seem to happen, and the kids like my

daughter are the ones who suffer.''

TNT, an organization that represents more than 60 community groups and

churches, is presenting its school report today at an assembly at Hillsboro

High that organizers expect to draw 800 to 1,000 people. The meeting is

scheduled for 4-5:30 p.m.

TNT members-turned-amateur school inspectors found that about half of the

elementary, middle and high schools they visited this spring - schools

chosen to represent a geographical and socio-economic cross section - had

problems severe enough that they posed an immediate health or safety hazard.

''I think many of our people were pleasantly surprised by many of the things

they did see in our schools, but I think we also realize that there are

things that nobody should tolerate,'' said Irene Boyd of TNT, who organized

the teams of volunteer auditors.

Those problems included fire hazards such as chained exit doors, health code

violations such as peeling lead-based paint, flooding, bad plumbing and

filthy bathrooms, missing or malfunctioning doors and locks, and heating and

cooling systems that are always broken.

Metro officials, who received copies of the report earlier this week, said

the group's audit highlighted the legacy of lean budget years when money was

directed into classroom education at the expense of maintaining the

district's 130 school buildings - many of which are decades old.

''When we've had shortfalls in the budget, the areas that were first cut

have been maintenance and upkeep,'' school board Chairman

said. ''I think it's vital that those problems be remedied. We may be at the

point of getting back to those basics.''

said TNT's audit would provide ''meaningful input'' into summer

maintenance plans.

School principals also said that the report pointed toward a lack of

resources rather than a lack of resolve to fix many ongoing problems caused

by aging buildings and a shrinking budget.

East Literature Magnet made TNT's list. Principal Kaye Schneider has

sweated, along with her 600 students, in hot weather because replacement

parts are no longer made for the old air conditioners. She says she has

heard students holler as mice and ''big, huge bugs'' scamper across

classrooms.

''There's no hot water in the bathrooms, the showers don't work and the

lockers are broken,'' Schneider said. ''It's an old building. Is that an

excuse? I don't know.

''This may sound like a cliché, but I assume it's because of a lack of money

to hire the proper personnel to take care of our buildings.''

The Rev. s of TNT said budget shortfalls cannot be used as an

excuse to skimp on the safety and well-being of children and school staff.

''Forget about what's in the budget line,'' said s, who is also a

pastor of Village Church in east Nashville. ''These things are must-do,

must-fix things. And they must be addressed now.''

The new Metro schools budget includes a hefty increase for school

maintenance, following a half-million-dollar performance audit by an outside

consultant hired by Mayor Bill Purcell last year.

While TNT's survey focused on facilities and resources available to

teachers, the MGT audit focused on how schools were run. MGT recommended an

increase of more than $7.8 million for maintenance and $4.78 million to hire

more custodians over the next five years.

This year's school budget, expected to gain approval from the Metro Council

this week and go into effect Sunday, included the first $1 million down

payment for maintenance based on that recommendation.

Boyd said that TNT's audit also highlighted long-term problems, such as an

inequitable distribution of resources between schools.

''There's a lot of explanations for that,'' she said. ''There is a lot of

private money going into public schools being raised by parents and from

teachers' pockets. The main thing we want to see is long-term equity in our

schools. The difference between equity and equality is that we know every

school is not going to have the same thing as every other school. But we

think each school should have what it needs.''

The group plans to convene a working group of representatives from schools,

public officials and TNT members to define baseline standards for resources

that must be available in each school.

Problems in need of attention

The most pressing health and safety problems identified in the TNT survey of

67 Metro schools, include:

Fire safety problems, such as broken or missing fire extinguishers, exit

doors chained shut, broken fire doors and disabled fire alarms:

Buena Vista Paideia Magnet

East Literature Magnet

ton Middle

Margaret Elementary

McKissack Middle

Pennington Elementary

Stratford Comprehensive High

Two Rivers Middle

Mold problems, such as mold-covered ceilings and walls that have led to

respiratory problems and staff and student sick days:

Bellevue Middle

Hume-Fogg Magnet

Hunters Lane Comprehensive High

Kings Lane Design Center

Pearl-Cohn High

Middle

Health code violations and other dangers, such as broken windows, concerns

about peeling paint containing lead, asbestos, broken dishwashers, unsafe

bleachers and balconies.

Buena Vista Paideia Magnet

Cameron Middle

Glenview Elementary

Haynes Middle

ton Middle

Nashville School of the Arts

Old Center Elementary

Percy Priest Elementary

Rose Park Middle

Flooding in classrooms and hallways:

Cole Elementary

Cumberland Elementary

Problems with doors and locks:

Crieve Hall Elementary

Hillsboro Comprehensive High

ton Middle

Bathroom problems, such as missing stall doors, mildew, leaking toilets,

sinks and pipes, unsanitary conditions:

Buena Vista Paideia Magnet

Buena Vista Paideia Magnet

East Literature Magnet

McKissack Middle

Stratford Comprehensive High

Pearl-Cohn High

Heating and cooling problems, such as broken air conditioners, heaters and

water heaters:

W.A. Bass Middle

East Literature Magnet

Glenview Elementary

Hume-Fogg Magnet

Napier Elementary

Stratford High

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 16

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:36:13 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: FDA Plans To Make Allergen Inspections

JUNE 25, 05:45 EST

FDA Plans To Make Allergen Inspections

By PHILIP BRASHER

Associated Press Writer

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The Food and Drug Administration plans to inspect

thousands of candy makers, bakeries and other processors over the next two

years to make sure ingredients that cause common allergic reactions aren't

getting into food and candy accidentally.

The FDA decided on the inspections, which could involve as many as 6,000

plants, after recently testing several plants in Minnesota and Wisconsin.

One-fourth of the cookie, ice cream and candy makers tested had ingredients

such as peanuts that weren't disclosed on product labels.

``We'd like to go out and see if that is true in the rest of the nation,''

said Falci, an FDA official who briefed industry officials on the

agency's plans at the Institute of Food Technologists annual conference over

the weekend.

Foods are supposed to disclose all ingredients except for flavorings,

colorings and spices, but allergenic ingredients sometimes slip into foods

undetected because machinery hasn't been cleaned properly between different

products, industry officials say.

Training for the 2,500 inspectors will take up to a year, Falci said.

The agency also has asked food makers and their ingredient suppliers to

study all of the thousands of flavorings, colorings and spices that are in

use to identify those that are made from common allergens, Falci said.

Under federal law, companies are not required to disclose the composition of

flavorings, colorings and spices on food labels.

Some 7 million Americans who suffer from food allergies rely on ingredient

labels to tell which processed foods are safe for them to consume. Some food

allergies, particularly peanut allergies, can be fatal, claiming an

estimated 150 lives a year. Allergy-related food recalls jumped 20 percent

last year to more than 120, according to the FDA.

Eight food groups are responsible for most allergic reactions: Crustaceans

such as crab and lobster; peanuts, eggs, fish, milk, soy, tree nuts such as

almonds and walnuts; and wheat.

In Minnesota and Wisconsin, the FDA asked state inspectors to look just at

peanut and egg allergies.

The inspectors found that allergens usually got into foods undetected

because bakers used the same utensils to stir separate mixes or reused

baking sheets between batches. At one candy company, certain machinery was

washed only once a year, even though both peanut-containing and peanut-free

chocolates were run through the equipment.

The food industry recently released voluntary labeling standards that call

for disclosure of the sources of flavorings that could cause allergic

reactions. Labels also are supposed to use more easily understood terms for

ingredients like casein, a milk product.

Falci suggested that the FDA may restrict the use of some precautionary

statements that some manufacturers are putting on all their products to

protect themselves against lawsuits. One common statement reads, ``May

contain peanuts.'' Such a label could be considered ``false and misleading''

if there is little chance the food could contain an allergen, Falci said.

The food industry, meanwhile, is wrestling with whether to start testing

foods for allergens. Tests have been developed that can detect minute

amounts of allergenic proteins for peanuts, milk and eggs.

Some companies won't do the testing on advice of their attorneys, industry

officials say. The fear is that the results could be used against them in

lawsuits.

``Before you actually do the testing you have to sit back and say, what are

you going to do with the results,'' said Hahn, an attorney who

specializes in food law. But, he said, the tests could help companies

discover problems in their plants.

---

On the Net: Institute of Food Technologists: http://www.ift.org

Food and Drug Administration: http://www.fda.gov

Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network: http://www.foodallergy.org

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 17

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:39:47 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Mold can create wall of frustration

http://www.lubbockonline.com/stories/062401/loc_0624010058.shtml

Sunday, June 24, 2001

Last modified at 2:01 a.m. on Sunday, June 24, 2001

© 2001 - The Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

Dr. Strauss examines Black Mold in a lab at TTHSC.

A-J photo/Jim Watkins

Mold can create wall of frustration

By CHARLES L. EHRENFELD

Avalanche-Journal

Lindsey has stopped coughing up blood, but the headaches remain, she

said, along with lingering fatigue.

Her mother, Donna of Amarillo, claims the symptoms stem from the

presence of a mold in the Lubbock apartment in which the Texas Tech student

lived from August 2000 to mid-February 2001.

" This has been just a nightmare for us, " Donna recently told The

Avalanche-Journal.

Her nightmare has been compounded by a lack of oversight by any public

health entity. When it comes to pathogens, such as black mold and similar

agents, in buildings that cater to the public, residents have little

recourse.

No existing local or state body investigates complaints about harmful molds

found in apartments, schools, homes or other buildings.

" It becomes a responsibility between the tenant and the building owner, "

said Ben Gordon, a regional industrial hygienist for the Texas Department of

Health. " Everyone is exposed to mold all the time. It's probably going to be

a problem for a while, but it's certainly not a new problem.

" It has just become more recognized. We get five inquiries a day from people

all over the Panhandle. It has really picked up in the last month and a

half. "

Stuart , lead environmental specialist with the Environmental

Inspection Ser vices Department for the city of Lubbock, said his department

also has seen more complaints about mold from city residents. The city,

however, lacks testing measures to identify mold.

" Any complaints we get about mold, if we are going to pursue them, we

approach under the sub-standard housing ordinances, " said. " We try to

get folks to handle it themselves first. If there are leaking pipes, that

can be a violation of an ordinance and can be pursued by our office. "

During the most recent legislative session, state Rep. Elliott Naishtat,

D-Austin, introduced a bill to prompt more inspections of schools for mold

and other contamination. After a fire, flood or reports of some illnesses,

school officials would have to have the quality of air inspected.

The bill, however, was left pending at the conclusion of the 77th

legislative session. If passed, the bill could have caused the Texas

Department of Health to set some indoor clean-air standards.

Meanwhile, litigation involving toxic mold is popping up like wild mushrooms

across the country.

" It's the new asbestos, " says on IV, co-founder and

managing senior partner of Knopfler & on, a Los Angeles, Calif.-based

civil litigation law firm that specializes in general liability and

insurance matters.

" Asbestos generated a lot of litigation and controversy in the beginning,

but everyone knows now it's dangerous. It's no longer being used in

manufacturing.

" But mold is naturally occurring, so it's always going to be present, "

on said. " It's the new asbestos as far as toxic tort litigation. And

like asbestos was 30 years ago, the medical and scientific communities don't

have all the answers yet. They do know it can make people sick; they don't

necessarily know why. "

on's firm currently is representing 1,000 mold plaintiffs, including

Brockovich, the real-life law firm clerk portrayed by in

last year's Academy Award-nominated movie. Brockovich has a house with a bad

mold problem.

" I'm turning away about 90 percent of the calls I get these days, " said

on, whose first mold case came in 1997, filed on behalf of an unnamed

actor and his wife who claimed the mold in their Malibu, Calif., house made

them ill. He settled the case for $1.35 million.

" Lawsuits are turning up all over the place. I'm chairing a mold litigation

conference here on the West Coast next week, and it's sold out. We have

people coming from all over the country. "

on, who also is a member of the state bar in Texas, said there has

been litigation filed by insurance companies in Texas to try to exclude mold

claims.

In May, the Delaware Supreme Court upheld a $1.04 million award to two women

whose landlord failed to address leaks and mold problems in their

apartments, resulting in asthma attacks and other health problems.

Lindsey 's health problems, she said, stemmed from a mold identified

by a professor at Texas Tech.

The mold found in apartment ED 8 & 9 at The Heritage Apartments, 3002 Fourth

St., is not stachybotrys chartarum, or " black mold, " that recently forced 20

Lubbock families out of their homes, according to C. Straus, a

professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at Texas Tech

University Health Sciences Center.

Black mold also temporarily displaced 31 employees from the Lubbock County

field office of the Child Support Enforcement Division of the Texas State

Attorney General's Office and damaged the Lubbock County Jail.

