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Fungal Laryngitis, Anyone hear of that before?

tigerpaw2c <tigerpaw2c@...> wrote: School

nurse says mold in office made her sick

Superintendent: School is safe; mold treated and removed in 2004

Atlanticville - Long Branch,NJ*

BY DANIEL HOWLEY Staff Writer

http://atlanticville.gmnews.com/news/2008/0110/Front_Page/002.html

A former nurse at the Intermediate School in Ocean Township has

filed a workers' compensation lawsuit against the district Board of

Education.

In the suit, Boodaghians is seeking compensation from the

district to pay medical bills accrued after what she claims was an

exposure to mold in her nurse's office at the Intermediate School on

West Park Avenue in 2004.

Boodaghians said she was exposed to a fine dust in August 2004 when

she opened her office a week prior to the start of the school year.

" I became ill inAugust 2004, but worked the first three days of

school, " Boodaghians, who now works as a nurse at the Ocean Township

Wanamassa Elementary School, said this week.

" My last day of employment [at the Intermediate School] was Sept. 3,

2004. The doctors had put me out of work for four months, " she said.

Boodaghians said that in April 2005 she was diagnosed with fungal

laryngitis from exposure to the mold at the school.

" Because the fungus was in my body for seven months, I developed

multiple medical problems, " she explained, adding that her doctors

advised her to no longer enter the Intermediate School.

Because of the diagnosis, Boodaghians was transferred by the

district to the Wanamassa School in 2006.

Boodaghians' attorney, Ahearn, said, " In late August, early

September 2004, [boodaghians] entered the Intermediate School prior

to the beginning of the school year to open her nursing office.

" She had a dust covering everything, which she had to clean. Day

after day she got sicker, until she had to go to the emergency

room, " he said.

Boodaghians was treated for laryngeal nerve paresis, a partial

paralysis of her vocal cords, at the Philadelphia Ear Nose and

Throat Association by Dr. Yolonda Heman-Ackah.

Some mold types can have a systemic effect on the body due to their

toxic nature, according to Ahearn.

Boodaghians is now suing the Township of Ocean Board of Education

(TOBE) district for workers' compensation. The suit is currently in

the discovery phase.

Boodaghians is seeking compensation for her medical bills and the

reinstatement of her sick and personal time.

" I believe that there is still a mold problem, only because there

are so many sick people still in the building, " Boodaghians said.

She added that the board has refused to pay her workers'

compensation because she was " chronically ill " prior to being

hospitalized.

" We have requested a jury trial, " Ahearn said. " Discovery will last

into the summer of this year and more is going to come to light as

we have depositions. "

The school district had closed the Intermediate School for a week a

year prior to Boodaghians' hospitalization to treat a mold problem,

according to Ahearn.

The district hired a contractor during that 2003-2004 school year to

remediate the mold, which was removed without incident, Ahearn said.

" In 2003-2004 when we had to close the school, it was because a

great deal of untreated, raw air from outside was allowed to enter

the building, " Ocean Township Superintendent of Schools

Pagano said last week.

" The air came in through an open window, and the air conditioning

was left on, allowing it to condense, " he said, explaining that the

air had entered the building uninterrupted for close to three weeks

and eventually led to the mold growth.

Since the start of the 2003-2004 school year, Pagano said, " air

quality tests [at the school] have been conducted and come back

clean. "

Pagano added that the school periodically reviews its maintenance

and cleaning procedures.

Pagano said any claims that moldy conditions remain at the school

today are " baseless accusations. "

" Each and every time that someone has expressed concern [with mold],

we immediately run air quality tests, and they have all come back

negative, " Pagano said. " At some time in the future, if we run a

test and it doesn't come back clean, we will remediate it. "

Following the 2003-2004 closing at the Intermediate School to treat

the mold, a humidity alarm system was installed on the school

premises, Pagano said.

The system is triggered if the humidity at the school goes above an

acceptable level, which could lead to the formation of mold,

according to Pagano.

The school district is in the process of reviewing bids for a

project to install a new HVAC (heating, ventilation and

airconditioning) system at the Intermediate School, Pagano said.

" It should be finished sometime in the not-too-distant future, "

Pagano said, adding that the district employs a fulltime HVAC

specialist to check the air quality in all of the schools.

New Jersey Educators Association [NJEA] attorney Barrett

said last week that the steps taken by the board regarding the mold

problem at the school have been insufficient.

The NJEA is a statewide representative of school employees and

Barrett is representing the Township of Ocean Educators Association

[TOEA], which is comprised of all school employees, including

teachers, secretaries, maintenance workers and custodians.

