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Twelve
families living over a dirt crawlspace have been experiencing various
ills for some time; chronic sinusitis, conjunctivitis, respiratory
infections, asthma, nosebleeds, coughing, skin rashes, fungal nail
infections. A recent sewage spill served to exacerbate the problem.
The County Board of Health has been here 3 times. Each inspector
claims the problem isn’t in their jurisdiction. One resident has had
to move out. Within three weeks his symptoms reduced significantly.
No agency seems to be able to help us get the proper testing done in
the crawlspace. Two families have tested positive for Cladosporium,
Penicillium and Alternaria. Can you direct us to an agency that can
order our management company/cooperative board to diagnose the problem
and remediate it? Out managing agent told us we can’t prove anything
and that he won’t have to do a thing.-Marie, New York
You and other residents of this
apparent apartment complex have not only health concerns associated
with your building environment but also the inevitable problems of
those leasing property, that is you are dependant on building
management which may not be sympathetic to your concerns. In such
circumstances the question is what do you do?
Appealing to public authorities who
in fact do not have jurisdiction unless an imminent case of health
endangerment can be proven is as you have experienced not very
fruitful. The Board of Health can in fact issue an order to building
management if they deem an immediate health threat exists. However,
no such case has in your situation been proven.
Therefore, how do you prove your
case. The best way is to hire an independent consultant to conduct an
investigation and if needed mold testing. If the results are
definitive, then the Board of Health has something hard to work with.
If the results are less than certain, then you have no course before
the Board of Health.
Before one engages a consultant in
such a case, building management must agree to allow the consultant to
come in and conduct an investigation. Some do and some don’t.
If all such steps result in no
progress, the last resort is litigation. It is likely that in your
state, property managers are required to maintain habitable building
environments for tenants. If not, this could be one key element of a
legal claim.
Lawsuits are not for the “weak of
heart”. They are slow to resolve (typically years) and of course
adversarial.
May 30, 3003
Indoor Environmental Quality (2000), Thad Godish Ph.D., C.I.H
Direct E-mail
00tjgodish@bsu.edu
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