Straus is considered a leader in the field in the study of molds found in

buildings. He pioneered research into mold-induced illnesses known as " sick

building syndrome. "

Using instructions from Straus, Lindsey took four swab samples from

her apartment Feb. 14. Test results from the Indoor Air Quality Laboratory

at TTUHSC indicated the presence of Aspergillus versicolor on one swab.

The swab sample containing Aspergillus was taken from inside a cabinet under

the sink in the apartment's laundry area, according to results detailed in

the microbiological report.

" The mold found in her apartment was not black mold, as I recall, " Straus

said. " It was Aspergillus, which can produce different mycotoxins, some of

which are carcinogenic. "

Three other swab samples taken from the apartment's two bathrooms and from a

spot under the linoleum were found to contain only common environmental

yeast, which is not considered to be harmful to health, according to the

microbiological report.

According to records furnished by representatives of The Heritage

Apartments, the company took one independent swab sample from apartment ED

8 & 9 on the same day, along with single swab samples from apartments EF 28

and W 101.

A separate microbiological report from the Indoor Air Quality Laboratory at

TTUHSC indicated that each swab contained only common environmental yeast,

along with the presence of Pithomyces and Cladosporium fungal species,

neither of which is toxic to humans.

Sandy Holloway, manager of The Heritage Apartments, declined to comment on

the matter.

Lindsey , 20, said she moved into apartment ED 8 & 9 in August 2000 and

began to experience symptoms, such as a recurring sore throat and an upper

respiratory infection, by Sept. 15. She was unaware of the presence of mold

at the time, she said.

Her symptoms worsened throughout the fall semester, and she fainted twice in

a public place. When she returned to Amarillo for the Christmas break, she

had medical tests to rule out a brain tumor and an EEG to test her heart.

There also were a chest X-ray and blood tests later, all of which proved

negative.

It was not until telephone conversations with Straus that she learned a mold

could be causing her illness. said other residents at Heritage told

her of having similar symptoms.

" There also was a stench, " said. " Even our clothes started having a

musty, moldy, mildew smell. "

said she noticed one of the apartment's toilets - the toilet in her

bathroom - had been leaking. She reported it to complex representatives.

said the walls in both bathrooms later were knocked out by

maintenance workers in mid-February, and deteriorating, leaking pipes were

found.

said she also found mold growing on ceiling fan blades and on stucco

walls inside kitchen cabinets.

" Molds produce spores, extremely small particles that float around in the

air, " Straus said. " When the spores land on a surface that is wet, they

grow.

" The key factor is water. If a house is dry and clean, mold will not grow.

It can't grow without water. But if there has been water damage from a leaky

pipe or a roof leak, mold will grow. "

In high concentrations on surfaces or in the air, molds, also called fungi,

are health hazards, he added. Potentially dangerous types of mold grow

indoors on wet material, including Sheetrock, pressed particle board and

ceiling tiles.

Straus pointed out that not all mold that appears black in color is

stachybotrys, or black mold.

" Unfortunately, there are actually lots of mold that are black, " Straus

said. " In fact, most molds look black when growing on building material. "

Managers of the apartment complex allowed to move to a different

apartment within the complex in mid-February, offering to pay moving costs

and provide moving assistance. After she changed apartments, she began

feeling better, she said.

" I go to bed with a headache and wake up with a headache, " said. " I

still have fatigue. But the coughing up of blood has gone away. "

L. Ehrenfeld can be contacted at 766-8796 or

cehrenfeld@...

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 18

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:44:10 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Woman Says House Is Making Her Sick

http://www.wdiv.com/det/news/stories/news-83783620010622-150604.html

Woman Says House Is Making Her Sick

Black Mold At Root Of Problem

WARREN, Mich., 6:07 p.m. EDT June 22, 2001-- The signs in the front of the

house warn all who pass by: Toxic Home, Black Mold, Do Not Enter.

The woman who lives in the Warren house says that the black mold inside is

killing her.

" I've got asthma, " Cheri Brunner said.

An environmental specialist from Sanit Air came to check Brunner's home for

testing because she was experiencing such health problems.

They cut into her walls and found bacteria and mold so dangerous that they

recommended she immediately evacuate the home.

It all started a year and a half ago when her house flooded while she was on

vacation. Brunner's insurance company brought in contractors to fix the

mess, but a lawsuit against the insurance company and contractors claims the

work wasn't done right.

Brunner knew that she was getting sicker but didn't know why. She now has a

lawyer who says the mold is responsible. They want the house torn down and a

new home built for Brunner, plus money for her pain and suffering.

" She has a myriad of problems, all related to mold, " Brunner's attorney Dodd

Fisher said.

Stachybotrys is toxic. And if the spores are inhaled they can lead to a

variety of ailments and even death. Experts say that it sometimes takes

years before the effects of black mold exposure are detected.

Stachybotrys information:

Stachybotrys, or black mold, thrives in moisture and grows well on wood,

paper or cotton surfaces. When wet, the mold looks black and slimy and often

has white edges. It's less shiny when dry.

If you find black mold, contact a home inspector, who should be able to

locate the source of moisture.

Moldy surfaces can normally be cleaned with bleach and water, but usually

require remediation if the mold is extensive in carpeting, insulation or

drywall.

Is The Mold In Your House Dangerous?

Center For Disease Control

Copyright 2001 by ClickOnDetroit.com. All rights reserved. This material may

not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 19

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 17:05:35 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: on practicing mold avoidance and PTSS

----- Original Message -----

From: " " <erikj6@...>

" bherk " <bherk@...>

Sent: Monday, June 25, 2001 11:52 AM

Subject: ABX

: I took 300 mg. Doxycycline a day for a year and it helped, as I say, a

: little bit. I had to stop because yeast got out of control. I think it was

: worth it though. Dr. Cheney thinks that the Immune pro alone can get rid

of

: mycoplasma. (yes, that's what I'm taking) No, it didn't work for me. Garth

: Nicolson says the ABX are just bacteriostatic and it takes a healthy

immune

: system to get rid of them. Absolutely nothing that I have done compares to

: the results I get by avoiding mold. I taught my girlfriend to do it and

she

: has the identical response. People " know " that stress caused their onset

in

: the same way they " knew " that stress caused ulcers. They felt the stress

: first so they think that's the predisposing factor. If you have bacteria

: boring a hole in your guts, it's just conceivable that you might have an

: inflammatory response. As you read in " A mind under siege " it seems that a

: hyperinflammatory response can be directly responsible for a depression

: response. When you try to rationalize the reason for your depression, you

: always find something in your life that could be responsible... you burnt

: the cookies, or you just broke up with your derelict " insignificant other "

: (should be cause for celebration) or whatever. I noticed that my

depression

: was the first indicator of a toxic exposure and use it as a guide for

: avoidance. If I wait until I feel like shit, it's way to late and I'll

: suffer for hours. By consistently doing this I gradually started feeling

: better and better. I know that any toxic exposure that you happen to be

: sensitive to can set off the response, but avoiding paint, perfume and

: petroleum products never lessened my reactivity to mold, but avoiding mold

: decreased my reactivity to everything else. That still might be considered

: just my own personal fluke except I noticed that almost everybody with CFS

: that I talk to complains about the same things that led me to suspect that

: mycotoxins were my primary reactor. And then, of course, repeating my

: experiment with a girl I met who complained of similar problems and

getting

: identical results, reinforced my concept in a big way. I asked Garth

: Nicolson if constant low level exposure to mycotoxins might not have the

: same effect on mycoplasma as giving somebody Penicillin. He agreed that

that

: might certainly be the case. We are all infected with something that

hates

: mold. PTSD is right, Perpetual Toxic Shock Syndrome! -

:

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 20

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 17:18:45 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Breathe Free Coupon officer

Coupon at:

http://www.dealofday.com/sys/deal?6497 code to enter " CHERRY "

$10 off on a $35 order at Breathe Free. Use it before 7/31. They sell a

variety of clean air products so check out replacing the filter in your air

cleaners or adding a piece of equipment you need to breathe better. Those

of you who NEED a mask and haven't gotten one yet - check them out. Those

of you who have a mask or respirator - let us know how it's working, how

often you have to change the cartridges, etc. I have survived without one -

but if I planned on traveling by airplane - it would be at the TOP of my

list.

http://www.breathefree.com/cgi-bin/beacon7/BreatheFree

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 21

Date: Tue, 26 Jun 2001 00:39:29 +0000 (UTC)

From: Angel MCS <jap2bemc@...>

Subject: Re: Can anyone recommend Michigan doctor?

Try:

R. Harbut, MD, MPH, FCCP

Diplomate, ABPM, Occ Med

Center for Occ/Env Medicine

Southfield, Mi.

I have corresponded with him and beleive he can assist you :)

Angel

" If having endured much, we at last asserted our 'right to know' and if,

knowing, we have concluded that we are being asked to take senseless and

frightening risks, then we should no longer accept the counsel of those

who tell us that we must fill our world with poisonous chemicals, we

should look around and see what other course is open to us. "

Carson

" My toxicasa (world) is your toxicasa (world). "

Judith Goode

On Mon, 4 Jun 2001, JB wrote:

> Can anyone recommend a good Michigan doctor experienced in mold

> poisioning, MCS, Immunotoxocologist/neurologist? There is no doctor

> familiar with any of this within my health care system. Any help

> greatly appreciated.

> jb

>

>

>

>

>

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,

The doctor gave me Allegra and Diflucan (an antifungal) and creams-Mentax and dermatop has turned that part around!!! Still have other things going on but the itching is better!!!

Good Luck,

Jan

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Guest guest

We have a mold problem in our house. We see mold and mildew all over the

house, we smell mold, and we have had a history of plumbing and water

problems at our home during the last ten years. We recently moved from our

home into an apartment because of the suspected mold problem. Our home

insurer is covering the total expense.

I have, personally, experienced the three symptoms you have described. I had

a severe itching/rash under my arms and on my crouch that lasted numerous

weeks. I did not know what to think. I also had the feeling that things

were crawling all over my body. I was very concerned about this. However,

I was not aware of the mold problem at that time. I went to my doctor

because of these symptoms, thinking I had a contagious disease. My doctor

gave me some medication and the symptoms went away several weeks latter. I

don't think my doctor adequately identified my illness. I have also had

symptoms of fatigue, muscle aches, and joint pains/inflamation, and many

other symptoms.

Please keep me informed of what you discover concerning this.

Tha.

-----Original Message-----

From: Haughton [mailto:1764@...]

Sent: Tuesday, June 26, 2001 1:10 PM

Subject: Re: [] Digest Number 909

Hi All,

Has anyone had an experience with mold causing the following

symptoms:

1-severe itching

2-feeling of mosquito bites every 3 to 4 seconds, all over

3-sensation of a strand of hair falling on the skin,

especially on the face

region, every few seconds.

These are the main physical symptoms we have experienced

with mold in a

previous home. We have since moved into a new home with no

leaks and a

concrete foundation. We are experiencing severe itching

again in our new

place after throwing everything we owned away and salvaging

only things like

non porous items(flat ware, glass items, etc..). Extreme

caution was taken

in decontamination of the few items that we did feel safe

trying to

save(wash, rinse, treat with biocide, rinse, then dry in the

sun outside for

3 to 4 days).

My question: Has ANYONE experienced these symptoms and is

there anything or

anyone that can help us successfully get rid of this

itchinare not

sleeping because the itching is so severe and it's driving

us nuts....help.

Thanx guys....chaughton.

----- Original Message -----

From: < >

< >

Sent: Tuesday, June 26, 2001 4:56 AM

Subject: [] Digest Number 909

There are 24 messages in this issue.

Topics in this digest:-

1. Fw: The Effects of Glutathion (whey)and/or

guaifenesin on GWS, CFS

and MCS and fibromyalgia

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

2. Fwd: Suddenly, it's personal...

From: RLLIPSEY87@...

3. Fwd: [ToxicMoldSurvivors] Digest Number 31

From: RLLIPSEY87@...

4. Fwd: PBS

From: RLLIPSEY87@...

5. HOBB Opposes Insurance Exclusion of Mold Coverage

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

6. Toxic mold/Asperger's Syndrome Link? Mom Looking

for Answers

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

7. Molds are hazards in variety of ways

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

8. PORTABLE CLASSROOMS TO BECOME LESS TOXIC

From: cavegrl777@...