" From what I know, there are still complaints being registered

through the association about the conditions of various rooms in the

[intermediate] school building, " Barrett said. " There are enough

complaints that it concerns the association and has for some time.

" It's not our concern that the Board of Education has not done

anything; the [humidity] alarms are a positive step taken by the

school district.

" I don't think the school board is indifferent to the problems of

its employees; they just haven't been aggressive enough, " Barrett

said.

Barrett further explained that the Ocean Township school district

allotted money in last year's budget for remediating air quality

problems at the Intermediate School.

" This leads me to believe that there is a history of air quality

issues at the [intermediate School], " Barrett said. " It became

increasingly apparent that there are air problems with the school

and we want to have them addressed.

" To [TOBE's] credit, they have taken steps such as closing the

school [in 2003- 2004] and getting a new HVAC.

" But the NJEA believes the problem should be dealt with more

aggressively. I think that [TOBE's] replacement of the HVAC system

is a credible step, so we were very pleased when substantial funds

were budgeted to do that. "

Funds for the HVAC replacement were budgeted in the spring of the

2006-2007 school year, with work supposedly scheduled to take place

in the summer of 2007, according to Barrett.

" [The NJEA] was led to believe that [the new HVAC replacement] was

going to take place last summer, and for reasons that are unclear to

me the work has been on hold.

" That puts us in this situation for another year, and that is

unacceptable, " Barrett said.

Boodaghians points to the upgrade of the HVAC system as an

admittance that a mold problem still exists in the building.

T

he Intermediate School houses 1,400

students in grades five through eight and Pagano said that the

district maintains it is doing everything it should to maintain the

air quality in the building.

" Everything that we have done [shows] that the air quality is

acceptable, " Pagano said. " You are going to have some people who may

have difficulty with the air quality in that particular environment

and you will find that in workplaces all over the state.

" There is a certain small population in any building that may on

occasion, have an allergic reaction to something that may be there, "

he said, adding, " The district has nothing to hide. "

Boodaghians said her ultimate goal for the lawsuit is " that the

school will become a sage and healthy environment. There is nothing

that can get my body back to the way that it used to be, but if I

can prevent someone from getting as sick as I am, that would be my

ultimate goal.

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

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a, I had heard that Candida Albicans, the fungus that causes thrush can

cause it, and also Histoplama, Blastomyces, and Aspergillus, can also cause

this. I never fully researched it, myself. Darlene

a Townsend <kmtown2003@...> wrote:

Fungal Laryngitis, Anyone hear of that before?

tigerpaw2c <tigerpaw2c@...> wrote: School

nurse says mold in office made her sick

Superintendent: School is safe; mold treated and removed in 2004

Atlanticville - Long Branch,NJ*

BY DANIEL HOWLEY Staff Writer

http://atlanticville.gmnews.com/news/2008/0110/Front_Page/002.html

A former nurse at the Intermediate School in Ocean Township has

filed a workers' compensation lawsuit against the district Board of

Education.

In the suit, Boodaghians is seeking compensation from the

district to pay medical bills accrued after what she claims was an

exposure to mold in her nurse's office at the Intermediate School on

West Park Avenue in 2004.

Boodaghians said she was exposed to a fine dust in August 2004 when

she opened her office a week prior to the start of the school year.

" I became ill inAugust 2004, but worked the first three days of

school, " Boodaghians, who now works as a nurse at the Ocean Township

Wanamassa Elementary School, said this week.

" My last day of employment [at the Intermediate School] was Sept. 3,

2004. The doctors had put me out of work for four months, " she said.

Boodaghians said that in April 2005 she was diagnosed with fungal

laryngitis from exposure to the mold at the school.

" Because the fungus was in my body for seven months, I developed

multiple medical problems, " she explained, adding that her doctors

advised her to no longer enter the Intermediate School.

Because of the diagnosis, Boodaghians was transferred by the

district to the Wanamassa School in 2006.

Boodaghians' attorney, Ahearn, said, " In late August, early

September 2004, [boodaghians] entered the Intermediate School prior

to the beginning of the school year to open her nursing office.

" She had a dust covering everything, which she had to clean. Day

after day she got sicker, until she had to go to the emergency

room, " he said.

Boodaghians was treated for laryngeal nerve paresis, a partial

paralysis of her vocal cords, at the Philadelphia Ear Nose and

Throat Association by Dr. Yolonda Heman-Ackah.

Some mold types can have a systemic effect on the body due to their

toxic nature, according to Ahearn.

Boodaghians is now suing the Township of Ocean Board of Education

(TOBE) district for workers' compensation. The suit is currently in

the discovery phase.

Boodaghians is seeking compensation for her medical bills and the

reinstatement of her sick and personal time.

