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Rio Vista Elementary School in Canyon Country ( Mold Found in Girl's Lungs )

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The Daily News of Los Angeles

June 27, 1999

MOLD FOUND IN GIRL'S LUNGS; PUPILS' ILLNESS ADDS TO PORTABLES CONTROVERSY

By Farrell Aidem Staff Writer

Santa Clarita. Worries about her little girl's health nagged at

Overlock for

months, but she wrote off the frequent headaches and stomachaches as ''just

part of growing up.''

Then, the alarm went off: Chemicals used to build portable classrooms were

found in blood samples of a classmate in Room 40 at Rio Vista Elementary

School in Canyon Country.

Tests on Overlock's 10-year-old daughter, Ashle, came back far worse than

expected.

The little girl had a poisonous mold growing in her lungs, a mold that

researchers with the state Department of Health Services say has appeared in

portables around the nation - though tests, so far, show no signs of its

spores in Santa Clarita classrooms, where at least five children and two

teachers have tested positive for the poisonous stachybotrys.

Their symptoms range from headaches to nosebleeds, lethargy to upper

respiratory distress. Initial blood and urine tests show high levels of

residue from the formaldehyde, inorganic arsenic and other chemicals used

routinely in plywood, carpeting and pressed board paneling that can fill the

air in a poorly ventilated portable classroom, said Dr. Ordog, head of

toxicology at Henry Mayo Newhall Memorial Hospital.

''This is a highly toxic mold, and it can affect any area of the body,''

Ordog said. ''And with any kind of prolonged exposure you can see a wide

range of symptoms.''

The mold, Ordog said, can harm the neurological system, cause headaches and

nerve and memory problems. It also can affect the immune system, alter the

chemicals in the blood and damage the hormone systems, muscles, joints and

lungs. Ordog sees patients not only from Rio Vista, but from Helmers

Elementary in Valencia.

Looking for evidence

An environmental consultant hired by the Saugus Union School District to

check suspect classrooms has found nontoxic molds, but none of the poisonous

stachybotrys, said Mark Fulmer, the district's assistant superintendent of

business services.

''So far, it doesn't appear to be coming from the classrooms,'' Fulmer said

last week, adding that the district is still waiting for more test results.

''There's no evidence, but we're concerned, and we continue to explore.

We've asked for help from the state and county health departments.''

The school district is working with experts in indoor air quality from UCLA

and California State University, Northridge. For parents with questions, A

UCLA environmental toxicologist can be reached through the Saugus district.

Fulmer and some parents said the neighborhood around Helmers is known to be

on a high water table, perhaps encouraging mold growth all around.

''One parent told me there was black mold on her grass at home,'' Fulmer

said.

One mother said it isn't unusual to dig a hole to plant a tree and find that

the hole fills with water.

That's very possible, said DiPrimio, president of the Valencia Water

Co. Last year's El Nino rains left behind moisture that is slowly sinking

into underground waterways and remains closer to the surface than usual.

And Rio Vista - Spanish for ''river view'' - sits on the banks of the Santa

Clara River, normally dry on the surface, but a key supply of groundwater.

Parents are frustrated.

''There's no question there's something making kids sick. It's just a

question of what it is,'' said one mother who asked not to be identified.

Her second-grader at Helmers had tested negative for any allergies but

suffered chronic allergy-type symptoms during her months in Room 30. Three

days in a row in January, the school nurse called the mother to pick up her

child because she was sick, but the symptoms disappeared when the little

girl came home. Tests results are due any day.

Parents at both schools say they have sneaked into the abandoned classes and

seen a black mold growing under the carpet or the wall coverings.

''They had wallpaper falling and you could see mold growing there,''

Overlock said.

Airborne spores

Stachybotrys grows when leaf debris or paper or wood products are soaking

wet for a long period of time, and isn't harmful until it dries and the

spores go airborne, said Sandy McNeel, a research scientist with the state

Department of Health Services.

That could have happened at Helmers, where Room 30 sits on a playground

drain, which clogged last year and left stagnant water under the class for

months, parents and researchers said.

In a June 8 letter to the school district, Ordog suggested that the suspect

portable classroom at Rio Vista be abandoned until thoroughly checked by

mold experts.

''It is my professional opinion, based upon my education and experience,

that this portable is currently not habitable by anyone until it is cleaned

and tested for sterility,'' Ordog wrote in a letter to Fulmer.

''Exposure to this mold could be extremely hazardous to anyone's health.''

Ordog's letter was prompted by Ashle Overlock's diagnosis and released with

her mother's permission. The little girl, he said, showed classic symptoms

of stachybotrys infection. Her grades were falling and she felt lethargic,

signs of the mold attacking the nervous system.

''Please note that this is not the only isolate of stachybotrys,'' Ordog

wrote. ''There are now at least six other patients from portables in the

Saugus district who are complaining of feeling ill while in the classrooms

and who (have tested positive) for high levels of stachybotrys.''

His prescription for Ashle has been a special dietary supplement with

vitamins and anti-oxidants and an hour a day in a spa to sweat out the

toxins, her mother said.

At Helmers, a lack of communication, the sudden abandonment of a classroom

with no word home to parents and the school's decision to forbid children

from removing backpacks, books and other items from their classroom once

summer vacation came has unnerved parents and their children.

''All these kids are freaked out,'' said the one unidentified mother.

''They're walking around saying there's a fungus in the room and it's going

to kill everyone.

''What we need to do is keep looking for the source. We're grasping at

straws here. You've got to hope that sooner or later you grab the right

one.''

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