9. Is the fungus in your floorboards making you sick?

With no clear

answers, panic and lawsuits abound

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

10. Insurance companies seek to head off homeowner

claims for mold

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

11. As mold grows, so do health worries

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

12. Mastering mold: how to get control

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

13. Answers about mold

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

14. Family abandons home after mold moves in

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

15. Mold, filth and broken fixtures plague schools,

civic audit finds

(Middle Tennessee)

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

16. FDA Plans To Make Allergen Inspections

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

17. Mold can create wall of frustration

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

18. Woman Says House Is Making Her Sick

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

19. on practicing mold avoidance and PTSS

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

20. Breathe Free Coupon officer

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

21. Re: Can anyone recommend Michigan doctor?

From: Angel MCS <jap2bemc@...>

22. Re: Remediation: Is chlorine dioxide safe?

From: " Gil Vice " <gilvice@...>

23. Keep deleting those e-mails

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

24. Re: Remediation: Is chlorine dioxide safe?

From: " Gil Vice " <gilvice@...>

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 1

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 07:03:43 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Fw: The Effects of Glutathion (whey)and/or

guaifenesin on GWS, CFS

and MCS and fibromyalgia

----- Original Message -----

From: " " <erikj6@...>

" bherk " <bherk@...>

Sent: Sunday, June 24, 2001 9:49 PM

Subject: Re: The Effects of Glutathion (whey)and/or

guaifenesin on GWS, CFS

and MCS and fibromyalgia

: Hi Barbara, I've been on the undenatured whey protein for

4 years now and

I

: agree that it has been the supplement that seems to do me

the most good.

: Definitely not a cure and it didn't wipe out the

mycoplasma, but it seems

to

: help. Lots of people have been using both the whey and

guaifenesin stuff

for

: a while now. I haven't heard that it's a magic bullet.

I've tried every

damn

: thing that I could afford and nothing has done much more

than help a

little

: bit until I tried this crazy mold avoidance thing. I just

got back from

: climbing Jobs peak, about a 5,000 ft. altitude gain. After

13 years of

: godawful living hell, I never dared hope that I could

recover to the

extent

: that I have. Let me ask you this. If toxins are the prime

mover of CFS and

: GWI how do wives and children get it? There is a

smouldering infection

just

: waiting to blaze with a toxic exposure, surgury, mold,

stress or any other

: thing that pushes you over the edge. You wouldn't have a

glutathione

: depletion if there wasn't something that used up

everything you got and

: more. You've seen the huge increase of people complaining

about stachy.

: That's just the beginning. Uncontrollable fungal infection

and chemical

: sensitivity come next. Oh well, I've been screaming about

this since 1985

: and it's pretty much been a waste of time. -

:

:

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 2

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 08:42:07 EDT

From: RLLIPSEY87@...

Subject: Fwd: Suddenly, it's personal...

In a message dated 6/25/2001 8:18:48 AM Eastern Daylight

Time, Rllipsey87

writes:

> Subj: Re: Suddenly, it's personal...

> Date: 6/25/2001 8:18:48 AM Eastern Daylight Time

> From: <A HREF= " mailto:Rllipsey87 " >Rllipsey87</A>

> <A

HREF= " mailto:lisarolanda@... " >lisarolanda@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:ToxicMoldSurvivors " >ToxicMoldSurvivors@gro

ups.com</A>

> CC: <A

HREF= " mailto:toxtalk@... " >toxtalk@...</A>

> BCC: <A HREF= " mailto:sbldf@... " >sbldf@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:wpfaff@... " >wpfaff@...</A>,

<A

HREF= " mailto:dp18@... " >dp18@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:info@... " >info@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:krhoda@... " >

> krhoda@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:HeartsNUni " >HeartsNUni</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:lallen@... " >lallen@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:NJTOXICS " >NJTOXICS</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:will@... " >

> will@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:hferreir@... " >hferreir@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:masspirg@... " >masspirg@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:txpeer@... " >txpeer@...

> </A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:ezh1@... " >ezh1@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:tburke@... " >tburke@...</A>

>

>

>

> LISA........

> Kilz anti-microbial paint is a Band-Aid approach to

mold control and

> will not solve your mother's mold problem. The black mold

is either A.

niger

> or Stachybotrys..................both highly pathogenic.

> I do not recommend that you use tape in baggies. Your

mother's life is

> worth more than saving a few dollars. Hire a professional

or call the

> health dept.

> Aspergillus versicolor has been linked to brain

tumors...............

in

> rats.

>

> DR. R. LIPSEY

> UNIV OF NORTH FLORIDA

> PROFESSOR AND TOXICOLOGIST

> <A HREF= " http://www.richardlipsey.com/index.htm " >RESUME,

2001--DR. R.

LIPSEY (www.richardlipsey.com)</A>

[This message contained attachments]

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 3

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 08:42:40 EDT

From: RLLIPSEY87@...

Subject: Fwd: [ToxicMoldSurvivors] Digest Number 31

In a message dated 6/25/2001 8:10:25 AM Eastern Daylight

Time, Rllipsey87

writes:

> Subj: Re: [ToxicMoldSurvivors] Digest Number 31

> Date: 6/25/2001 8:10:25 AM Eastern Daylight Time

> From: <A HREF= " mailto:Rllipsey87 " >Rllipsey87</A>

> <A

HREF= " mailto:ToxicMoldSurvivors-owner " >ToxicMoldSurvivors-ow

ner </A>

> CC: <A

HREF= " mailto:toxtalk@... " >toxtalk@...</A>

>

>

>

>

> Yes, an air level of 10,400 cfu's/M3 is a hazardous

level for any

> pathogenic Aspergillus species of mold.

>

> There are no federal or state standards or

guidelines for any mold

at

> any level, but Aspergillus versicolor is occasionally

pathogenic that is

> associated with two mycotoxins that can cause diarrhea,

nausea, etc. It

has

> also been associated with liver and kidney cancer. Any

level of 300

> cfu's/M3 should be considered toxic for normal healthy

people, but the

> first to get sick will be infants, the elderly and weak

immune systems and

> asthma. My suggestion to you is find out if the spores

have spread inside

> your home and have a professional decontamination done

which would include

> the ripping out of all the wallboard and insulation in the

contaminated

> wall and then washing the remaining wood with a bleach

solution of 1 cup

or

> 1.5 cups of bleach in a gallon of water.

>

> DR. RICHARD LIPSEY

> PROFESSOR AND TOXICOLOGIST

> UNIV OF NORTH FLORIDA

> <A HREF= " http://www.richardlipsey.com/index.htm " >RESUME,

2001--DR. R.

LIPSEY (www.richardlipsey.com)</A>

[This message contained attachments]

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 4

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 08:43:13 EDT

From: RLLIPSEY87@...

Subject: Fwd: PBS

In a message dated 6/25/2001 7:59:02 AM Eastern Daylight

Time, Rllipsey87

writes:

> Subj: Re: PBS

> Date: 6/25/2001 7:59:02 AM Eastern Daylight Time

> From: <A HREF= " mailto:Rllipsey87 " >Rllipsey87</A>

> <A

HREF= " mailto:coolgram@... " >coolgram@...</A>

> CC: <A

HREF= " mailto:Chatboards@... " >Chatboards@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:ToxicMoldSurvivors " >ToxicMoldSurvivors@gro

ups.com</A>

> BCC: <A

HREF= " mailto:toxtalk@... " >toxtalk@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:sbldf@... " >sbldf@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:wpfaff@... " >wpfaff@...</A>,

<A

HREF= " mailto:dp18@... " >

> dp18@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:info@... " >info@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:krhoda@... " >krhoda@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:HeartsNUni " >HeartsNUni</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:lallen@... " >

> lallen@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:NJTOXICS " >NJTOXICS</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:will@... " >will@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:hferreir@... " >hferreir@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:masspirg@... " >

> masspirg@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:txpeer@... " >txpeer@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:ezh1@... " >ezh1@...</A>, <A

HREF= " mailto:tburke@... " >tburke@...</A>

>

>

>

> The PBS program on MOLD POISONING is being produced

this

week........but

> no date on the date of the airing of the program. I will

post it when I

> know.

>

> DR. R. LIPSEY

> PROFESSOR AND TOXICOLOGIST

> UNIV OF NORTH FLORIDA

> <A HREF= " http://www.richardlipsey.com/index.htm " >RESUME,

2001--DR. R.

LIPSEY (www.richardlipsey.com)</A>

[This message contained attachments]

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 5

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 10:28:51 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: HOBB Opposes Insurance Exclusion of Mold Coverage

: HOMEOWNERS FOR BETTER BUILDING

: E-mail: president@... * Website: www.hobb.org

: / FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE /

: MOLD ALERT: Insurance Coverage Public Hearing

: " Silent Killer and Sick Building Syndrome "

: 9:30 June 26, 2001,A.M.

: LBJ Library Auditorium - 2313 Red River in Austin

: Austin, Texas, June 25, 2001 -- Texas

insurance

: companies are requesting that the Texas Insurance

Commission exclude mold

: coverage from homeowner policies. HomeOwners for Better

Building is

: opposed to this effort to eliminate coverage.

: Recent news accounts of health issues have given attention

to the

: nationwide crisis of dangerous Toxic Molds that are

invading homes,

: offices, and schools. Faulty construction, faulty air

conditioning,

: plumbing leaks, careless building practices and defective

building

: materials are identified as the major contributing factors

to the growth

: of molds. If the Texas Insurance Commission allows

insurance companies

: to delete mold coverage from homeowner policies, then

health care cost

: will most certainly increase, which does not solve the

dilemma.

: What is the answer? Construction Defects are the major

cause of the

: growth of these toxic molds, leaving families facing a

crisis without

: answers or help. The mold issue should be handled in the

same manner as

: any other health issue. HomeOwners for Better Building

will recommend

: that the insurance industry concentrate on the

identification and

: prevention of construction defect in homes rather than

eliminating " mold "

: from insurance coverage. This should be a wakeup call for

the Insurance

: Industry to start addressing prevention as a way to cut

their losses,

: instead of refusing to help victims. The industry has an

obligation to

: insist that builders of new homes adhere to standards that

insure homes

: are built free of construction defects that contribute to

the growth of

: mold.

: Homebuilders are not licensed or regulated in the state of

Texas, and the

: lack of accountability on the part of homebuilders is

being recognized as

: the cause for the lack of quality control, resulting in

substandard

: homes, that promotes the growth of toxic molds. Tort

Reform and

: contractual advantage requirements designed by the home

building industry

: prevent homeowners from suing the builder, leaving them

with only their

: insurance coverage as a means of getting help.

: HomeOwners for Better Building will aslo be meeting with

Lieutenant

: Governor Ratliff to discuss Interim Committee Hearings on

the mold

: crisis, construction defects and a home lemon law that was

introduced

: this last session by Senator Van de Putte.

: Contacts: Janet Ahmad, President, (210) 494-6404 or

Gerding, (936)

321-5565

: HOBB National Board of Directors

: Janet Ahmad - San h Munoz - Austin h Judy

Doyle -

: California h Tom Davey - Dallas l Armstrong -

Florida

: Flo /Osteen & Tomlinson - Georgia hTahni

Hutchins - Indiana

: h Cobarruvias - Houston

: & Ainslie Vice - Kentucky h Lorinda & Couch

- North

: Carolina h Marie Crosby - New Jersey h Gloria -

South Carolina

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 6

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 12:27:55 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Toxic mold/Asperger's Syndrome Link? Mom Looking

for Answers

----- Original Message -----

From: " Peggy Chaves " <ToxicHomes@...>

<bherk@...>

Sent: Monday, June 25, 2001 11:54 AM

Subject: Research

Hi Barbara,

Seats thought I should e-mail you. I had e-mailed her

this story and

she thought maybe you could help. I just want to try and get

this query out

to has many people has I can that have been affected with

toxic mold.

Thank you,

Peggy Chaves

In 1998 my son, who was 8 at the time, started developing

strange behaviors

and unexplained outbursts. We searched for two years for a

diagnosis. We

were told of a Dr. at UCLA, California, that could possibly

help us. We took

him to UCLA where he was diagnosed with Asperger Syndrome.

We recently found

out in Feb. '01 that we have been exposed to toxic molds for

a good 3-4

years and didn't know it. I believe these toxins directly

affected my son's

nervous system.

I have found a couple of families who have experienced the

same thing. I'm

asking for everyone's help, if you believe your children may

have been

exposed to toxic mold and are autistic, or have an autism

spectrum disorder,

I need to hear from you. I need to gather this information

for research

purposes. You can send me your story or contact me, Peggy,

at

ToxicHomes@...

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 7

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 12:32:34 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Molds are hazards in variety of ways

http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/business/buggs/951334

June 25, 2001, 9:48AM

Molds are hazards in variety of ways

By SHANNON BUGGS

Copyright 2001 Houston Chronicle

The flood sicced mosquitoes and mold on homes all over

Houston.

Both can carry germs harmful to your health, but the mold

also could be

hazardous to your insurance claim.

Molds are microscopic organisms that are so lightweight they

can travel

through the air. They use moisture to multiply and spread to

any available

surface. If left unchecked, mold can cause structural damage

to a home.

