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New York Times: The Turmoil Over Mold in Buildings

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March 23, 2003

The Turmoil Over Mold in Buildings

By DENNIS HEVESI

t is a slimy, sticky, black, brownish or sometimes orangey organism that mostly comes in knobby, though sometimes hairy, microscopic ovals — half a million or more spores fitting on the face of a dime.

Mold, in some of its myriad forms, has long been known to cause serious damage to some people's pulmonary systems. But over the last five years, for a mix of reasons, the literally creepy substance has also exerted increasing strains on the real estate industry, the insurance industry, the court system and architectural and construction practices.

Yet, given that fungus (its more scientific appellation) has inhabited the planet for millions of years, there are those caught up in the current concern who contend that, however legitimate in some cases, that worry has also been exaggerated.

The confusion stems, in part, from the fact that while some people can suffer serious health damage from exposure to mold, others are unaffected.

Some of the agitation was stirred by a federal agency's initial opinion, later reversed, that mold might have caused bleeding in the lungs of infants. Also in the mix has been litigious piling on after sizable damage awards in several court cases, including one, later scaled back, for $32 million; the insurance industry's hasty retreat from mold coverage; and insufficient understanding of the medical consequences of mold exposure.

"Five years ago, we would get one call a month about mold: a residence, a school, a commercial property," said Krell, president of IAQ Technologies, an indoor environmental consulting and remediation company in Syracuse, N.Y. "Now we get 10 calls a day."

"I've seen people become deathly ill," Mr. Krell said. "I've also seen them make themselves ill with hysteria."

Sitomer, a partner in the environmental law firm of Sitomer & Hogan in Manhattan, calls for calm on the legal front, where about 10,000 mold-related lawsuits have been filed nationwide in the last three years. "What we've found where the knee-jerk response was to overreact and litigate," Mr. Sitomer said, "is that those who have commenced those suits have directly impacted the value of their own home."

Mr. Sitomer's firm represents both plaintiffs and defendants in mold-related cases, but specializes in preparing building managers and co-op and condominium boards to deal with the mold problem. "There's time to commence litigation after there's been a unified effort by the building and the residents to manage the mold," he said. "Once that's implemented, there's time to address responsibility and the development of claims."

About 24,000 homeowners across the nation — including 1,600 in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut — had mold-related insurance claims unresolved as of Dec. 31, according to a Texas-based homeowners advocacy group called Policyholders of America.

Last year, according to P. Hartwig, the chief economist for the Insurance Information Institute, insurance companies paid out $2.5 billion in mold-related claims. "That's about double what it was in 2001," Mr. Hartwig said.

"In addition, in 2002 it became clear that the mold issue was no longer confined to homeowners' insurance," Mr. Hartwig continued, "but became a problem in commercial coverage as well — particularly for co-ops, condominiums, hotels and schools." Because they are corporations, co-ops and condominiums must carry commercial liability coverage.

The insurance industry has not taken kindly to the explosion in mold-related claims. At the industry's urging, 35 states — including New Jersey, but not New York or Connecticut — have allowed insurers to exclude mold coverage from homeowner policies. "In some states," Mr. Hartwig said, "insurers have introduced caps on the coverage for this type of claim, perhaps $5,000 or $10,000."

All of which squeezes homeowners and building owners.

In Texas — which along with California leads the nation in mold claims, at just under 5,000 each (followed by Florida with 3,900) — the per-policy cost of industry payouts for mold coverage rose from $23 in the first quarter of 2000 to $444 by the end of 2001, Mr. Hartwig said. "These costs are passed on to policyholders," he said.

Rental buildings have also been affected, with some landlords informing renters that they could be held responsible for not removing visible moisture or not reporting the appearance of mold to management.

With coverage limited and insurance companies fiercely contesting court claims, some owners of private homes are facing frightening choices — especially those with widespread contamination deep within their walls, plumbing, heating and ventilation systems. In those cases, remediation can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.

