Tests on apartment mold show wide growth, variety
State wants plan for cleanup at Elsmere complex
By EDWARD L. KENNEY
Staff reporter
11/08/2002
Tests on mold samples that state officials collected at an Elsmere apartment
complex indicate a variety of molds, some of which can cause allergic reactions
and infections.
"The mold was not only extensive in its growth, but there was a large variety,"
state toxicologist Gerald Llewellyn said, referring to the preliminary findings
released by the state's Division of Public Health. "Probably one type of
mold has grown on top of another."
Division staff members collected the mold samples Oct. 10 from basements at
Fenwick Park Apartments, where town and health officials found extensive amounts
of mold in basements. Officials condemned all but one of the complex's 39 buildings,
and about 650 residents were forced to find lodging elsewhere because of fear
the mold could cause health problems.
Heidi Truschel-Light, a spokeswoman for the Division of Public Health, said
the preliminary results of tests on floor tile from the basements indicates
"the presence of deteriorating asbestos." Asbestos fibers, when inhaled,
can cause various breathing ailments including lung cancer, the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention said.
Health officials last month cited other problems in the basements, such as open
sewer lines, traces of bug and rodent infestation, and faulty wiring.
Tests on the mold, conducted by an independent laboratory in Cherry Hill, N.J.,
detected the presence of stachybotrys chartarum, Llewellyn said. "That's
one of the ones people have a lot of concern about," he said, "but
it was at fairly low levels."
The CDC said there is no scientific proof that stachybotrys chartarum, the greenish-black
so-called "toxic mold," causes extreme health conditions.
Another mold type the lab detected in the Fenwick Park samples, aspergillus,
can infect lungs, particularly in people with weakened immune systems, the CDC
said. It was among the most widespread of the molds found at Fenwick Park, Llewellyn
said. Exposure to aspergillus can also lead to allergic reactions such as sinus
inflammation, the CDC said.
About a dozen molds are identified in the Division of Public Health's synopsis
of the lab report.
All molds produce spores, which can causeallergic reactions or respiratory infections,
Llewellyn said.
The elderly, infants, people who are sick or have a compromised immune system
are susceptible to health problems caused by mold spores. But because of the
large amount of mold at the apartments, officials fear even healthy people could
experience problems.
"The great area that was covered was even more important than the kinds
of the molds, because it was so extensive," Llewellyn said.
Llewellyn said he has recommended that the town of Elsmere contact apartment
owner Elsmere Park Club and request more widespread tests, including bulk mold
sampling, air sampling and swabbing of all apartments and hallways. He also
said the town should ask the owner to develop a plan to remove the mold and
asbestos.
Regina O'Neil, vice president of property management at the apartment complex,
said Thursday that Elsmere Park Club had not received notification of the lab
results. She would not comment further.
Elsmere Town Manager John Giles said he had not seen the lab findings either
but plans to act on the state's recommendations.
"We want to know the extent of the problem in all of the buildings,"
he said. "And we want to see a remediation plan that will eliminate any
risks. That may mean phone calls and discussions with the apartments, and we're
more than willing to do that," he said.
Former Fenwick Park Apartments resident Sherry George said the report does not
surprise her.
George, who moved in with relatives in Wilmington after leaving the apartments
Oct. 7, said her 12-year-old son, Marquis, was having allergy problems when
they lived at the apartments, but those have cleared up since they moved out.
"He hasn't had the running eyes or anything like that, the tightening of
the chest," she said.
But George, who lived at Fenwick Park Apartments three years, said she has recently
suffered health problems that developed after she moved.
"I had to have an asthma treatment Tuesday," she said. "I've
never had anything like that before."
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