Federal flood insurance policies specify payment can be

denied on claims if

" water, moisture, mildew or mold damage " results from a

homeowner failing to

" inspect and maintain the property after a flood recedes. "

Flood insurance covers the repair and replacement of most

items touched by

floodwaters, but coverage for mold cleanup depends on

homeowners actively

working to kill mold.

Clean and keep cleaning

It's not enough to rip out wet carpet, stack up destroyed

possessions on the

curb and shut your home's windows and doors while you wait

for an insurance

adjuster to come assess the damage.

If you do just that, when the adjuster finally arrives, your

home will be

infested with mold and mildew.

And since you did nothing to stop its spread, you run the

risk of your

adjuster refusing to recommend coverage for removing the

mold and mildew.

To make sure you don't lose out on some insurance money,

clean and keep

cleaning until the repair work begins.

By this time, you should have discarded all ruined clothes

and possessions,

washed and disinfected anything salvageable and dried out

your home and

belongings using fans, air conditioners and sunshine.

If you haven't, get started today.

For most flood cleanup jobs, a bleach solution combining a

quarter cup of

liquid chlorine bleach, such as Clorox or Purex, for each

gallon of water

will kill mold and mildew.

Tear out and throw away Sheetrock or drywall rotten with

mold, so spores

won't jump to other walls and ceilings.

Further protect your home's interior by removing all the

Sheetrock at least

12 inches above the high water mark.

Remove water-soaked insulation. If it's rigid foam, you may

be able to

disinfect it, dry it out and reuse it. But other insulation

materials must

be destroyed.

If you properly clean and air out everything, you should

eliminate the

moisture mold needs to spread.

In case you missed a spot, stay vigilant. Continue to wipe

down interior and

exterior walls with disinfectant or the bleach solution

every few days.

Insurance issue intense

As much of a hassle as all of this may seem, the standard

federal flood

policy at least provides mold coverage. There's an effort

now to cut mold

coverage in the Texas standard homeowners policy.

Farmers Insurance Group has asked state regulators to allow

it to modify all

of its Texas homeowners policies to limit its liability for

losses caused by

wet or dry rot, mold, rust or fungus.

Farmers wants to cover only mold damage stemming from a

sudden or accidental

burst of water, such as a broken pipe, and exclude mold

claims resulting

from an old leak that a homeowner failed to repair or from

faulty

construction.

The standard homeowners policy already excludes mold and

other damage caused

by flooding. Federal flood insurance covers that.

Farmers' request came in the midst of the Los Angeles-based

insurer's court

battle with an Austin-area couple.

Earlier this month, a jury decided Farmers committed fraud

by delaying

payment to repair a plumbing leak in the couple's home and

awarded them $32

million.

Without discussing the specifics of the case, Ray of

the Southwestern

Insurance Information Service said, " Premiums were not

written to cover

these types of claims. A year ago, mold wasn't even heard

of. "

The insurance industry expects mold claims to mount into the

billions of

dollars, with claims ranging from $10,000 to $100,000.

Ray predicts insurance companies will go bankrupt if state

rules don't

change to limit mold coverage or create separate policies

for mold damage.

TDI will hold a public hearing at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday in

Austin. The location

was changed from the Commissioner's Hearing Room in the

department to the

1,000-seat LBJ Library Auditorium.

Interest in mold insurance coverage is just that intense.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

----

Buggs invites comments and column ideas, but cannot

offer specific

financial advice about individual situations. E-mail her at

shannon.buggs@... or call 713-220-2000, access code

1003.

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 8

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 12:50:44 EDT

From: cavegrl777@...

Subject: PORTABLE CLASSROOMS TO BECOME LESS TOXIC

PORTABLE CLASSROOMS TO BECOME LESS TOXIC

SAN FRANCISCO, California, June 22, 2001 (ENS) - In a major

victory for

California school children, manufacturers and distributors

of portable

classrooms have agreed to use less toxic materials in their

buildings.

The change could slash exposures to airborne chemicals known

to cause

cancer,

asthma and other illnesses.

A settlement was reached last month in a lawsuit brought by

As You Sow, a

San

Francisco based environmental group, against 14 makers and

suppliers of

modular buildings, including many of the estimated 85,000

portable

classrooms

in use in California. As You Sow sued under Proposition 65,

a state law that

says products containing chemicals that cause cancer or

reproductive harm

must carry warning labels.

The portable classroom companies did not admit liability,

but paid As You

Sow

$150,000 in restitution funds, which will be redistributed

as grants to

other

nonprofit groups working to reduce chemical exposures and

raise public

awareness of toxic chemicals' health effects. The portables

companies also

paid all of As You Sow's legal fees and costs, and $10,000

in civil

penalties.

In 1999, an Environmental Working Group (EWG) analysis of

state and federal

data found that more than two million California children

attend school in

portable classrooms that can expose them to harmful levels

of toxic

chemicals

and molds. EWG calculated that long term exposure to known

levels of

formaldehyde, benzene and other chemicals emitted inside

portables could

increase some children's lifetime risk of developing cancer

by a factor of

two.

The EWG study, " Reading, Writing and Risk, " is available at:

http://www.ewg.org/pub/home/reports/readingwritingrisk/pressrelease.html

" Two years ago the modular building industry vehemently

denied that the

toxic

materials used in portable classrooms posed a health hazard

to children, "

said Bill , EWG's California director. " They still

won't admit it, but

they've agreed to use safer materials, and that means kids

will be healthier

at school. "

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 9

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 14:58:32 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Is the fungus in your floorboards making you sick?

With no clear

answers, panic and lawsuits abound

http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,165155,00.html

Sunday, Jun. 24, 2001

Beware:Toxic Mold

Is the fungus in your floorboards making you sick? With no

clear answers,

panic and lawsuits abound

BY ANITA HAMILTON

Sharyn Iler, 52, of the Woodlands, Texas, an upscale suburb

of Houston,

couldn't figure out what was wrong. Every time she went into

her bathroom to

put on makeup, her eyes started burning. She felt constantly

exhausted, her

vision was blurry and she had a dry cough that just wouldn't

quit. Diagnosed

with breast cancer in 1998, Iler feared the worst. Perhaps

after two years

of remission, the disease had returned. She never imagined

that the source

of her troubles might lie buried within the walls of her

$300,000 home--or

that she and her husband Bruce would be forced to flee for

health reasons

with nothing but their dog and cat in tow.

Yet that is exactly what happened one ill-fated afternoon

last February.

Inspectors had found a thick black mold growing between the

stucco and the

drywall of the master bedroom, bath, study and dining room.

After some of it

was identified as stachybotrys atra--a fungus that has been

linked to

everything from sinus infections to brain damage--an

industrial hygienist

warned the Ilers to evacuate. Thirty minutes later, they

abandoned their

home forever. " I thought, This can't be happening to me, "

says Sharyn. " This

is my sanctuary. This is where I come when everything else

is wrong. "

Like some sort of biblical plague, toxic mold has been

creeping through

homes, schools and other buildings across the U.S. Although

press reports

have focused on stachybotrys, strains of aspergillus,

chaetomium and

penicillium have also triggered their share of grief. At

least two families

have burned their homes to rid themselves of the

contamination. Thousands

more, including antipollution crusader Brockovich, are

suing home

builders, landlords and insurers for damages to their

property and their

health. Last month the California state senate approved the

country's first

mold bill, which would set standards for acceptable levels

indoors and

require home sellers to disclose mold problems.

Amid the frenzy, a cottage industry of fungus busters, mold

lawyers and

support groups is growing. On June 4 a jury found that

Farmers Insurance

should pay Melinda Ballard of Dripping Springs, Texas, $32

million for mold

damage to her 22-room, hilltop mansion and for her ensuing

mental anguish.

In May the Delaware Supreme Court upheld a $1 million jury

award to

Stroot of Wilmington, Del., who claimed that moldy

water leaking

into the bathroom of her apartment aggravated her asthma and

caused

cognitive disorders.

Faced with a rising number of claims, insurers and home

builders are looking

for ways to minimize their liability. Farmers, which

estimates that in Texas

alone it will have to shell out $85 million in mold claims,

has simply

eliminated coverage in some 30 states. Says Janet Bachman,

vice president of

the American Insurance Association: " We are not the

guarantors of public

health. " The California building industry tried and failed

to push through a

" home warranty " bill, under which homeowners could be

required to enter

binding arbitration instead of suing for defects.

How much of the crisis is based on hard science and how much

stems from

plain old hysteria--fanned by news reports and plaintiffs'

lawyers--is a

hotly contested issue. Mold, after all, is everywhere, from

the tasty

Roquefort cheese in your salad dressing to the nasty black

stuff clinging to

the grout in your bathroom. Doctors know that certain

strains can trigger

allergic reactions, asthma and other respiratory ailments.

They have

discovered that toxins produced by aspergillus molds can

cause cancer. But

proving that a mold in this house caused this person's

nosebleeds or mental

confusion is a notoriously difficult task.

Among the skeptics, Dr. Emil Bardana, of Oregon Health &

Science University,

argues that most people will experience little more than

" transient

irritations, " such as a runny nose or teary eyes, that clear

up once the

mold is removed.

Others are not so sure. In a study published in 1999, Mayo

Clinic

researchers concluded that mold causes most chronic sinus

infections. Even

more alarming, several researchers believe that molds can

cause some types

of brain damage. Wayne Gordon, a neuropsychologist, and Dr.

Eckardt

Johanning, both of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New

York City, have

seen enough patients whose problems with memory, learning

and concentration

occurred only after exposure to stachybotrys to convince

them there is a

relationship. Still, they concede, more research is needed.

Lawyers don't require such absolutes. " For science to prove

something, it

has to be 100% certain. In a civil lawsuit, it has to be

proved only 51%, "

says Guy Vann, a New York City attorney who has won mold

trials. The

Department of Housing and Urban Development has shelled out

some $5 million

to clean up mold problems in low-income homes.

The biggest winners are the industries feeding off mold

mania. " Six years

ago, people laughed in my face, " says Ed Cross, a lawyer in

Santa Ana,

Calif. Since then, he has won mold settlements as large as

$978,000 and says

he gets 50 calls a week from potential clients. Steve Temes,

an industrial

hygienist in Red Bank, N.J., charges $150 an hour for mold

inspections. " I

used to do radon and lead testing, " he says. " But there was

no demand. "

The losers are people like Mark and Jane O'Hara of

Eugene, Ore. In

February they had the local fire department burn their home

to the ground

after doctors attributed the family's chronic nosebleeds,

flulike symptoms

and severe headaches to mold. The O'Haras figured it would

cost more to

repair the house than to rebuild it from scratch. Others,

like Carol Cherry

of Hazlet, N.J., can't afford the $5,000-to-$10,000 retainer

that lawyers

often require to take on a mold case. Stranded in her moldy

home, Cherry

says, " I can't have guests over. I can't even invite

children over to play

with my nine-year-old son. " Yet Cherry, who has spent the

past year looking

for help, is not ready to give up the fight. " My children

and I were

wronged, " she says, " and I will do everything in my power to

right that

wrong. "

With reporting by Dan Cray/Los Angeles, Hylton/

Austin,

McCalope/Houston and Maggie Sieger/Chicago

The EPA's Mold Resources page

Mold Remediation

Information provided for commercial buildings that's also

applicable to

homes

Center for Disease Control

Questions and nswers on Stachybotrys chartarum and other

molds

Clearing the Air

A report on asthma and mold from the National Academy of

Science Institute

of Medicine

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 10

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:01:41 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Insurance companies seek to head off homeowner

claims for mold

http://www.nj.com/newsflash/index.ssf?/cgi-free/getstory_ssf.cgi?n4889_BC_LA

-TX--BlackMold & & news & newsflash-financial

Insurance companies seek to head off homeowner claims for

mold

By DAVID KOENIG

The Associated Press

6/24/01 1:46 PM

DALLAS (AP) -- The spiderlike crack in the breakfast-room

wall didn't look

serious, but when a workman removed the wallboard, the

insulation and back

of the board were covered with black fuzz.

The mildewing substance stretched around a corner and into

the adjoining

den. A biochemist came in to take samples of the rot. A

month later, in

early 1999, homeowner Harold Hobbs got a call from his

insurance company's

staff engineer.

" She said the biochemist strongly recommends you don't go

into the house

without a respirator, a moon suit, gloves and boots, " Hobbs

said. " It scared

the hell out of me. "

Tests showed the mold growing behind the walls in Hobbs'

Houston home was

Stachybotrys chartarum, which some scientists have linked to

everything from

rashes to fatal pulmonary bleeding -- conclusions disputed

by other

scientists and insurers.

Hobbs, who moved his family into a hotel and then a leased

house, was on the

cutting edge of an apparently growing trend: Mold growing in

homes and other

buildings. In the past few months, a Dallas apartment

complex was evacuated,

a courthouse in Denton was closed and a construction company

agreed to pay a

school district $3 million, all in cases involving mold.