"One issue we are seeing more and more of these days is foreclosures," said Melinda Ballard, president of Policyholders of America. Ms. Ballard started her organization after winning the nation's most publicized mold-related lawsuit against an insurer, resulting in a damage award of $32 million — later reduced to $4 million.

"Let's say you have a family in a home with severe contamination and it's not covered by insurance," Ms. Ballard said. "They face ugly choices. They can stay and have their children suffer the health consequences. They can put their home up for sale and not disclose anything. Or they can hand the keys to the bank."

Starting in midyear 2002, Ms. Ballard said, her organization began receiving about 50 calls a week from people facing foreclosure because of mold exposure. "Here's the rub," she said, "when the bank forecloses, they sell it at auction — as-is."

The Setting

High-Tech Conditions May Promote Mold

Modern architecture and construction techniques, particularly for high-rise buildings, are also affected by mold concerns. Pointing out that there are spores in the air everywhere, Mr. Sitomer, the environmental lawyer, said, "In today's sealed buildings, tightly controlled environments, central air-conditioning, mold grows at much higher levels than outside."

To which New York State Senator Carl L. Marcellino, a Republican from Long Island and chairman of the Senate Environmental Conservation Committee, said, "Maybe you don't seal new buildings; let them breathe."

Senator Marcellino is the sponsor of a bill that would create a commission of scientists, lawyers, insurers, architects and builders to advise government officials on mold policy.

Worries about mold, he said, are as much a problem in the suburbs as in urban high-rises. "That leaky roof dripping behind your Sheetrock becomes a nesting place," he said. "You fix the roof, but nobody looks behind the wall."

The Health Impact

A Range of Fungi, a Range of Effects

Several experts said widespread mold anxiety got its start in the mid-90's after 10 babies in neighboring buildings in Cleveland suffered severe bleeding in the lungs, including one who died. Investigators from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention joined independent scientists in concluding that "infant pulmonary hemorrhage may be caused by exposure to Stachybotrys chartarum or other fungi growing in moist household environments." Stachybotrys has since been seized upon by some lawyers as "killer mold."

In 1997, a C.D.C. task force reviewed the initial findings and concluded that the evidence "was not of sufficient quality to support an association" between Stachybotrys and bleeding lungs in infants.

Which hardly means that mold is harmless. "We know that there are a range of health effects related to mold exposure," said Dr. Maida P. Galvez, a pediatrician at the Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Unit at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Manhattan. "The most common are asthma and allergy-type symptoms."

"We know that families with strong histories of allergic diseases are more susceptible to these exposures," Dr. Galvez said, "that mold can exacerbate these conditions." At a minimum, mold can cause eye, ear, nose and throat irritation, as well as coughing and wheezing — sometimes severe and unrelenting.

While mold exacerbates those conditions for people prone to allergies and asthma, Dr. Galvez said, it has not yet been proved to be a direct instigator of asthma in families without a history of that disease. "There are ongoing studies to determine that relationship," she said.

Still, mold can be deadly. Dr. Jordan Fink, a professor in the allergy and immunology division of the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, said mold can cause hypersensitivity pneumonitis, resulting in progressive lung impairment. "There have been fatal cases of hypersensitivity pneumonitis," he said, "because of the inflammation and scarring of pulmonary tissue."

Pointing out that there are "hundreds to thousands" of mold species that have not been studied, Dr. Fink focused on the notorious Stachybotrys variety. While it is proved that Stachybotrys causes pulmonary and allergic symptoms, he said, "there is no documentation as yet that Stachybotrys can cause nonallergic-type symptoms." As examples, he said, some people say they suffer memory loss, "can't think anymore, can't eat."

Ms. Ballard, president of the policyholders group, said that she, her husband and 2-year-old son lived for months in their contaminated 22-room home in a suburb of Austin, Tex. — "called, appropriately enough, Dripping Springs," she said — after being told by their insurance company that the contractors hired to remediate Stachybotrys in their home could not break through the walls and floors until the insurance investigation was completed. "I stupidly, not knowing jack about toxic mold, listened to them and stopped all scheduled repairs," she said. That was in 1998.