" I believe that there is still a mold problem, only because there

are so many sick people still in the building, " Boodaghians said.

She added that the board has refused to pay her workers'

compensation because she was " chronically ill " prior to being

hospitalized.

" We have requested a jury trial, " Ahearn said. " Discovery will last

into the summer of this year and more is going to come to light as

we have depositions. "

The school district had closed the Intermediate School for a week a

year prior to Boodaghians' hospitalization to treat a mold problem,

according to Ahearn.

The district hired a contractor during that 2003-2004 school year to

remediate the mold, which was removed without incident, Ahearn said.

" In 2003-2004 when we had to close the school, it was because a

great deal of untreated, raw air from outside was allowed to enter

the building, " Ocean Township Superintendent of Schools

Pagano said last week.

" The air came in through an open window, and the air conditioning

was left on, allowing it to condense, " he said, explaining that the

air had entered the building uninterrupted for close to three weeks

and eventually led to the mold growth.

Since the start of the 2003-2004 school year, Pagano said, " air

quality tests [at the school] have been conducted and come back

clean. "

Pagano added that the school periodically reviews its maintenance

and cleaning procedures.

Pagano said any claims that moldy conditions remain at the school

today are " baseless accusations. "

" Each and every time that someone has expressed concern [with mold],

we immediately run air quality tests, and they have all come back

negative, " Pagano said. " At some time in the future, if we run a

test and it doesn't come back clean, we will remediate it. "

Following the 2003-2004 closing at the Intermediate School to treat

the mold, a humidity alarm system was installed on the school

premises, Pagano said.

The system is triggered if the humidity at the school goes above an

acceptable level, which could lead to the formation of mold,

according to Pagano.

The school district is in the process of reviewing bids for a

project to install a new HVAC (heating, ventilation and

airconditioning) system at the Intermediate School, Pagano said.

" It should be finished sometime in the not-too-distant future, "

Pagano said, adding that the district employs a fulltime HVAC

specialist to check the air quality in all of the schools.

New Jersey Educators Association [NJEA] attorney Barrett

said last week that the steps taken by the board regarding the mold

problem at the school have been insufficient.

The NJEA is a statewide representative of school employees and

Barrett is representing the Township of Ocean Educators Association

[TOEA], which is comprised of all school employees, including

teachers, secretaries, maintenance workers and custodians.

" From what I know, there are still complaints being registered

through the association about the conditions of various rooms in the

[intermediate] school building, " Barrett said. " There are enough

complaints that it concerns the association and has for some time.

" It's not our concern that the Board of Education has not done

anything; the [humidity] alarms are a positive step taken by the

school district.

" I don't think the school board is indifferent to the problems of

its employees; they just haven't been aggressive enough, " Barrett

said.

Barrett further explained that the Ocean Township school district

allotted money in last year's budget for remediating air quality

problems at the Intermediate School.

" This leads me to believe that there is a history of air quality

issues at the [intermediate School], " Barrett said. " It became

increasingly apparent that there are air problems with the school

and we want to have them addressed.

" To [TOBE's] credit, they have taken steps such as closing the

school [in 2003- 2004] and getting a new HVAC.

" But the NJEA believes the problem should be dealt with more

aggressively. I think that [TOBE's] replacement of the HVAC system

is a credible step, so we were very pleased when substantial funds

were budgeted to do that. "

Funds for the HVAC replacement were budgeted in the spring of the

2006-2007 school year, with work supposedly scheduled to take place

in the summer of 2007, according to Barrett.

" [The NJEA] was led to believe that [the new HVAC replacement] was

going to take place last summer, and for reasons that are unclear to

me the work has been on hold.

" That puts us in this situation for another year, and that is

unacceptable, " Barrett said.

Boodaghians points to the upgrade of the HVAC system as an

admittance that a mold problem still exists in the building.

T

he Intermediate School houses 1,400

students in grades five through eight and Pagano said that the

district maintains it is doing everything it should to maintain the

air quality in the building.

" Everything that we have done [shows] that the air quality is

acceptable, " Pagano said. " You are going to have some people who may

have difficulty with the air quality in that particular environment

and you will find that in workplaces all over the state.

" There is a certain small population in any building that may on

occasion, have an allergic reaction to something that may be there, "

he said, adding, " The district has nothing to hide. "

Boodaghians said her ultimate goal for the lawsuit is " that the

school will become a sage and healthy environment. There is nothing

that can get my body back to the way that it used to be, but if I

can prevent someone from getting as sick as I am, that would be my

ultimate goal.