There's nothing new about mold -- it's mentioned in the

Bible -- but concern

about its effect on people living in infested homes is

growing faster than

the fungus itself. Homeowners, contractors and attorneys are

looking for

someone to pay for expensive mold removal and home repairs.

That would be insurance companies.

Worried insurers say mold claims, if unchecked, soon could

rival the

billions they have paid for asbestos-related claims.

" The number of claims is growing exponentially, " said Bob

Huxel, a lobbyist

for Farmers Insurance, the largest underwriter of homeowner

policies in

Texas. " We anticipate the losses coming in very rapidly. "

Farmers, which sells 10 percent of the homeowner policies in

Texas, will

testify before state regulators this week that claims this

year in Texas

alone could conservatively approach $130 million and require

a 40 percent

increase in homeowner premiums.

Farmers has petitioned the state insurance commissioner to

exclude coverage

of mold claims. If the request is granted, other insurers

are expected to

follow suit or seek to require homeowners to buy separate

policies for mold

damage.

" It's going to cost homeowners thousands of dollars in

repairs if the

insurance companies don't cover this, " said Joe Cole, a

contractor who does

mold-abatement work in Corpus Christi. " We have some houses

that are only

worth $100,000 and the cleanup is $300,000. People are just

going to walk

away from the houses and turn them over to the lenders. "

Insurers say that the public -- encouraged by media reports

-- has become

hysterical about mold. The Environmental Protection Agency

says molds are

everywhere and grow easily on just about any damp surface.

EPA says there is

no practical way to eliminate mold inside buildings and the

best defense is

to control moisture.

Insurance officials also suggest that not all mold claims

are on the level.

" There are legitimate instances of mold having an effect on

a person's

health, but we've seen cases where people develop what we

call opportunistic

illness, " said Jerry s, spokesman for an industry group,

the

Southwestern Insurance Information Service.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says links

between mold and

conditions such as memory loss and lung damage haven't been

proved, although

the agency says people with lowered immune systems or lung

disease might be

at increased risk for infection from mold.

Homeowners who have moved out of mold-infested homes say

their suffering is

far from phony.

Melinda Ballard sued Farmers when it delayed repairing

water-soaked sub

flooring in her 22-room, 11,500-square-foot dream house in

the Hill Country

town of Dripping Springs. She said a water leak in late 1998

allowed

Stachybotrys chartarum, also called black mold, to spread

wildly throughout

the home.

Ballard said she suffered no ill effects but her husband

still suffers

blackouts and had to quit his job as an investment banker.

She said her

5-year-old son has scarred lung tissue, asthma and learning

problems because

of exposure to the mold.

Two weeks ago, an Austin jury awarded Ballard $32 million in

actual and

punitive damages -- a judge is scheduled to review the

verdict Monday.

" They could've fixed the house for less than $1 million in

April of 1999.

They opted not to, " Ballard said. " That was pure stupidity

and arrogance. "

Ballard vows to sue again over her son's health problems,

which were not an

issue in the trial. " Farmers hasn't seen the last of us by a

long shot, " she

said.

Hobbs, the Houston man forced out of his home, is also suing

Farmers. He

claims adjusters didn't take the time to examine the house

when the mold and

sources of moisture could have been treated.

Farmers declined to comment on the cases. Its lawyers have

hinted they will

appeal the Ballard verdict if the state district court judge

doesn't

overturn it.

Insurers usually order toxicology tests when mold is found

in a home. If

it's Stachybotrys, abatement crews are called in, and EPA

guidelines tell

them to wear full protective suits and masks. Contents, from

shoes to sofas,

are often double-wrapped in plastic and hauled away.

The cost of such a job adds up quickly. s, the Texas

insurance industry

group official, said the average claim is about $30,000.

In January, Farmers petitioned Texas Insurance Commissioner

Montemayor

to approve a new form for its Texas homeowner policies that

would exclude

coverage for " any loss consisting of, caused by, contributed

to, or

aggravated by rust, mold, fungus, or wet or dry rot. "

The proposal has raised a furor among homeowners with mold

claims.

Montemayor called a Tuesday hearing, and interest on the

subject forced him

to move it from a 150-seat room to an auditorium that holds

1,000.

No one claims to know how the insurance commissioner will

rule on Farmers'

request, but Huxel, the company's Texas lobbyist,

acknowledged that growing

public concern about mold could make it harder for the

insurer to get its

way.

" My fear is it's such an emotional issue that facts may not

carry the day, "

he said.

------

On the Net:

Texas Department of Insurance: www.tdi.state.tx.us

CDC site:

http://www.cdc.gov/nceh/asthma/factsheets/molds/default.htm

EPA: http://www.epa.gov/iaq/pubs/moldresources.html

Copyright 2001 Associated Press.

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 11

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:07:49 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: As mold grows, so do health worries

http://enquirer.com/editions/2001/06/24/loc_as_mold_grows_so_do.html

Sunday, June 24, 2001

As mold grows, so do health worries

Toxic threat or overblown fear?

By Peggy O'Farrell

The Cincinnati Enquirer

Mold, the fungus that gave us the wonder drug penicillin, is

now being

blamed for everything from asthma to cancer to immune

deficiencies.

An industrial hygenist wearing a respirator suit inspects a

Tristate home

with mold-covered walls.

(M.S. Crandall Group Inc. photo)

Increasingly, Americans are worrying - some experts

say panicking -

about getting sick from the black fuzz that can grow, unseen

and unchecked,

behind walls in our homes, schools and offices.

So how big a problem is it?

Some scientists call mold a potentially new, serious

health threat.

Others say concern is overblown. But whatever their belief,

more people are

paying attention.

For the first time, the Ohio Department of Health is

working with

federal and local officials to clean up mold and improve air

quality in

schools. In the Tristate, tens of thousands of dollars are

being spent to

clean up mold in buildings where we work, play and sleep.

And while national experts debate how bad the

problem really is,

Cincinnati researchers for the U.S. Environmental Protection

Agency may have

developed a way to find answers.

A hidden menace

The Vanden Bosch family in West Chester is one of

perhaps hundreds

of Tristate households facing costs of cleaning up mold that

grew,

unbeknownst to them, in their own homes.

WARNING SIGNS

. Visible mold

. Visible water damage to building materials, carpet,

furniture, etc.

. A musty, damp odor

. Unexplained symptoms such as runny nose, congestion,

watery nose,

sneezing and cough, headache or skin rashes.

Vanden Bosch and her son, , were starting

a home

improvement project early in March at their 23-year-old,

trilevel house.

When they began peeling back wallpaper in the downstairs

bathroom, they

discovered unsightly fuzz underneath.

The growth was so thick, it had eaten holes in the

drywall.

Mrs. Vanden Bosch's husband, Tom, discovered the

fuzz was even more

widespread when he investigated after work. So horrified was

the family that

they called a contractor.

" He put on an a spacesuit and a respirator " before

going into the

house to do testing, Mrs. Vanden Bosch says. " I'd never seen

anything like

it. "

The Vanden Bosch family - , and Tom - in the West

Chester home

they had to leave for monthws because of mold.

(Craig Ruttle photo)

| ZOOM |

The contractor found even more mold. It was upstairs

as well - under

carpet and behind wallpaper in all three bathrooms. It had

eaten holes in

the wooden sub-flooring.

Lab results were even more dismaying: Mold samples

in the Vanden

Bosch home came back positive for Stachybotrys and

Aspergillus, two common

indoor molds linked to numerous health problems, including

some forms of

cancer, skin irritation, systemic infections, hemorrhage and

convulsions.

The family hired a company to clean up their house

and moved into a

hotel in April. Insurance is covering most of the cost to

replace drywall

and paint and carpet - estimated at $30,000 so far.

While test results answered some questions, the

Vanden Bosches

wonder what health effects may linger.

Mrs. Vanden Bosch and , now nearly 8, had

suffered many upper

respiratory infections, coughs, headaches and sore throats.

was having

trouble in school because he was sick so often.

After they tore the wallpaper off, some of those

symptoms got worse,

Mrs. Vanden Bosch says. She developed a severe rash and was

" covered in

hives " at one point.

Many of their symptoms eased after they moved out of

the house.

is in better health, although Mrs. Vanden Bosch still

has a cough she

can't seem to shake.

She's also still waiting on tests taken from a skin

lesion to find

out if it's cancer and another to see whether the mold and

its toxins are in

her bloodstream.

Thriving in the dark

Experts blame escalating complaints about mold on

contemporary

construction techniques that emphasize air-tight energy

conservation.

Moisture provides a perfect breeding ground for mold,

especially in houses

that allow little air in or out.

MORE ABOUT MOLD

. How to get control

. Answers to common questions

That's because mold feeds on rotting organic matter.

And it grows

everywhere - on building materials, grass, dead leaves,

newspapers, books,

firewood, grain, fruit, bread and soil. Under a microscope,

mold looks like

a vibrant mixture of red, orange, yellow or green.

It's routine to find mold on shower walls or around

window

air-conditioners where moisture condenses. Usually, people

clean these areas

regularly. But mold thrives where it is hidden away - inside

walls, under

carpet and in damp attics and basements.

Its ill effects can include allergic reactions,

resulting in runny

noses, itchy eyes, rashes and asthma.

It also can be infectious, meaning people can inhale

mold spores,

which then begin growing in the body, resulting in permanent

tissue and

organ damage. Histoplasmosis is a common form of mold

infection in the Ohio

Valley.

In its worst form, molds produce mycotoxins, which

can interfere

with cellular and DNA function, resulting in cancers and

other problems.

Mike Crandall, a certified industrial hygienist and

owner of M.S.

Crandall Group Inc. in Norwood, frequently lectures on the

best way to

prevent and clean up mold damage.

" Everyone, it seems, has an interest in mold these

days, " Mr.

Crandall says. Last month, a Texas jury awarded $32 million

to a woman who

sued her insurance company for not covering mold damage

claims. That verdict

" got everybody talking and thinking about mold, particularly

if you own

buildings. "

Mold in schools has been in the headlines here.

In April, a classroom in E. Lucas

Intermediate School in the

Princeton school district was closed for the rest of the

school year because

of mold.

Maple Dale Elementary School in Blue Ash was closed

for two days in

February after officials discovered potentially dangerous

mold on a single

ceiling tile in a storage closet.

And at Lawrenceburg, Ind., High School, several

rooms were closed in

March while heating and cooling systems were cleaned and

wallpaper and

water-damaged ceilings were removed.

Gayetsky, an industrial hygienist with the Ohio

Department of

Health, has helped officials at 10 area schools identify

potential problems

affecting the air that students breathe. Flat roofs, for

example, can

contribute to a problem if rain can't easily run off, he

says.

Mr. Gayetsky is working with schools to implement

the " Tools for

Schools " program, an EPA training program that emphasizes

improving indoor

air quality in school buildings. State and federal funding

funding for the

program totaled $44,000 for 2000-2001.

The Vanden Bosches blame a leaky water pipe for

their mold problem.

They discovered the leak and had it fixed soon after they

moved into the

home in 1997, but the damage was already done.

Mold 101

Baby boomers were taught that living things are

divided into two

kingdoms, plants and animals. Now, science students learn

that fungi are a

kingdom of their own. Types of fungi include mushrooms,

mildew and mold.

There are hundreds of kinds of mold; scientists

can't even agree on

how many. One kind - Penicillium - gives us the antibiotic

penicillin.

But the bigger debate is how big a public health

threat mold poses.

Dr. Eckhart Johanning, an Albany, N.Y., mold expert

and the head of

the Fungal Research Group, is concerned.

" Mold has great public health impact. If we can make

a small dent in

this, I think we will make a great difference in people's

quality of life, "

Dr. Johanning says.

Dr. Gots disagrees. An environmental health

and toxicology

expert, he's the head of the International Center for

Toxicology and

Medicine in Washington, D.C.

" People abandon houses and close schools, and

there's no reason for

it, " he says. " It's just out of control. It's totally out of

control. "

Dr. Gots blames a number of factors for what he

calls undue panic

over indoor mold, including high-profile lawsuits and more

advertising from

contractors who specialize in testing for or cleaning up

mold.

" I'm getting brochures every day that are titled,

How to Make Money

in Mold. There are plaintiff's lawyers who are filing

lawsuits every day, "

he says.

" There's media hype. There is a wildly active and

very chaotic

industry made up of all sorts of people with varying

expertise about what to

test and how to test and how much cleanup is necessary. And

there's very

little medical input. "

Dr. Malcolm Adcock, health commissioner for the city

of Cincinnati,

calls references to toxic mold " an overstatement. " He says

that for most

people, mold is simply an allergen, not a deadly poison.