"We started getting sick," Ms. Ballard said. "My son would gasp for every breath. My husband had some strange symptoms. He became extremely forgetful. He had driven the same car for years and could not remember what kind of car it was. He had brain seizures that showed up on M.R.I.'s."

The old "fixer upper" had cost $300,000, Ms. Ballard said, and about $1 million to modernize. The $32 million in damages was awarded in 2001, but was later reduced to $4 million, plus interest and lawyers' fees.

In December, a mold suit was filed by the owner of a condominium apartment at 515 Park Avenue — advertised by its sponsors, at $3,000 per square foot, as the world's most expensive residential building.

The suit alleges that the developer, architect, contractors and condominium board members had all been negligent in the design, construction and management of the building, which opened in 2000, resulting in "massive leaks" throughout the structure.

"As recent studies performed for the building's board of managers confirmed," the suit says, "the building is contaminated with toxic fungus molds, including a strain known as Stachybotrys, the `killer fungus.' "

The plaintiff, Kramer, claimed that the apartment and its contents, including antiques and artwork, were totally ruined. "Such damage pales," the suit says, in comparison with the harm to the plaintiff's 3-year-old daughter, "who has developed severe and disabling respiratory and other illnesses."

Mr. Kramer is asking for $2 billion in damages. Lawyers for the developers, Zeckendorf Realty, did not respond to several requests for comment.

According to the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology, 35 million Americans suffer from reactions to mold — 12 percent of the nation's population.

"Do we design buildings to take care of the person who is allergic or the person who is not?" wonders Angelo III, the principal industrial hygienist at Future Environment Designs, a consultation and remediation company on Long Island. "Do you build for one in eight persons?"

Senator Marcellino believes, "It will come to setting regulatory standards that force people to take the effects of mold into consideration when they create buildings, maintain buildings."

Remediation

Process Starts by Eliminating Leaks

Until then, what is a homeowner or building owner to do? In a phrase: stop leaks.

Mold thrives on moisture. And, as Mr. emphasized, remediation requires elimination of the source. "Whatever caused water damage must be fixed," he said. "Realistically, that should be done before the cleaning, because the mold will come back." Better yet, leaks should be eliminated before mold ever takes root.

If mold does become visible — a big if, given that it also thrives in a building's dark recesses — a cleanup is in order.

The Old Testament, while genteelly referring to mold as mildew, offers a harsh prescription. Speaking of "the priest," Leviticus 14, says: "If mildew has spread on the walls, he is to order that the contaminated stones be torn out." If mildew reappears, it says, "the house must be torn down."

Mr. Krell stressed, however, that "not every time somebody has a few square feet of mold do they have to burn the house down or default on their mortgage. Most people can wear gloves, a surgical mask and safety goggles and perform a limited cleanup themselves."

If a homeowner prefers the reassurance of hiring a professional for a small cleanup, Mr. Krell said, the least expensive job would cost about $800. Still, he said: "We've been involved in projects in excess of $300,000. There was a massive job in Alpine, N.J., involving faulty construction on a 20,000-square-foot mansion. There were 8,000 square feet of mold throughout the basement. Eventually, they forced the builder to buy the house back, for $5 million."

But if mold has only crept halfway up a wall, for instance, and the owner wants to personally perform the cleanup, then strong detergent or bleach, water and a lot of elbow grease are in order. "Scrub the area until nothing is visible," Mr. said. "You only do this on nonporous surfaces — wood, metal, plaster." Fabrics, books and even wallboard are porous and, if contaminated, might have to be disposed of.

Big jobs are, obviously, more complicated. "If, let's say, it gets into the ventilation system," Mr. said, "you've got to clean throughout the house. Then the job becomes similar to asbestos removal — sealing the windows, high-efficiency filters to clean the air, vacuums with filters, all surfaces cleaned."

If the job is done correctly — another big if — the workers will wear respirators, protective suits, gloves. "They will build a chamber next to or in the house to decontaminate themselves, so they don't bring out the contaminants," Mr. said. All removed materials will be sealed in plastic bags for disposal. Pretesting will be necessary to establish parameters for the project, Mr. Krell said, and to set reference points for air and surface testing after the job is done.