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

Never miss a thing. Make your homepage.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Also, there can be bacterial, or viral laryngitis also. Darlene

a Townsend <kmtown2003@...> wrote:

Fungal Laryngitis, Anyone hear of that before?

tigerpaw2c <tigerpaw2c@...> wrote: School

nurse says mold in office made her sick

Superintendent: School is safe; mold treated and removed in 2004

Atlanticville - Long Branch,NJ*

BY DANIEL HOWLEY Staff Writer

http://atlanticville.gmnews.com/news/2008/0110/Front_Page/002.html

A former nurse at the Intermediate School in Ocean Township has

filed a workers' compensation lawsuit against the district Board of

Education.

In the suit, Boodaghians is seeking compensation from the

district to pay medical bills accrued after what she claims was an

exposure to mold in her nurse's office at the Intermediate School on

West Park Avenue in 2004.

Boodaghians said she was exposed to a fine dust in August 2004 when

she opened her office a week prior to the start of the school year.

" I became ill inAugust 2004, but worked the first three days of

school, " Boodaghians, who now works as a nurse at the Ocean Township

Wanamassa Elementary School, said this week.

" My last day of employment [at the Intermediate School] was Sept. 3,

2004. The doctors had put me out of work for four months, " she said.

Boodaghians said that in April 2005 she was diagnosed with fungal

laryngitis from exposure to the mold at the school.

" Because the fungus was in my body for seven months, I developed

multiple medical problems, " she explained, adding that her doctors

advised her to no longer enter the Intermediate School.

Because of the diagnosis, Boodaghians was transferred by the

district to the Wanamassa School in 2006.

Boodaghians' attorney, Ahearn, said, " In late August, early

September 2004, [boodaghians] entered the Intermediate School prior

to the beginning of the school year to open her nursing office.

" She had a dust covering everything, which she had to clean. Day

after day she got sicker, until she had to go to the emergency

room, " he said.

Boodaghians was treated for laryngeal nerve paresis, a partial

paralysis of her vocal cords, at the Philadelphia Ear Nose and

Throat Association by Dr. Yolonda Heman-Ackah.

Some mold types can have a systemic effect on the body due to their

toxic nature, according to Ahearn.

Boodaghians is now suing the Township of Ocean Board of Education

(TOBE) district for workers' compensation. The suit is currently in

the discovery phase.

Boodaghians is seeking compensation for her medical bills and the

reinstatement of her sick and personal time.

" I believe that there is still a mold problem, only because there

are so many sick people still in the building, " Boodaghians said.

She added that the board has refused to pay her workers'

compensation because she was " chronically ill " prior to being

hospitalized.

" We have requested a jury trial, " Ahearn said. " Discovery will last

into the summer of this year and more is going to come to light as

we have depositions. "

The school district had closed the Intermediate School for a week a

year prior to Boodaghians' hospitalization to treat a mold problem,

according to Ahearn.

The district hired a contractor during that 2003-2004 school year to

remediate the mold, which was removed without incident, Ahearn said.

" In 2003-2004 when we had to close the school, it was because a

great deal of untreated, raw air from outside was allowed to enter

the building, " Ocean Township Superintendent of Schools

Pagano said last week.

" The air came in through an open window, and the air conditioning

was left on, allowing it to condense, " he said, explaining that the

air had entered the building uninterrupted for close to three weeks

and eventually led to the mold growth.

Since the start of the 2003-2004 school year, Pagano said, " air

quality tests [at the school] have been conducted and come back

clean. "

Pagano added that the school periodically reviews its maintenance

and cleaning procedures.

Pagano said any claims that moldy conditions remain at the school

today are " baseless accusations. "

" Each and every time that someone has expressed concern [with mold],

we immediately run air quality tests, and they have all come back

negative, " Pagano said. " At some time in the future, if we run a

test and it doesn't come back clean, we will remediate it. "

Following the 2003-2004 closing at the Intermediate School to treat

the mold, a humidity alarm system was installed on the school

premises, Pagano said.

The system is triggered if the humidity at the school goes above an

acceptable level, which could lead to the formation of mold,

according to Pagano.

The school district is in the process of reviewing bids for a

project to install a new HVAC (heating, ventilation and

airconditioning) system at the Intermediate School, Pagano said.

" It should be finished sometime in the not-too-distant future, "

Pagano said, adding that the district employs a fulltime HVAC

specialist to check the air quality in all of the schools.

New Jersey Educators Association [NJEA] attorney Barrett

said last week that the steps taken by the board regarding the mold

problem at the school have been insufficient.

The NJEA is a statewide representative of school employees and

Barrett is representing the Township of Ocean Educators Association

[TOEA], which is comprised of all school employees, including

teachers, secretaries, maintenance workers and custodians.

