Why Are New
Homes Moldier?
What's
behind the sudden mold epidemic? Experts point to modern home design,
including materials used, such as fake stucco (great mold food when wet);
the way insulation can trap moisture behind walls; and the fact that today's
homes, like office buildings, are more airtight, with air-conditioning and
heating systems recirculating contaminated air.
Families can go for months, even years, without knowing where their
symptoms are coming from.
New
houses are more prone to mold problems than older houses, but a bad leak in
any house anywhere in the country can cause a mold problem if not properly
taken care of (see tips at bottom).
And what starts as a small mold problem can grow to consume a home.
Melinda Ballard and Ron Allison's house can't even be bulldozed until
men in moon suits cut out the Stachybotrys-infested timber, flooring and
wallboard, wrap it up and cart it off for burial.
“That's the only safe way to get rid of the stuff,” says David
Straus, a mold expert with the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center,
who found himself throwing up hours after spending just 30 minutes inside
Ballard's house. “I'm
still not entirely over it,” says Straus, who has severe hearing loss in
one ear from his exposure to the mold.
Melinda
Ballard believes her child or husband would have died if providence had not
intervened. Their house's copper plumbing sprang a series of leaks starting
in 1998. That December, the hardwood floors in the living and dining rooms
began to warp. By March 1999, the family (as well as the groundskeeper and
nanny) were suffering from headaches, dizziness and fatigue, then
respiratory and sinus problems. Not your ordinary runny noses, but profusely
bloody runny noses. “It was
grotesque,” Ballard recalls. “We would cough up the hardest stuff you've
ever seen. It was blood, but it was hard as a rock.”
Everyone
tested negative for allergies, so no one associated the symptoms with the
house. Then, on an April 1 plane trip from Austin, Ballard ran into
indoor-air-quality consultant Bill Holder.
“He saw me coughing up blood,” she recalls, “and he said,
'What's wrong with you?' I said, 'I don't know. We can't figure it out.' His
next question was, 'Had any water damage to your house recently?'
Holder
was on his way to Dallas. He stopped by Dripping Springs on his way back and
took samples. “There
was visible mold growing everywhere,” Holder says. He sent the samples to
Straus at Texas Tech, who came back on April 23 with a level-4 Stachybotrys
diagnosis, advising Ballard and Allison to evacuate immediately. They
checked into a Four Seasons hotel -- and that's when Allison realized he
couldn't remember his room number.
The
former investment banker now carries a note pad to keep track of such
things. “It got continually worse,” he says, his voice slow and
deliberate. “I
started slipping at work. The president of the company was asking, 'What's
wrong with Ron?' The last few weeks, I just sat there and stared at my
screen.” He stops for a moment.
“It's hard to accept,” he says.
“You work long and hard to get to a point where you're proud of
yourself, and then you go from that to ...” “Mowing the lawn,” Melinda
interjects. “At 33, he's
basically having to retire.”
It
will be several years before 3-year-old Reese is old enough for cognitive
testing. Then there's the ongoing battle with Farmers Insurance, which,
Ballard insists, knew about the danger to her family and did nothing to
alert or protect them. Ballard has filed a $100 million suit against
Farmers. In it she claims, among other things, that Farmers ignored repeated
warnings from Richard Roberts of Double R Hardwood Floors that buckling
floors had to be removed immediately or else “dangerous molds” could
grow.
In
addition, Hays County District Attorney Michael Wenk has initiated a
grand-jury investigation to consider criminal charges against the insurance
company in its handling of Ballard's claim.
Farmers Insurance spokesman Bob Huxel told USA WEEKEND magazine that
“Mr. Roberts did not make repeated warnings to Farmers that dangerous
molds could grow.” He says Farmers is aware that toxic molds can be a
health threat and that Stachybotrys can be neurotoxic. “We believe all of
that,” Huxel says, “because we know it's true.”
Today,
signs posted around Melinda Ballard's house read: “DO NOT ENTER --
BIOHAZARD.” It will be years before Ballard and her family see any kind of
normal life again. “I just want everyone to know Stachybotrys is something
that can happen to them,” Ballard says.
Arnold
Mann, a contributing writer for Time magazine, last wrote for USA WEEKEND
about laser eye surgery.