 Posted on Sat, Aug. 07, 2004
 
IN YOUR HOMES
Combating
mold in Carolinas
It has taken over the S.C. Governor's Mansion.
It displaces families and ruins heirlooms. It costs $50,000 to
$100,000 to clean up even a modest home.
By Colin Burch
The Sun News
Mold has chased the Ewings from their Loris home.
Everything inside is essentially ruined, covered with toxic mold
spores distributed through the air conditioning system.
Caroline Ewing cried for months. "You feel like you've lost your home
and your history - we have lost our history," she said.
South Carolina's humidity creates mold-related problems for
homeowners - problems that can't be measured by existing governmental
health guidelines and generally aren't covered by insurance. Mold even
forced Gov. Mark Sanford and his family to bail out of the Governor's
Mansion while crews undertake a remediation project that could exceed $1
million.
"The Governor's Mansion has brought it back to the forefront," said
Tom McHood of A&I Fire and Water Restoration.
Whether mold problems are actually becoming more widespread is
unclear.
Experts have different theories.
Part of the reason mold has become more of an issue could be the way
buildings are constructed, said Richard Bennett, a certified industrial
hygienist and chief science officer with Risk Tech LLC, an
environmental-health services company in South Carolina that is cleaning
up the Governor's Mansion.
"After the energy crisis in the 1970s, we sealed our buildings up,"
he said. That's a good thing from an energy-conservation standpoint, but
"when water goes into a building now, it can't get back out and it
doesn't dry quickly," he said.
Fred Newby, a Myrtle Beach attorney who specializes in construction
cases, said, "I don't know if this is a new problem or our testing
methods have gotten more sophisticated."
Either way, fixing the problem is expensive.
A full cleanup of even a modest residential home could run $50,000 to
$100,000 or more, Bennett said.
That's what the Ewings are facing.
Back in July 2003, Caroline Ewing had trouble sleeping, experienced
itchy eyes and had other symptoms.
An out-of-state mold inspector found toxic varieties of mold in their
home. The spores had been distributed through the air conditioning
system, and covered everything, including heirlooms and kitchen pots.
Mold-contaminated items must be cleaned before they are moved into a
new or decontaminated living space, but the cost to decontaminate it can
exceed the value of the property itself, and homeowners insurance
policies don't cover most mold problems. Insurance companies see most
mold-related problems as maintenance issues rather than acts of God.
The Ewings haven't made a final decision on what they'll keep and
clean. Meanwhile, they're living in a second house, making two house
payments, two utility payments and digging into their savings, Caroline
Ewing said.
Spores and symptoms
Research on mold's health impact is ongoing, and there are no federal
or state guidelines for the amount of mold spores acceptable in
residential air.
Industrial hygienists usually do the evaluation of the number of mold
spores inside a home or office. They typically compare the species of
mold inside to what naturally occurs outside the building.
Certain creatures, including stachybotris and penicillium, are more
likely to cause health problems, but the effect of a mold problem on
someone's health isn't predictable based strictly on the number of
spores in the air.
"It really affects some people more than others," said Steve Kahn of
Full Steam Ahead Fire and Water Restoration.
If a test finds a high level of toxic spores in a home, the
hygienists or remediation experts might recommend the homeowner leave
the house.
Dianne Minasium, program coordinator in the S.C. Health Department's
Bureau of Air Quality, said that, because there are no governmental
guidelines, DHEC doesn't do inspections or testing.
The best DHEC can do is point people to the Environmental Protection
Agency's information, available at EPA.gov/mold. DHEC will mail the same
information in brochure form to people who do not have Internet access.
The EPA encourages homeowners to clean a mold area of less than 10
square feet in size. Harder surfaces can be cleaned with detergent and
water, but must be dried thoroughly. More permeable surfaces might have
to be removed altogether.
But if the moldy area is larger, the EPA recommends a professional
cleanup service.
The problem for homeowners is that standard homeowner insurance
policies don't cover mold remediation, although Full Steam Ahead's Kahn
said so-called HO6 condominium policies typically will cover mold.
Some insurance companies are offering mold riders that can be added
to existing single-family home policies for an extra fee, but the
payouts are capped, usually less than $10,000.
In South Carolina, Nationwide's homeowner policy includes up to
$5,000 coverage for mold remediation, but only if the mold developed as
a result of a type of water damage that already is covered in the
policy, said spokesman Kevin Craiglow.
Jane Swanson, who lives in the River Hillls subdivision of Little
River, takes Tylenol Sinus while she waits for her house to be fixed.
"I sort of have problems with drainage and allergies, and my husband
noticed this musty smell," said Jane Swanson, who lives in the River
Hills subdivision of Little River.
The Swansons had Clean Space of the Carolinas inspect their crawl
space, where the company discovered a mold and mildew problem and
presented the evidence in digital photos.
The couple accepted an offer from the company to clean up the area
and line it with a heavy-duty, waterproof liner to prevent future
problems. Clean Space says it's easy for the mold spores under the house
to be drawn in the house.
The cleanup, encapsulation and dehumidifying process will cost more
than $5,000.
"I can't wait to get it done because it's going to take care of all
this," she said.
How mold gets in
Local mold remediation companies say mold problems are particularly
common in second homes that are unoccupied for extended periods.
Usually it's water damage left unattended that allows mold to grow,
said Kahn of Full Steam Ahead Fire and Water Restoration.
Culprits include incorrect flashing around windows, bad drainage on
air conditioning units and overflowing drain pans on refrigerators.
Cleaning, paying, reselling
Professional remediation is essential for many reasons, said McHood
of A&I Fire and Water Restoration.
"It creates a liability issue if you sell the house, and the mold
comes back," McHood said.
South Carolina and most other states require the seller of a home to
disclose "all material facts," and that includes mold problems, said Tom
Maeser, president of Fortune Academy, a local real estate school.
The N.C. Association of Realtors includes on its Web site guidelines
from the National Association of Realtors, which say in part that
sellers should disclose "mold-related conditions, water intrusion and
presence of known existing or past mold [other than that which is known
not to adversely affect the property or its occupants]."
Keeping moisture out
The key to prevention is controlling humidity and moisture in the
home, but techniques will differ between the crawl space and the rest of
the house, local experts said.
"They automatically think of mold as plumbing leaks," said Sandy Poe
of Red Flag Home Inspections. "In our area, the big problem is people
having their homes shut tight."
Poe recommends running the kitchen and bathroom fans, especially when
owners are away for extended periods of time.
Crawl spaces need almost the opposite of the living space, said John
Fisher of Clean Space of the Carolinas.
Building codes have required crawl space ventilation, but Fisher said
recent research shows ventilation is creating problems.
Humid air, entering crawl space vents, doesn't just flow through,
Fisher said.
The degree of problems resulting from mold vary, and in the case of
the Ewings in Loris, the toll it has been more than financial. It's more
like a broadside against their entire lives.
"We've been married 35 years, and this is the hardest thing we've
been through," Caroline Ewing said.
"I guess we're in good company if the governor has it, too," Alton
Ewing said.
Knight Ridder contributed to this report.
WHAT MOLD CAN DO | Sometimes it's caused
by a faulty air conditioner spewing damp air (center), other times
it's simply our sticky weather taking root from baseboard to ceiling.
Keep your air conditioning at 78 degrees Fahrenheit or below. If you
have to keep the AC higher, run a dehumidifier. Check drainage pipes,
drip pans and plumbing for leaks, and clean up the water immediately.
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