" From what I know, there are still complaints being registered

through the association about the conditions of various rooms in the

[intermediate] school building, " Barrett said. " There are enough

complaints that it concerns the association and has for some time.

" It's not our concern that the Board of Education has not done

anything; the [humidity] alarms are a positive step taken by the

school district.

" I don't think the school board is indifferent to the problems of

its employees; they just haven't been aggressive enough, " Barrett

said.

Barrett further explained that the Ocean Township school district

allotted money in last year's budget for remediating air quality

problems at the Intermediate School.

" This leads me to believe that there is a history of air quality

issues at the [intermediate School], " Barrett said. " It became

increasingly apparent that there are air problems with the school

and we want to have them addressed.

" To [TOBE's] credit, they have taken steps such as closing the

school [in 2003- 2004] and getting a new HVAC.

" But the NJEA believes the problem should be dealt with more

aggressively. I think that [TOBE's] replacement of the HVAC system

is a credible step, so we were very pleased when substantial funds

were budgeted to do that. "

Funds for the HVAC replacement were budgeted in the spring of the

2006-2007 school year, with work supposedly scheduled to take place

in the summer of 2007, according to Barrett.

" [The NJEA] was led to believe that [the new HVAC replacement] was

going to take place last summer, and for reasons that are unclear to

me the work has been on hold.

" That puts us in this situation for another year, and that is

unacceptable, " Barrett said.

Boodaghians points to the upgrade of the HVAC system as an

admittance that a mold problem still exists in the building.

T

he Intermediate School houses 1,400

students in grades five through eight and Pagano said that the

district maintains it is doing everything it should to maintain the

air quality in the building.

" Everything that we have done [shows] that the air quality is

acceptable, " Pagano said. " You are going to have some people who may

have difficulty with the air quality in that particular environment

and you will find that in workplaces all over the state.

" There is a certain small population in any building that may on

occasion, have an allergic reaction to something that may be there, "

he said, adding, " The district has nothing to hide. "

Boodaghians said her ultimate goal for the lawsuit is " that the

school will become a sage and healthy environment. There is nothing

that can get my body back to the way that it used to be, but if I

can prevent someone from getting as sick as I am, that would be my

ultimate goal.

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

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>

> Fungal Laryngitis, Anyone hear of that before?

>

a,

Firstly I have always been highly allergic to mold.

I had the exact same thing. The fungal dust (which

contained mold spores) got into my sinuses and upper respiratory

system--as I was emptying old boxes of stuff that had been in my

previous home's basement (which was very moldy and dusty, that's why

we moved).

As the boxes sat open in the next room I physically fell on the coach

and became freezing cold and shivered; my lungs pained me and I

wheezed; I was too weak to walk; I was dizzy; I had cramps; I had

heart palpitations; throbbing glands, total mental confusion etc.

Thought I was about to die. Really did.

In my weakened and confused state, I was somehow able to think about

what might have caused it; so I got up and closed the lids to the

boxes and instantly felt some relief. (that's how I knew it was the

moldy dust). By then I had breathed in enough mold spores to cause me

lots of serious problems.

**if you'd like you can PM or email me to discuss what happened to me

afterwards...it was a horrible situation to be in....

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Dear Moldsters,

Definitely the fungal infection travels throughout your body;

laryngitis is one of my symptoms & is so severe that there are many

times I can't talk on the phone, because the other end can't hear me.

It has, after 14months, traveled from head to toe, literally. Fungal

finger/toenails, dermatitis, hair loss, vaginal yeast,athlete's foot,

constant sinus drainage, post nasal drip, and now eye goop(ocular

keratitis) that swells & seals my eyelids shut during sleep.That's

just the outside of me; the psychological, emotional, brain

dysfunction, aching & fatigue are almost worse.You just don't get

better by leaving the scene & all your worldly goodies. . .am

considering renaming myself Mold Maven; once you're aware, you

realize how widespread it is, and why over-the counter allergy pills

is so profitable.

Be Well, Friends,

Neysa

School nurse says mold in office made her sick

> Superintendent: School is safe; mold treated and removed in 2004

> Atlanticville - Long Branch,NJ*

> BY DANIEL HOWLEY Staff Writer

>

> http://atlanticville.gmnews.com/news/2008/0110/Front_Page/002.html

>

> A former nurse at the Intermediate School in Ocean Township has

> filed a workers' compensation lawsuit against the district Board

of

> Education.

>

> In the suit, Boodaghians is seeking compensation from the

> district to pay medical bills accrued after what she claims was an

> exposure to mold in her nurse's office at the Intermediate School

on

> West Park Avenue in 2004.

>

> Boodaghians said she was exposed to a fine dust in August 2004

when

> she opened her office a week prior to the start of the school

year.

