Season's Storms Create Recipe for Mold
Disaster
By JUNE FLETCHER Staff Reporter of
The Wall Street Journal
From The Wall
Street Journal Online
March 19, 2003 -- Ever since last month's big blizzard, Charles
Levine's phone has been ringing nonstop, with more than 400 callers
a day. But he doesn't own a snowplow. He's a waterproofing
specialist, and his callers are all worried about the same thing --
drying things out before mold sets in. "I'm predicting a
catastrophe," says the Laurel, Md., contractor.
Warning, homeowners: This could be a very fuzzy spring. The big
storms and wet winter in many parts of the country have basements
flooded and carpet soggy -- perfect breeding grounds for the molds
and fungi that have become a growing issue recently. Already, mold
specialists from Florida to California say business is up 25% or
more -- and they're booked solid for weeks. Among them: Lyle Deitch,
a New York-based consultant who charges $250 to swab carpets and
peer behind walls for growing colonies. "The weather's helped
business a lot," he says.
That could be bad news for folks facing allergic reactions from
so-called toxic mold (aka Stachybotrys) -- not to mention a battle
from their insurance company. Mold-related insurance claims reached
a record $2.5 billion last year, almost double 2001, and nearly all
major insurers are now excluding mold from their standard policies.
Meanwhile, everyone from controls makers like Honeywell (it makes an
ultraviolet light to zap spores in heating ducts) to paint companies
like DAP (it's putting the antibacterial Microban in special paint)
is pushing new products to get rid of the stuff.
'Mushroomy Smell'
And it's not just a problem in wet, snowy climates. A year ago,
when Sue Hooley moved from Massachusetts to Arizona, mold was the
last thing on her mind. But shortly after she moved into her
brand-new, $600,000 house, she noticed a "mushroomy smell" near the
front entrance after a rainstorm. The builder ripped out and
replaced moldy walls and floorboards, but Ms. Hooley says the smell
persists -- and these days she runs three special air filters in her
bedroom, and complains of everything from chronic fatigue to
constant sore throats. "My house is beautiful, but I love to get
away from it," she says. "That's when I can breathe again."
Mold's been around forever, of course, but it didn't become a big
issue for homeowners until two years ago, when a Texas woman won a
$32 million "toxic-mold" lawsuit against her insurance company,
saying it had failed to clean up water damage that caused an
infestation. (The award was later reduced to $4 million, plus
expenses and interest.) That set off a flood of claims -- literally.
Before the suit, big insurer Allstate was getting about 250 mold
claims a year; after it, the company says, it got that many each
month. In Texas alone, the number of claims jumped more than tenfold
in 2002 -- and so did homeowners' insurance premiums. Now, only one
major insurer even offers mold coverage in its standard policies, so
getting covered can mean shelling out as much as $7,500 a year for a
special policy.
The issue's such a red flag that any house with multiple repairs
for mold may be tough to insure (Claims are part of a special
database called CLUE -- Comprehensive Loss Underwriting Exchange --
which covers 90% of American homes). After Philip Schnepp's Michigan
house came down with a bad case of toxic mold three years ago, his
family moved out and had all the furniture destroyed -- and then Mr.
Schnepp's insurer canceled his homeowner's policy. In the end, the
roofing-system designer spent more than $125,000 cleaning the place
up, but now he's worried he'll have trouble selling. "The house has
a history now," he says.
A Run on Pumps
That has folks scrambling to get rid of the water, fast. Hardware
chain Lowe's says it has seen double-digit increases in sales of
sump pumps in the Mid-Atlantic states, where snow is starting to
melt -- and is expecting similar jumps in the Northeast. Baltimore
homeowner Richard Malisse hit his local hardware store after rain
fell on top of 2 feet of snow, leaving his basement 6 inches deep in
water. Armed with a pump, squeegee, bleach and a garden hose, he
waded in. Now he's planning to have the foundation dug up and a new
drainage system installed -- as soon as his contractor can find the
time. "It's too much for one guy," he says.
The irony, experts say, is that improved building practices are
at least partly responsible for the explosion in mold. Things like
vapor barriers and heavy caulking, now required by building codes,
give trapped moisture no way to escape, says Joe Lsituburek, a
Massachusetts forensic engineer. "We've institutionalized mold," he
says. Even lawyers who sue builders for mold-related problems agree.
"Builders are required by law to build houses so energy-efficient
they're like Tupperware -- they're not breathing," says Newport
Beach, Calif., attorney Tom Miller.
Still, some waterlogged homeowners might do better to wait before
calling in the heavy artillery. California attorney Sami Shamieh
often gets called in to inspect what potential clients say is a
fast-growing colony. But, he says, some people confuse mold with
dirt. "I have to clear my throat and say, 'Um, you just have to
clean that.' "
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