" I'm not downplaying it, but I think it's been

raised to more of a

concern than it warrants, given the types of problems that

it normally

causes, " Dr. Adcock says. " People don't think a thing at all

about taking a

walk in the woods. If you're out walking through the woods

with decaying

material on the floor of the forest, you're being exposed to

literally

thousands of kinds of mold. "

Questions remain

For all their differences, the experts do agree that

many questions

need to be answered. Among them:

. How much mold is too much? There are national

maximum exposure

standards for chemicals but none for mold. It's unlikely a

mold standard

could be established, Dr. Johanning says. Molds are

allergens, and some

individuals are much more sensitive to them than others.

And since molds are so common, it's nearly

impossible to establish a

mold-free environment.

Dr. Gots is working with other researchers to

compile existing

background levels of molds in different settings -

households, office

buildings, manufacturing plants, lumberyards and other

places. He's

correlating that data with information on health complaints

that might be

related.

. How toxic is toxic? Lab tests show mycotoxins -

poisons produced

by molds - cause serious health problems, including cancers,

in animals. But

it's difficult to detect mycotoxins in humans because they

remain in the

body for such short times.

Researchers can find antigens - protein " markers "

for a few

mycotoxins and mold. But several different types of mold can

produce the

same markers, making it difficult to trace toxic effects.

. What else may be causing health problems? Mold

isn't the only

thing that likes wet, dark environments. So do bacteria.

It's possible that

toxic effects being attributed to molds are really being

caused by toxins

produced by bacteria.

Science in Cincinnati

Cincinnati researchers are at the forefront of

research trying to

answer some of those questions.

At the EPA's Office of Research and Development's

National Exposure

Research Laboratory, molecular microbiologists

Haugland and

Vesper have developed a way to rapidly identify different

strains of mold

using DNA sequencing. They're also working to determine how

much mold is

present from a particular sample.

The researchers have collected DNA markers for

Stachybotrys and more

than 100 other problem molds.

Currently, mold samples are sent to labs and grown -

a process that

can take weeks. Some molds can be identified by physical

characteristics,

but that method isn't always accurate.

The method developed at the EPA's Cincinnati lab

gives fast and

accurate results, making it easier to tie specific molds to

health

complaints, and to determine " which molds are a problem and

at what levels

they are a problem, " Dr. Haugland says. " We hope that this

can be a big

piece of the puzzle. "

The EPA is licensing the technology, and one firm in

Arizona is

using it commercially.

Are we ever safe?

With so many unanswered questions, it's difficult

for people and

their doctors to determine the risks of mold exposure. But

whether it causes

a runny nose or lung infection or cancer, mold should be

limited indoors.

" It really doesn't matter what kind of mold it is,''

says Mandy

Burkett, chief of the Ohio Department of Health's indoor

environment

section. " You need to get rid of it. "

Members of the Vanden Bosch family hope they can

move back home in

another week or two, and they're adapting to life in the

hotel.

But Mrs. Vanden Bosch wonders what's next. Will her

medical tests be

OK? How many other families are getting sick because they

don't realize mold

is in their homes? Will mold re-infest her home?

" I wonder if I'll ever feel safe there again. "

Mastering mold: how to get control

Answers about mold

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 12

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:12:21 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Mastering mold: how to get control

http://enquirer.com/editions/2001/06/24/loc_mastering_mold_how.html

Sunday, June 24, 2001

Mastering mold: how to get control

By Peggy O'Farrell

The Cincinnati Enquirer

Experts say it's almost a certainty that there's

some mold in your

house, since mold spores can be found almost everywhere. The

key is to keep

mold from growing so much it can damage your home and your

health.

If you can see or smell mold, you know it's there.

The little bit

growing in the shower or around the window air-conditioner

isn't harmful.

The black fuzz eating away your attic could be.

If your house has suffered water damage from a

flood, burst pipe or

leaky roof, it's at risk for mold intrusion. If you or your

family -

especially your children - suffer allergy symptoms (runny

nose, congestion,

itchy eyes), cough, headaches or repeated colds and upper

respiratory

infections only at home, that could be a sign there's a mold

problem.

And if you can see a significant amount of mold -

more than several

inches in diameter - it's time to call a professional to

find out how bad

things might be. A little mold isn't a problem. But when it

starts taking

over carpets and walls and adds up to square feet, it could

reach toxic

levels.

To keep mold from running rampant in your home or

office, follow

these steps:

. Keep water out of the building. Look for leaks

from pipes,

foundations, basements, roofs and attics. Plug the leaks and

clean up any

standing water.

. Clean up visible mold. If it's the stuff turning

the grout in the

bathroom black, a household cleaner, or a sponge soaked in

liquid bleach and

water, will do it.

. Control the humidity. Try to keep the humidity at

or below 50

percent, and consider installing a humidity gauge in the

basement, which

tends to be damper than other parts of the house.

. Remove water- or mold-damaged materials, including

carpet and

other floor coverings, wallpaper, drywall, wood, sheetrock,

paper, yard

waste and plants.

. Get it where it lives: Check mold-friendly areas

regularly for

intrusion: Potting soil, piles of old newspapers, laundry

rooms, the sills

and molding around window air-conditioning units, insulation

and carpet.

As mold grows, so do health worries

Mastering mold: how to get control

Answers about mold

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 13

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:16:17 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Answers about mold

http://enquirer.com/editions/2001/06/24/loc_answers_about.html

Sunday, June 24, 2001

Answers about mold

What is it?

Mold is one of the oldest life forms on Earth.

Neither a plant nor

an animal, mold belongs to the fungi kingdom, along with

mushrooms, rusts,

smuts and mildews. Fungi can't produce chlorophyll, as green

plants do, and

rely on rotting organic material (wood, leaves, grass,

paper, etc.) for

food. There are hundreds of types of mold. (Penicillium,

Aspergillus,

Stachybotrys, Fusarium and Alternaria are a few), and

experts sometimes

disagree when identifying individual types of mold and on

what criteria to

use to classify them.

How can it affect my health?

Mold can affect people's health in three ways:

. Allergic reactions: runny nose, asthma,

hypersensitive

pneumonitis.

. Infectious: the growth of mold spores in or on the

body.

Histoplasmosis is a common mold infection in the Tristate.

. Toxic: disruption of cellular and DNA function,

including cancer.

What harm can mold-produced toxins do?

Molds produce mycotoxins, poisons that can harm

people and animals

if they're eaten, inhaled or touched. There are plenty of

data available

that indicate mycotoxins are harmful to animals and to some

agricultural

workers. There's little information showing a direct link

between mycotoxins

and health problems in people in non-agricultural, indoor

settings. Molds

that produce mycotoxins include:

. Apergillus: These common molds produce aflatoxins,

which can cause

miscarriage, birth defects, immunosuppression and cancer in

animals. In

humans, aflatoxins have been implicated in cases of liver

cancer and

hepatitis B, liver cirrhosis and Reye's syndrome. The toxin

is regularly

found in moldy peanuts, peas, bread, cheese, rice, corn and

other grains,

and some studies suggest that people who work in peanut

processing have

higher cancer rates. Some lab workers who have inhaled

aflatoxins have

reported lung disease and lung cancer.

. Fusarium, Stachybotrys, Memnoniella and other

strains: These molds

produce more than 100 compounds classified as tricothecenes.

T-2 toxin, a

biological warfare agent, is probably the best known of the

tricothecenes,

and is believed to be the mycotoxin responsible for some

forms of aleukia

(the absence of white blood cells). T-2 toxin is believed to

have killed

thousands of Soviets who ate mold-infested cereal grains

toward the end of

World War II. Symptoms of tricothecene poisoning include

skin irritation,

vomiting, anorexia, diarrhea, hemorrhage and convulsions,

sometimes

resulting in death. Stachybotrys poisoning has been

associated with fatal

hemorrhaging in horses and other livestock, and dermatitis,

bloody rhinitis,

cough and severe respiratory tract irritation in people.

Farm workers,

workers in cottonseed oil plants and grain elevators,

textile mill works,

grain processing workers and binder twine factory workers

report

occupational exposure to stachybotrys toxins.

. Penicillium produces several toxins, including

ochratoxin A, which

has been shown to cause miscarriage, birth defects and

kidney damage in

experimental animals. It has also been linked to a form of

kidney disease

found in people in the Balkan Valley region of Bulgaria,

Yugoslavia and

Romania, theoretically because they ate contaminated foods.

. Alternaria, a very common mold, produces more than

30 compounds

that are toxic to animals and cell cultures. Its toxicity to

people is

unknown, though it can cause allergic reaction

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 14

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:25:29 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Family abandons home after mold moves in

http://www.caller.com/2001/june/24/today/localnew/3626.html

Sunday, June 24, 2001

Family abandons home after mold moves in

Couple believes water leak in A/C led to growth throughout

the house

By Neal Falgoust

Caller-Times

What began for Dwight and Mercer as a simple

renovation of their

Flour Bluff house turned into a flight from home, a

nine-month exile and a

fight with their insurance company.

All the Mercers wanted was to add a room and spruce up

the property, but

they soon found themselves swirling in a storm of mold.

The Mercers' battle with mold began in February of last

year. 's

father, Cloud, wanted to move in with the family.

They decided to

build him a room and to do some other renovations on the

home that they had

lived in for more than a decade.

The home had been a fixer-upper. The family rented it for

several years

before buying it in 1992, and since then made nearly $40,000

in

improvements.

The Mercers hired Gutmann Turn Key contractors to repair

a deck

overlooking the water and to enclose part of the garage,

where Cloud would

live. They expected the job to proceed in a timely fashion.

During an inspection of the home, Gutmann,

president of the

contracting firm, found some soft spots in the floor that

separated the

upstairs home from the downstairs garage. What Gutmann found

underneath the

floor would change the Mercers' lives.

From beneath the floor

A leak in the air conditioning system had dampened the

sub-floor and

frame of the house. Mold was growing in the moisture,

feasting on the wood

and paper in the floor. The mold also had spread throughout

the home's air

conditioning system and had contaminated the family's

furniture,

Mercer said.

By March of last year, just a month after they found the

mold, Dwight and

Mercer filed a claim with their insurance company and

hoped to have

the mold problem resolved. Two independent air conditioning

contractors

inspected the unit for the Mercers, and the insurance

company hired a third

firm. All three concluded that there had been a leak,

Mercer said.

But the insurance adjuster was not convinced that there

was a problem,

Gutmann said.

" You can't smell it. You can't see it, " she said. " So the

insurance

company goes in and says, 'There's nothing wrong with this.'

"

'It doesn't cover this'

But something was wrong, the Mercers maintain. Dwight

Mercer had

respiratory problems, and everyone in the house was feeling

sick.

" We all thought we had the flu, " Mercer said.

But they couldn't afford to do anything about their

problems without help

from the insurance company.

" We had the coverage, but for some reason they said it

doesn't cover

this, " Mercer said.

Then, in September - eight months after the family

discovered the mold

and after the family hired a lawyer - the insurance company

agreed to pay

for relocation. The family left as soon as it got word that

the insurance

company would pay. They took only their clothes.

Photos of relatives still hang on the moldy walls.

Furniture that has not

been sat on in more than a year now shows signs of mold

growth. And

Mercer's room looks like it was frozen in time - a pair of

overturned tennis

shoes sits in the middle of the floor, the sheets on his bed

still tousled.

" We assumed when we moved out that things would start

moving and the work

would be done and we would be back home, " Mercer said.

Living in exile

Since then, the family has floated from a hotel to a

rental property on

Padre Island. They had to buy an entire house full of

furniture.

Mercer also had to adjust to a new life in a

strange place, a place

where she feels uncomfortable.

" I get scared out here, " she said.

For now, the insurance company is paying only for the

family's temporary

quarters - not for the furniture they needed to replace.

There has been no

agreement about who should pay to fix the house.

The family's case is set for trial Nov. 5, and

Mercer still hopes

that she will be able to move back home. She hopes the

courts will be able

to settle the issue.

" It's a big hope, " she said. " But where else do you go?

This is our

home. "

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

----

Contact Neal Falgoust at 886-4334 or_falgoustn@...

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 15

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:32:29 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Mold, filth and broken fixtures plague schools,

civic audit finds

(Middle Tennessee)

http://www.tennessean.com/local/archives/01/04/06043037.shtml?Element_ID=604

3037

Sunday, 06/24/01

Mold, filth and broken fixtures plague schools, civic audit

finds

JOHN PARTIPILO / STAFF

Missing ceiling tiles expose wiring and existing tiles

reveal large

watermarks in the fourth-floor hallway, which lacks air

conditioning, at

East Literature Magnet School.

By ANITA WADHWANI

Staff Writer

Students and staff in Metro schools face health and safety

hazards that

include unsafe bleachers on sports fields, sewer odors

permeating

classrooms, and mold so widespread that some teachers say it

is causing

respiratory problems that are keeping staff and students

home sick,

according to a community group's audit of 67 Metro schools.