>

> " I became ill inAugust 2004, but worked the first three days of

> school, " Boodaghians, who now works as a nurse at the Ocean

Township

> Wanamassa Elementary School, said this week.

>

> " My last day of employment [at the Intermediate School] was Sept.

3,

> 2004. The doctors had put me out of work for four months, " she

said.

>

> Boodaghians said that in April 2005 she was diagnosed with fungal

> laryngitis from exposure to the mold at the school.

>

> " Because the fungus was in my body for seven months, I developed

> multiple medical problems, " she explained, adding that her doctors

> advised her to no longer enter the Intermediate School.

>

> Because of the diagnosis, Boodaghians was transferred by the

> district to the Wanamassa School in 2006.

>

> Boodaghians' attorney, Ahearn, said, " In late August, early

> September 2004, [boodaghians] entered the Intermediate School

prior

> to the beginning of the school year to open her nursing office.

>

> " She had a dust covering everything, which she had to clean. Day

> after day she got sicker, until she had to go to the emergency

> room, " he said.

>

> Boodaghians was treated for laryngeal nerve paresis, a partial

> paralysis of her vocal cords, at the Philadelphia Ear Nose and

> Throat Association by Dr. Yolonda Heman-Ackah.

>

> Some mold types can have a systemic effect on the body due to

their

> toxic nature, according to Ahearn.

>

> Boodaghians is now suing the Township of Ocean Board of Education

> (TOBE) district for workers' compensation. The suit is currently

in

> the discovery phase.

>

> Boodaghians is seeking compensation for her medical bills and the

> reinstatement of her sick and personal time.

>

> " I believe that there is still a mold problem, only because there

> are so many sick people still in the building, " Boodaghians said.

>

> She added that the board has refused to pay her workers'

> compensation because she was " chronically ill " prior to being

> hospitalized.

>

> " We have requested a jury trial, " Ahearn said. " Discovery will

last

> into the summer of this year and more is going to come to light as

> we have depositions. "

>

> The school district had closed the Intermediate School for a week

a

> year prior to Boodaghians' hospitalization to treat a mold

problem,

> according to Ahearn.

>

> The district hired a contractor during that 2003-2004 school year

to

> remediate the mold, which was removed without incident, Ahearn

said.

>

> " In 2003-2004 when we had to close the school, it was because a

> great deal of untreated, raw air from outside was allowed to enter

> the building, " Ocean Township Superintendent of Schools

> Pagano said last week.

>

> " The air came in through an open window, and the air conditioning

> was left on, allowing it to condense, " he said, explaining that

the

> air had entered the building uninterrupted for close to three

weeks

> and eventually led to the mold growth.

>

> Since the start of the 2003-2004 school year, Pagano said, " air

> quality tests [at the school] have been conducted and come back

> clean. "

>

> Pagano added that the school periodically reviews its maintenance

> and cleaning procedures.

>

> Pagano said any claims that moldy conditions remain at the school

> today are " baseless accusations. "

>

> " Each and every time that someone has expressed concern [with

mold],

> we immediately run air quality tests, and they have all come back

> negative, " Pagano said. " At some time in the future, if we run a

> test and it doesn't come back clean, we will remediate it. "

>

> Following the 2003-2004 closing at the Intermediate School to

treat

> the mold, a humidity alarm system was installed on the school

> premises, Pagano said.

>

> The system is triggered if the humidity at the school goes above

an

> acceptable level, which could lead to the formation of mold,

> according to Pagano.

>

> The school district is in the process of reviewing bids for a

> project to install a new HVAC (heating, ventilation and

> airconditioning) system at the Intermediate School, Pagano said.

>

> " It should be finished sometime in the not-too-distant future, "

> Pagano said, adding that the district employs a fulltime HVAC

> specialist to check the air quality in all of the schools.

>

> New Jersey Educators Association [NJEA] attorney Barrett

> said last week that the steps taken by the board regarding the

mold

> problem at the school have been insufficient.

>

> The NJEA is a statewide representative of school employees and

> Barrett is representing the Township of Ocean Educators

Association

> [TOEA], which is comprised of all school employees, including

> teachers, secretaries, maintenance workers and custodians.

>

> " From what I know, there are still complaints being registered

> through the association about the conditions of various rooms in

the

> [intermediate] school building, " Barrett said. " There are enough

> complaints that it concerns the association and has for some time.

>

> " It's not our concern that the Board of Education has not done

> anything; the [humidity] alarms are a positive step taken by the

> school district.

>

> " I don't think the school board is indifferent to the problems of

> its employees; they just haven't been aggressive enough, " Barrett

> said.