In 1995, Mr. said, his company remediated an entire two-bedroom apartment in Manhattan for $7,000. Asked if prices have gone up since, he said that, in fact, "as more contractors get into this, prices come down."

And that is part of the problem.

As Mr. Krell said: "Almost every water and fire restoration contractor, every lead and asbestos abatement contractor in the country is jumping into this field. And many are ill-prepared." There are no state or federal regulations for mold consultants and contractors.

The federal Environmental Protection Agency and the New York City Department of Health have written remediation guidelines. And there are two organizations — the American Indoor Air Quality Council, (800) 942-0832, www.iaqcouncil.org; and the Indoor Air Quality Association, (301) 231-8388, www.iaqa.org) — that offer lists of contractors who have completed voluntary certification requirements. But Mr. Krell believes those requirements are not stringent enough.

So, in choosing a contractor, the watchword is "references, references, references," he said. "Ask for a list of previous clients they have done similar work for."

It is also crucial, Mr. Krell said, to make sure that the consultant and contractor have specific mold coverage in their insurance policies, in case, for example, "they spread contamination throughout the rest of the building through poor work practices."

Extrapolating those precautions to the biggest residential buildings, Mr. Sitomer, the Manhattan environmental lawyer, said that, on that scale, "managing mold has to be a partnership between building owners and residents, allowing for a free flow of information that reduces fear."

Reiterating his position that apartment owners should not overreact, Mr. Sitomer said: "With litigation comes public disclosure of the issues as the plaintiff sees them. That not only can have an adverse effect on apartment values, it can also complicate the board's attempt to manage the problem."

A cornerstone of a building's partnership is that residents, board members and management fully understand the extent of insurance coverage for mold — from the apartment owners' policies to the board members' directors and officers insurance to the entire building's liability policy.

Building staff should be trained to respond quickly and appropriately — sealing mold in plastic sheeting, informing management and calling in a contractor — so problems are not increased by mishandling of mold.

And buildings should prescreen consultants and contractors — and their insurance coverage — allowing for rapid response. "If building staff first has to find qualified contractors," Mr. Sitomer said, "the spores have time to spread."  

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company | Privacy Policy

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Keng

Yes . This is a 100 year old flooding every rainstorm basement that I was exposed to for many years. Now I am very ill and mostly confind to apartment and air cleaners. I hope some one makes a difference and will realize what this can do to people, and there are no doctors who truely can help.None are educated. There a a few. Far away and exspensive.

Thanks

Janet s

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An informative article without the obvious statements of cause. High

indoor relative humidity grows mold. Water leaks are only one of the

problems. Currently high outdoor humidity is causing indoor mold

growth inside buildings from the Gulf States to Atlantic coast. When

the outdoor dewpoints are above 60^F, potential exsists to grow mold

inside as a result humid air entering a building. We have had a

couple weeks of rain in the SE US. All buildings in the wet regions

should a high humidity alert system. When the relative humidity goes

+60% RH for days, the cool sufaces are damp enough to have potential

for mold growth. This is a closely held secret!

>

> March 23, 2003

>

> The Turmoil Over Mold in Buildings

>

> By DENNIS HEVESI

>

>

> t is a slimy, sticky, black, brownish or sometimes orangey organism

that

> mostly comes in knobby, though sometimes hairy, microscopic ovals

†" half a

> million or more spores fitting on the face of a dime.

>

> Mold, in some of its myriad forms, has long been known to cause

serious

> damage to some people's pulmonary systems. But over the last five

years, for

> a mix of reasons, the literally creepy substance has also exerted

increasing

> strains on the real estate industry, the insurance industry, the

court system

> and architectural and construction practices.

>

> Yet, given that fungus (its more scientific appellation) has

inhabited the

> planet for millions of years, there are those caught up in the

current

> concern who contend that, however legitimate in some cases, that

worry has

> also been exaggerated.

>

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