Members of the

group, Tying Nashville Together, say they are surprised at

the conditions

children must face in trying to get an education and plan to

begin a 60- to

90-day countdown today to demand that the most critical

problems identified

in dozens of schools be fixed - despite the cost - in time

for kids to

return to class.

Students and staff in Metro schools face health and safety

hazards that

include unsafe bleachers on sports fields, sewer odors

permeating

classrooms, and mold so widespread that some teachers say it

is causing

respiratory problems that are keeping staff and students

home sick,

according to a community group's audit of 67 Metro schools.

Members of the group, Tying Nashville Together, say they are

surprised at

the conditions children must face in trying to get an

education and plan to

begin a 60- to 90-day countdown today to demand that the

most critical

problems identified in dozens of schools be fixed - despite

the cost - in

time for kids to return to class.

''My thinking is that if you live in a house and the roof

leaks, you fix

it,'' said Sneed, a TNT member and parent of a

16-year-old student

attending Hume-Fogg Magnet, a high school identified in the

report as

needing emergency work to remove mold and fix heating and

air-conditioning

systems.

''In Metro schools that doesn't seem to happen, and the kids

like my

daughter are the ones who suffer.''

TNT, an organization that represents more than 60 community

groups and

churches, is presenting its school report today at an

assembly at Hillsboro

High that organizers expect to draw 800 to 1,000 people. The

meeting is

scheduled for 4-5:30 p.m.

TNT members-turned-amateur school inspectors found that

about half of the

elementary, middle and high schools they visited this spring

- schools

chosen to represent a geographical and socio-economic cross

section - had

problems severe enough that they posed an immediate health

or safety hazard.

''I think many of our people were pleasantly surprised by

many of the things

they did see in our schools, but I think we also realize

that there are

things that nobody should tolerate,'' said Irene Boyd of

TNT, who organized

the teams of volunteer auditors.

Those problems included fire hazards such as chained exit

doors, health code

violations such as peeling lead-based paint, flooding, bad

plumbing and

filthy bathrooms, missing or malfunctioning doors and locks,

and heating and

cooling systems that are always broken.

Metro officials, who received copies of the report earlier

this week, said

the group's audit highlighted the legacy of lean budget

years when money was

directed into classroom education at the expense of

maintaining the

district's 130 school buildings - many of which are decades

old.

''When we've had shortfalls in the budget, the areas that

were first cut

have been maintenance and upkeep,'' school board Chairman

said. ''I think it's vital that those problems be remedied.

We may be at the

point of getting back to those basics.''

said TNT's audit would provide ''meaningful input''

into summer

maintenance plans.

School principals also said that the report pointed toward a

lack of

resources rather than a lack of resolve to fix many ongoing

problems caused

by aging buildings and a shrinking budget.

East Literature Magnet made TNT's list. Principal Kaye

Schneider has

sweated, along with her 600 students, in hot weather because

replacement

parts are no longer made for the old air conditioners. She

says she has

heard students holler as mice and ''big, huge bugs'' scamper

across

classrooms.

''There's no hot water in the bathrooms, the showers don't

work and the

lockers are broken,'' Schneider said. ''It's an old

building. Is that an

excuse? I don't know.

''This may sound like a cliché, but I assume it's because of

a lack of money

to hire the proper personnel to take care of our

buildings.''

The Rev. s of TNT said budget shortfalls cannot

be used as an

excuse to skimp on the safety and well-being of children and

school staff.

''Forget about what's in the budget line,'' said s,

who is also a

pastor of Village Church in east Nashville. ''These things

are must-do,

must-fix things. And they must be addressed now.''

The new Metro schools budget includes a hefty increase for

school

maintenance, following a half-million-dollar performance

audit by an outside

consultant hired by Mayor Bill Purcell last year.

While TNT's survey focused on facilities and resources

available to

teachers, the MGT audit focused on how schools were run. MGT

recommended an

increase of more than $7.8 million for maintenance and $4.78

million to hire

more custodians over the next five years.

This year's school budget, expected to gain approval from

the Metro Council

this week and go into effect Sunday, included the first $1

million down

payment for maintenance based on that recommendation.

Boyd said that TNT's audit also highlighted long-term

problems, such as an

inequitable distribution of resources between schools.

''There's a lot of explanations for that,'' she said.

''There is a lot of

private money going into public schools being raised by

parents and from

teachers' pockets. The main thing we want to see is

long-term equity in our

schools. The difference between equity and equality is that

we know every

school is not going to have the same thing as every other

school. But we

think each school should have what it needs.''

The group plans to convene a working group of

representatives from schools,

public officials and TNT members to define baseline

standards for resources

that must be available in each school.

Problems in need of attention

The most pressing health and safety problems identified in

the TNT survey of

67 Metro schools, include:

Fire safety problems, such as broken or missing fire

extinguishers, exit

doors chained shut, broken fire doors and disabled fire

alarms:

Buena Vista Paideia Magnet

East Literature Magnet

ton Middle

Margaret Elementary

McKissack Middle

Pennington Elementary

Stratford Comprehensive High

Two Rivers Middle

Mold problems, such as mold-covered ceilings and walls that

have led to

respiratory problems and staff and student sick days:

Bellevue Middle

Hume-Fogg Magnet

Hunters Lane Comprehensive High

Kings Lane Design Center

Pearl-Cohn High

Middle

Health code violations and other dangers, such as broken

windows, concerns

about peeling paint containing lead, asbestos, broken

dishwashers, unsafe

bleachers and balconies.

Buena Vista Paideia Magnet

Cameron Middle

Glenview Elementary

Haynes Middle

ton Middle

Nashville School of the Arts

Old Center Elementary

Percy Priest Elementary

Rose Park Middle

Flooding in classrooms and hallways:

Cole Elementary

Cumberland Elementary

Problems with doors and locks:

Crieve Hall Elementary

Hillsboro Comprehensive High

ton Middle

Bathroom problems, such as missing stall doors, mildew,

leaking toilets,

sinks and pipes, unsanitary conditions:

Buena Vista Paideia Magnet

Buena Vista Paideia Magnet

East Literature Magnet

McKissack Middle

Stratford Comprehensive High

Pearl-Cohn High

Heating and cooling problems, such as broken air

conditioners, heaters and

water heaters:

W.A. Bass Middle

East Literature Magnet

Glenview Elementary

Hume-Fogg Magnet

Napier Elementary

Stratford High

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 16

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:36:13 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: FDA Plans To Make Allergen Inspections

JUNE 25, 05:45 EST

FDA Plans To Make Allergen Inspections

By PHILIP BRASHER

Associated Press Writer

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The Food and Drug Administration plans to

inspect

thousands of candy makers, bakeries and other processors

over the next two

years to make sure ingredients that cause common allergic

reactions aren't

getting into food and candy accidentally.

The FDA decided on the inspections, which could involve as

many as 6,000

plants, after recently testing several plants in Minnesota

and Wisconsin.

One-fourth of the cookie, ice cream and candy makers tested

had ingredients

such as peanuts that weren't disclosed on product labels.

``We'd like to go out and see if that is true in the rest of

the nation,''

said Falci, an FDA official who briefed industry

officials on the

agency's plans at the Institute of Food Technologists annual

conference over

the weekend.

Foods are supposed to disclose all ingredients except for

flavorings,

colorings and spices, but allergenic ingredients sometimes

slip into foods

undetected because machinery hasn't been cleaned properly

between different

products, industry officials say.

Training for the 2,500 inspectors will take up to a year,

Falci said.

The agency also has asked food makers and their ingredient

suppliers to

study all of the thousands of flavorings, colorings and

spices that are in

use to identify those that are made from common allergens,

Falci said.

Under federal law, companies are not required to disclose

the composition of

flavorings, colorings and spices on food labels.

Some 7 million Americans who suffer from food allergies rely

on ingredient

labels to tell which processed foods are safe for them to

consume. Some food

allergies, particularly peanut allergies, can be fatal,

claiming an

estimated 150 lives a year. Allergy-related food recalls

jumped 20 percent

last year to more than 120, according to the FDA.

Eight food groups are responsible for most allergic

reactions: Crustaceans

such as crab and lobster; peanuts, eggs, fish, milk, soy,

tree nuts such as

almonds and walnuts; and wheat.

In Minnesota and Wisconsin, the FDA asked state inspectors

to look just at

peanut and egg allergies.

The inspectors found that allergens usually got into foods

undetected

because bakers used the same utensils to stir separate mixes

or reused

baking sheets between batches. At one candy company, certain

machinery was

washed only once a year, even though both peanut-containing

and peanut-free

chocolates were run through the equipment.

The food industry recently released voluntary labeling

standards that call

for disclosure of the sources of flavorings that could cause

allergic

reactions. Labels also are supposed to use more easily

understood terms for

ingredients like casein, a milk product.

Falci suggested that the FDA may restrict the use of some

precautionary

statements that some manufacturers are putting on all their

products to

protect themselves against lawsuits. One common statement

reads, ``May

contain peanuts.'' Such a label could be considered ``false

and misleading''

if there is little chance the food could contain an

allergen, Falci said.

The food industry, meanwhile, is wrestling with whether to

start testing

foods for allergens. Tests have been developed that can

detect minute

amounts of allergenic proteins for peanuts, milk and eggs.

Some companies won't do the testing on advice of their

attorneys, industry

officials say. The fear is that the results could be used

against them in

lawsuits.

``Before you actually do the testing you have to sit back

and say, what are

you going to do with the results,'' said Hahn, an

attorney who

specializes in food law. But, he said, the tests could help

companies

discover problems in their plants.

---

On the Net: Institute of Food Technologists:

http://www.ift.org

Food and Drug Administration: http://www.fda.gov

Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network:

http://www.foodallergy.org

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 17

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:39:47 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Mold can create wall of frustration

http://www.lubbockonline.com/stories/062401/loc_0624010058.shtml

Sunday, June 24, 2001

Last modified at 2:01 a.m. on Sunday, June 24, 2001

© 2001 - The Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

Dr. Strauss examines Black Mold in a lab at TTHSC.

A-J photo/Jim Watkins

Mold can create wall of frustration

By CHARLES L. EHRENFELD

Avalanche-Journal

Lindsey has stopped coughing up blood, but the

headaches remain, she

said, along with lingering fatigue.

Her mother, Donna of Amarillo, claims the symptoms

stem from the

presence of a mold in the Lubbock apartment in which the

Texas Tech student

lived from August 2000 to mid-February 2001.

" This has been just a nightmare for us, " Donna

recently told The

Avalanche-Journal.

Her nightmare has been compounded by a lack of oversight by

any public

health entity. When it comes to pathogens, such as black

mold and similar

agents, in buildings that cater to the public, residents

have little

recourse.

No existing local or state body investigates complaints

about harmful molds

found in apartments, schools, homes or other buildings.

" It becomes a responsibility between the tenant and the

building owner, "

said Ben Gordon, a regional industrial hygienist for the

Texas Department of

Health. " Everyone is exposed to mold all the time. It's

probably going to be

a problem for a while, but it's certainly not a new problem.

" It has just become more recognized. We get five inquiries a

day from people

all over the Panhandle. It has really picked up in the last

month and a

half. "

Stuart , lead environmental specialist with the

Environmental

Inspection Ser vices Department for the city of Lubbock,

said his department

also has seen more complaints about mold from city

residents. The city,

however, lacks testing measures to identify mold.

" Any complaints we get about mold, if we are going to pursue

them, we

approach under the sub-standard housing ordinances, "

said. " We try to

get folks to handle it themselves first. If there are

leaking pipes, that

can be a violation of an ordinance and can be pursued by our

office. "

During the most recent legislative session, state Rep.

Elliott Naishtat,

D-Austin, introduced a bill to prompt more inspections of

schools for mold

and other contamination. After a fire, flood or reports of

some illnesses,

school officials would have to have the quality of air

inspected.

The bill, however, was left pending at the conclusion of the

77th

legislative session. If passed, the bill could have caused

the Texas

Department of Health to set some indoor clean-air standards.

Meanwhile, litigation involving toxic mold is popping up

like wild mushrooms

across the country.

" It's the new asbestos, " says on IV,

co-founder and

managing senior partner of Knopfler & on, a Los

Angeles, Calif.-based

civil litigation law firm that specializes in general

liability and

insurance matters.

" Asbestos generated a lot of litigation and controversy in

the beginning,

but everyone knows now it's dangerous. It's no longer being

used in

manufacturing.