>

> Barrett further explained that the Ocean Township school district

> allotted money in last year's budget for remediating air quality

> problems at the Intermediate School.

>

> " This leads me to believe that there is a history of air quality

> issues at the [intermediate School], " Barrett said. " It became

> increasingly apparent that there are air problems with the school

> and we want to have them addressed.

>

> " To [TOBE's] credit, they have taken steps such as closing the

> school [in 2003- 2004] and getting a new HVAC.

>

> " But the NJEA believes the problem should be dealt with more

> aggressively. I think that [TOBE's] replacement of the HVAC system

> is a credible step, so we were very pleased when substantial funds

> were budgeted to do that. "

>

> Funds for the HVAC replacement were budgeted in the spring of the

> 2006-2007 school year, with work supposedly scheduled to take

place

> in the summer of 2007, according to Barrett.

>

> " [The NJEA] was led to believe that [the new HVAC replacement] was

> going to take place last summer, and for reasons that are unclear

to

> me the work has been on hold.

>

> " That puts us in this situation for another year, and that is

> unacceptable, " Barrett said.

>

> Boodaghians points to the upgrade of the HVAC system as an

> admittance that a mold problem still exists in the building.

>

> T

>

> he Intermediate School houses 1,400

>

> students in grades five through eight and Pagano said that the

> district maintains it is doing everything it should to maintain

the

> air quality in the building.

>

> " Everything that we have done [shows] that the air quality is

> acceptable, " Pagano said. " You are going to have some people who

may

> have difficulty with the air quality in that particular

environment

> and you will find that in workplaces all over the state.

>

> " There is a certain small population in any building that may on

> occasion, have an allergic reaction to something that may be

there, "

> he said, adding, " The district has nothing to hide. "

>

> Boodaghians said her ultimate goal for the lawsuit is " that the

> school will become a sage and healthy environment. There is

nothing

> that can get my body back to the way that it used to be, but if I

> can prevent someone from getting as sick as I am, that would be my

> ultimate goal.

>

>

>

>

>

>

> ---------------------------------

> Never miss a thing. Make your homepage.

>

>

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Sorry I havn't been feeping up. Thanks. I was aware of the cuase, I just never

saw it diagnosed.

Darlene <darlenesb2000@...> wrote: a,

I had heard that Candida Albicans, the fungus that causes thrush can cause it,

and also Histoplama, Blastomyces, and Aspergillus, can also cause this. I never

fully researched it, myself. Darlene

a Townsend <kmtown2003@...> wrote:

Fungal Laryngitis, Anyone hear of that before?

tigerpaw2c <tigerpaw2c@...> wrote: School

nurse says mold in office made her sick

Superintendent: School is safe; mold treated and removed in 2004

Atlanticville - Long Branch,NJ*

BY DANIEL HOWLEY Staff Writer

http://atlanticville.gmnews.com/news/2008/0110/Front_Page/002.html

A former nurse at the Intermediate School in Ocean Township has

filed a workers' compensation lawsuit against the district Board of

Education.

In the suit, Boodaghians is seeking compensation from the

district to pay medical bills accrued after what she claims was an

exposure to mold in her nurse's office at the Intermediate School on

West Park Avenue in 2004.

Boodaghians said she was exposed to a fine dust in August 2004 when

she opened her office a week prior to the start of the school year.

" I became ill inAugust 2004, but worked the first three days of

school, " Boodaghians, who now works as a nurse at the Ocean Township

Wanamassa Elementary School, said this week.

" My last day of employment [at the Intermediate School] was Sept. 3,

2004. The doctors had put me out of work for four months, " she said.

Boodaghians said that in April 2005 she was diagnosed with fungal

laryngitis from exposure to the mold at the school.

" Because the fungus was in my body for seven months, I developed

multiple medical problems, " she explained, adding that her doctors

advised her to no longer enter the Intermediate School.

Because of the diagnosis, Boodaghians was transferred by the

district to the Wanamassa School in 2006.

Boodaghians' attorney, Ahearn, said, " In late August, early

September 2004, [boodaghians] entered the Intermediate School prior

to the beginning of the school year to open her nursing office.

" She had a dust covering everything, which she had to clean. Day

after day she got sicker, until she had to go to the emergency

room, " he said.

Boodaghians was treated for laryngeal nerve paresis, a partial

paralysis of her vocal cords, at the Philadelphia Ear Nose and

Throat Association by Dr. Yolonda Heman-Ackah.

Some mold types can have a systemic effect on the body due to their

toxic nature, according to Ahearn.

Boodaghians is now suing the Township of Ocean Board of Education

(TOBE) district for workers' compensation. The suit is currently in

the discovery phase.