" But mold is naturally occurring, so it's always going to be

present, "

on said. " It's the new asbestos as far as toxic tort

litigation. And

like asbestos was 30 years ago, the medical and scientific

communities don't

have all the answers yet. They do know it can make people

sick; they don't

necessarily know why. "

on's firm currently is representing 1,000 mold

plaintiffs, including

Brockovich, the real-life law firm clerk portrayed by

in

last year's Academy Award-nominated movie. Brockovich has a

house with a bad

mold problem.

" I'm turning away about 90 percent of the calls I get these

days, " said

on, whose first mold case came in 1997, filed on

behalf of an unnamed

actor and his wife who claimed the mold in their Malibu,

Calif., house made

them ill. He settled the case for $1.35 million.

" Lawsuits are turning up all over the place. I'm chairing a

mold litigation

conference here on the West Coast next week, and it's sold

out. We have

people coming from all over the country. "

on, who also is a member of the state bar in Texas,

said there has

been litigation filed by insurance companies in Texas to try

to exclude mold

claims.

In May, the Delaware Supreme Court upheld a $1.04 million

award to two women

whose landlord failed to address leaks and mold problems in

their

apartments, resulting in asthma attacks and other health

problems.

Lindsey 's health problems, she said, stemmed from a

mold identified

by a professor at Texas Tech.

The mold found in apartment ED 8 & 9 at The Heritage

Apartments, 3002 Fourth

St., is not stachybotrys chartarum, or " black mold, " that

recently forced 20

Lubbock families out of their homes, according to C.

Straus, a

professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology

at Texas Tech

University Health Sciences Center.

Black mold also temporarily displaced 31 employees from the

Lubbock County

field office of the Child Support Enforcement Division of

the Texas State

Attorney General's Office and damaged the Lubbock County

Jail.

Straus is considered a leader in the field in the study of

molds found in

buildings. He pioneered research into mold-induced illnesses

known as " sick

building syndrome. "

Using instructions from Straus, Lindsey took four

swab samples from

her apartment Feb. 14. Test results from the Indoor Air

Quality Laboratory

at TTUHSC indicated the presence of Aspergillus versicolor

on one swab.

The swab sample containing Aspergillus was taken from inside

a cabinet under

the sink in the apartment's laundry area, according to

results detailed in

the microbiological report.

" The mold found in her apartment was not black mold, as I

recall, " Straus

said. " It was Aspergillus, which can produce different

mycotoxins, some of

which are carcinogenic. "

Three other swab samples taken from the apartment's two

bathrooms and from a

spot under the linoleum were found to contain only common

environmental

yeast, which is not considered to be harmful to health,

according to the

microbiological report.

According to records furnished by representatives of The

Heritage

Apartments, the company took one independent swab sample

from apartment ED

8 & 9 on the same day, along with single swab samples from

apartments EF 28

and W 101.

A separate microbiological report from the Indoor Air

Quality Laboratory at

TTUHSC indicated that each swab contained only common

environmental yeast,

along with the presence of Pithomyces and Cladosporium

fungal species,

neither of which is toxic to humans.

Sandy Holloway, manager of The Heritage Apartments, declined

to comment on

the matter.

Lindsey , 20, said she moved into apartment ED 8 & 9 in

August 2000 and

began to experience symptoms, such as a recurring sore

throat and an upper

respiratory infection, by Sept. 15. She was unaware of the

presence of mold

at the time, she said.

Her symptoms worsened throughout the fall semester, and she

fainted twice in

a public place. When she returned to Amarillo for the

Christmas break, she

had medical tests to rule out a brain tumor and an EEG to

test her heart.

There also were a chest X-ray and blood tests later, all of

which proved

negative.

It was not until telephone conversations with Straus that

she learned a mold

could be causing her illness. said other residents

at Heritage told

her of having similar symptoms.

" There also was a stench, " said. " Even our clothes

started having a

musty, moldy, mildew smell. "

said she noticed one of the apartment's toilets -

the toilet in her

bathroom - had been leaking. She reported it to complex

representatives.

said the walls in both bathrooms later were knocked

out by

maintenance workers in mid-February, and deteriorating,

leaking pipes were

found.

said she also found mold growing on ceiling fan

blades and on stucco

walls inside kitchen cabinets.

" Molds produce spores, extremely small particles that float

around in the

air, " Straus said. " When the spores land on a surface that

is wet, they

grow.

" The key factor is water. If a house is dry and clean, mold

will not grow.

It can't grow without water. But if there has been water

damage from a leaky

pipe or a roof leak, mold will grow. "

In high concentrations on surfaces or in the air, molds,

also called fungi,

are health hazards, he added. Potentially dangerous types of

mold grow

indoors on wet material, including Sheetrock, pressed

particle board and

ceiling tiles.

Straus pointed out that not all mold that appears black in

color is

stachybotrys, or black mold.

" Unfortunately, there are actually lots of mold that are

black, " Straus

said. " In fact, most molds look black when growing on

building material. "

Managers of the apartment complex allowed to move to

a different

apartment within the complex in mid-February, offering to

pay moving costs

and provide moving assistance. After she changed apartments,

she began

feeling better, she said.

" I go to bed with a headache and wake up with a headache, "

said. " I

still have fatigue. But the coughing up of blood has gone

away. "

L. Ehrenfeld can be contacted at 766-8796 or

cehrenfeld@...

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Message: 18

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 15:44:10 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Woman Says House Is Making Her Sick

http://www.wdiv.com/det/news/stories/news-83783620010622-150604.html

Woman Says House Is Making Her Sick

Black Mold At Root Of Problem

WARREN, Mich., 6:07 p.m. EDT June 22, 2001-- The signs in

the front of the

house warn all who pass by: Toxic Home, Black Mold, Do Not

Enter.

The woman who lives in the Warren house says that the black

mold inside is

killing her.

" I've got asthma, " Cheri Brunner said.

An environmental specialist from Sanit Air came to check

Brunner's home for

testing because she was experiencing such health problems.

They cut into her walls and found bacteria and mold so

dangerous that they

recommended she immediately evacuate the home.

It all started a year and a half ago when her house flooded

while she was on

vacation. Brunner's insurance company brought in contractors

to fix the

mess, but a lawsuit against the insurance company and

contractors claims the

work wasn't done right.

Brunner knew that she was getting sicker but didn't know

why. She now has a

lawyer who says the mold is responsible. They want the house

torn down and a

new home built for Brunner, plus money for her pain and

suffering.

" She has a myriad of problems, all related to mold, "

Brunner's attorney Dodd

Fisher said.

Stachybotrys is toxic. And if the spores are inhaled they

can lead to a

variety of ailments and even death. Experts say that it

sometimes takes

years before the effects of black mold exposure are

detected.

Stachybotrys information:

Stachybotrys, or black mold, thrives in moisture and grows

well on wood,

paper or cotton surfaces. When wet, the mold looks black and

slimy and often

has white edges. It's less shiny when dry.

If you find black mold, contact a home inspector, who should

be able to

locate the source of moisture.

Moldy surfaces can normally be cleaned with bleach and

water, but usually

require remediation if the mold is extensive in carpeting,

insulation or

drywall.

Is The Mold In Your House Dangerous?

Center For Disease Control

Copyright 2001 by ClickOnDetroit.com. All rights reserved.

This material may

not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

________________________________________________________________________

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Message: 19

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 17:05:35 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: on practicing mold avoidance and PTSS

----- Original Message -----

From: " " <erikj6@...>

" bherk " <bherk@...>

Sent: Monday, June 25, 2001 11:52 AM

Subject: ABX

: I took 300 mg. Doxycycline a day for a year and it helped,

as I say, a

: little bit. I had to stop because yeast got out of

control. I think it was

: worth it though. Dr. Cheney thinks that the Immune pro

alone can get rid

of

: mycoplasma. (yes, that's what I'm taking) No, it didn't

work for me. Garth

: Nicolson says the ABX are just bacteriostatic and it takes

a healthy

immune

: system to get rid of them. Absolutely nothing that I have

done compares to

: the results I get by avoiding mold. I taught my girlfriend

to do it and

she

: has the identical response. People " know " that stress

caused their onset

in

: the same way they " knew " that stress caused ulcers. They

felt the stress

: first so they think that's the predisposing factor. If you

have bacteria

: boring a hole in your guts, it's just conceivable that you

might have an

: inflammatory response. As you read in " A mind under siege "

it seems that a

: hyperinflammatory response can be directly responsible for

a depression

: response. When you try to rationalize the reason for your

depression, you

: always find something in your life that could be

responsible... you burnt

: the cookies, or you just broke up with your derelict

" insignificant other "

: (should be cause for celebration) or whatever. I noticed

that my

depression

: was the first indicator of a toxic exposure and use it as

a guide for

: avoidance. If I wait until I feel like shit, it's way to

late and I'll

: suffer for hours. By consistently doing this I gradually

started feeling

: better and better. I know that any toxic exposure that you

happen to be

: sensitive to can set off the response, but avoiding paint,

perfume and

: petroleum products never lessened my reactivity to mold,

but avoiding mold

: decreased my reactivity to everything else. That still

might be considered

: just my own personal fluke except I noticed that almost

everybody with CFS

: that I talk to complains about the same things that led me

to suspect that

: mycotoxins were my primary reactor. And then, of course,

repeating my

: experiment with a girl I met who complained of similar

problems and

getting

: identical results, reinforced my concept in a big way. I

asked Garth

: Nicolson if constant low level exposure to mycotoxins

might not have the

: same effect on mycoplasma as giving somebody Penicillin.

He agreed that

that

: might certainly be the case. We are all infected with

something that

hates

: mold. PTSD is right, Perpetual Toxic Shock Syndrome!

-

:

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Message: 20

Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 17:18:45 -0400

From: " bherk " <bherk@...>

Subject: Breathe Free Coupon officer

Coupon at:

http://www.dealofday.com/sys/deal?6497 code to enter

" CHERRY "

$10 off on a $35 order at Breathe Free. Use it before 7/31.

They sell a

variety of clean air products so check out replacing the

filter in your air

cleaners or adding a piece of equipment you need to breathe

better. Those

of you who NEED a mask and haven't gotten one yet - check

them out. Those

of you who have a mask or respirator - let us know how it's

working, how

often you have to change the cartridges, etc. I have

survived without one -

but if I planned on traveling by airplane - it would be at

the TOP of my

list.

http://www.breathefree.com/cgi-bin/beacon7/BreatheFree

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Message: 21

Date: Tue, 26 Jun 2001 00:39:29 +0000 (UTC)

From: Angel MCS <jap2bemc@...>

Subject: Re: Can anyone recommend Michigan doctor?

Try:

R. Harbut, MD, MPH, FCCP

Diplomate, ABPM, Occ Med

Center for Occ/Env Medicine

Southfield, Mi.

I have corresponded with him and beleive he can assist you

:)

Angel

" If having endured much, we at last asserted our 'right to

know' and if,

knowing, we have concluded that we are being asked to take

senseless and

frightening risks, then we should no longer accept the

counsel of those

who tell us that we must fill our world with poisonous

chemicals, we

should look around and see what other course is open to us. "

Carson

" My toxicasa (world) is your toxicasa (world). "

Judith Goode

On Mon, 4 Jun 2001, JB wrote:

> Can anyone recommend a good Michigan doctor experienced in

mold

> poisioning, MCS, Immunotoxocologist/neurologist? There is

no doctor

> familiar with any of this within my health care system.

Any help

> greatly appreciated.

> jb

>

>

>

>

>

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  • 2 years later...

In a message dated 12/24/03 3:19:27 AM Mountain Standard Time,

SSRI medications writes:

> this article they spoke of drug compaines making

> up 'social anxiety disorder' and others... Im pretty certain that it

> is listed in the DSM-IV.

>

Half the disorders in the DSM are made up, for God's sake. How else could

they sell all those billions of dollars worth of psycho drugs????

Blind Reason

a novel of espionage and pharmaceutical intrigue

Think your antidepressant is safe? Think again.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Good point. If they make up a disorder then only their drugs will

appear to treat that one, making them look better. Sorry for being

so silly....drug is affecting memory problems making me extremely

distressed i am willing to die over it. lol. Yeah...mood stabilisers

are working!

Jeni (sending love to all)

> Half the disorders in the DSM are made up, for God's sake. How

else could

> they sell all those billions of dollars worth of psycho drugs????

>

> Blind Reason

> a novel of espionage and pharmaceutical intrigue

> Think your antidepressant is safe? Think again.

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Good point. If they make up a disorder then only their drugs will

appear to treat that one, making them look better. Sorry for being

so silly....drug is affecting memory problems making me extremely

distressed i am willing to die over it. lol. Yeah...mood stabilisers

are working!

Jeni (sending love to all)

> Half the disorders in the DSM are made up, for God's sake. How

else could

> they sell all those billions of dollars worth of psycho drugs????

>

> Blind Reason

> a novel of espionage and pharmaceutical intrigue

> Think your antidepressant is safe? Think again.

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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