Boodaghians is seeking compensation for her medical bills and the

reinstatement of her sick and personal time.

" I believe that there is still a mold problem, only because there

are so many sick people still in the building, " Boodaghians said.

She added that the board has refused to pay her workers'

compensation because she was " chronically ill " prior to being

hospitalized.

" We have requested a jury trial, " Ahearn said. " Discovery will last

into the summer of this year and more is going to come to light as

we have depositions. "

The school district had closed the Intermediate School for a week a

year prior to Boodaghians' hospitalization to treat a mold problem,

according to Ahearn.

The district hired a contractor during that 2003-2004 school year to

remediate the mold, which was removed without incident, Ahearn said.

" In 2003-2004 when we had to close the school, it was because a

great deal of untreated, raw air from outside was allowed to enter

the building, " Ocean Township Superintendent of Schools

Pagano said last week.

" The air came in through an open window, and the air conditioning

was left on, allowing it to condense, " he said, explaining that the

air had entered the building uninterrupted for close to three weeks

and eventually led to the mold growth.

Since the start of the 2003-2004 school year, Pagano said, " air

quality tests [at the school] have been conducted and come back

clean. "

Pagano added that the school periodically reviews its maintenance

and cleaning procedures.

Pagano said any claims that moldy conditions remain at the school

today are " baseless accusations. "

" Each and every time that someone has expressed concern [with mold],

we immediately run air quality tests, and they have all come back

negative, " Pagano said. " At some time in the future, if we run a

test and it doesn't come back clean, we will remediate it. "

Following the 2003-2004 closing at the Intermediate School to treat

the mold, a humidity alarm system was installed on the school

premises, Pagano said.

The system is triggered if the humidity at the school goes above an

acceptable level, which could lead to the formation of mold,

according to Pagano.

The school district is in the process of reviewing bids for a

project to install a new HVAC (heating, ventilation and

airconditioning) system at the Intermediate School, Pagano said.

" It should be finished sometime in the not-too-distant future, "

Pagano said, adding that the district employs a fulltime HVAC

specialist to check the air quality in all of the schools.

New Jersey Educators Association [NJEA] attorney Barrett

said last week that the steps taken by the board regarding the mold

problem at the school have been insufficient.

The NJEA is a statewide representative of school employees and

Barrett is representing the Township of Ocean Educators Association

[TOEA], which is comprised of all school employees, including

teachers, secretaries, maintenance workers and custodians.

" From what I know, there are still complaints being registered

through the association about the conditions of various rooms in the

[intermediate] school building, " Barrett said. " There are enough

complaints that it concerns the association and has for some time.

" It's not our concern that the Board of Education has not done

anything; the [humidity] alarms are a positive step taken by the

school district.

" I don't think the school board is indifferent to the problems of

its employees; they just haven't been aggressive enough, " Barrett

said.

Barrett further explained that the Ocean Township school district

allotted money in last year's budget for remediating air quality

problems at the Intermediate School.

" This leads me to believe that there is a history of air quality

issues at the [intermediate School], " Barrett said. " It became

increasingly apparent that there are air problems with the school

and we want to have them addressed.

" To [TOBE's] credit, they have taken steps such as closing the

school [in 2003- 2004] and getting a new HVAC.

" But the NJEA believes the problem should be dealt with more

aggressively. I think that [TOBE's] replacement of the HVAC system

is a credible step, so we were very pleased when substantial funds

were budgeted to do that. "

Funds for the HVAC replacement were budgeted in the spring of the

2006-2007 school year, with work supposedly scheduled to take place

in the summer of 2007, according to Barrett.

" [The NJEA] was led to believe that [the new HVAC replacement] was

going to take place last summer, and for reasons that are unclear to

me the work has been on hold.

" That puts us in this situation for another year, and that is

unacceptable, " Barrett said.

Boodaghians points to the upgrade of the HVAC system as an

admittance that a mold problem still exists in the building.

T

he Intermediate School houses 1,400

students in grades five through eight and Pagano said that the

district maintains it is doing everything it should to maintain the

air quality in the building.

" Everything that we have done [shows] that the air quality is

acceptable, " Pagano said. " You are going to have some people who may

have difficulty with the air quality in that particular environment

and you will find that in workplaces all over the state.

" There is a certain small population in any building that may on

occasion, have an allergic reaction to something that may be there, "

he said, adding, " The district has nothing to hide. "

Boodaghians said her ultimate goal for the lawsuit is " that the

school will become a sage and healthy environment. There is nothing

that can get my body back to the way that it used to be, but if I

can prevent someone from getting as sick as I am, that would be my

ultimate goal.

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

Never miss a thing. Make your homepage.

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