Video – Mushrooms sprouting inside a mold infested Las Vegas apartment – Lake Mead Estates – managed by Pinnacle Realty Management

3/4/2010 

Las Vegas, NV (KTNV) – One woman is fed up and it’s a fungus that is making her living situation an unpleasant one.

Action News cameras spotted mushrooms growing in a tenant’s living room inside at apartment on Nellis near Lake Mead.

Barbara Ruz contacted Action News to investigate the situation at the Lake Mead Estates, which is managed by Pinnacle Realty Management.

It was last month that Ruz says she first spotted the mushrooms creeping in from a crack in her ceiling. She believes the plentiful rainfall through January contributed to the problem.

According to Ruz, her apartment complexes’ maintenance man plucked out the mushrooms and painted over the remnants. She says she was revolted when she saw the mushrooms were coming back through.

“They’re gross. They’re disgusting. I’m horrified,” said Barbara Ruz. “I almost feel scared to be at home. From school, I brought home masks to cover our faces because I was so freaked out.”

The complex sent a third party testing company to assess the potential health hazard. On Wednesday night, Ruz says she received news that the mushrooms aren’t toxic but have a high allergy count. However, she says she doesn’t know what to do next.

Action News reporter Drew Karedes went to the property manager, however she did not want to be interviewed. After making several calls to the regional manager of Pinnacle, we were sent a statement by a spokesperson based in Washington state.

“We take the comfort and safety of our residents and their concerns very seriously. When there are mold or mildew problems, we have specific steps we take to protect the residents and solve the problem.”

This problem is something one mold expert says he’s seeing more and more often in valley apartments.

Bob Whitaker is a mold technician with Nevada Mold Testing, Inc. He can’t comment specifically on this instance, but says in many cases complexes simply don’t know how to properly remedy the problem.

“What I’m seeing a lot of them doing, they’re just covering it all up, cutting it all off or just throwing bleach on it. It’s still growing behind the walls. They’re not fixing the problem. They’re not fixing the water source,” said Whitaker.

As for Barbara Ruz, she’s hoping her apartment complex is prepared to take the next step to get rid of the mushrooms that are freaking her out.

The complex spokesman says Ruz has the option of moving to a different unit or another one of their properties.

We will continue to monitor if this situation gets resolved.

ktnv.com

New Action Committee – ACHEMMIC- Urges Transparency in EPA Policy Over Mold & Microbial Contaminants

FEMA Using US Chamber Fraud in Katrina Trailer Litigation; EPA, GAO & Both Isle$ of Congre$$ Turn Blind Eye$

Certain Corporate and Government Interests Have Spent Huge Sums of Money and Resources DENYING THE TRUTH about the HEALTH EFFECTS of TOXIC MOLD

Political Action Committee – National Apartment Association (NAA) files Amicus Brief in mold case (two infant deaths in mold filled apt – Wasatch Prop Mgmt) citing US Chamber/ACOEM ‘litigation defense report’ to disclaim health effects of indoor mold & limit financial risk for industry

“Changes in construction methods have caused US buildings to become perfect petri dishes for mold and bacteria to flourish when water is added. Instead of warning the public and teaching physicians that the buildings were causing illness; in 2003 the US Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform, a think-tank, and a workers comp physician trade organization mass marketed an unscientific nonsequitor to the courts to disclaim the adverse health effects to stave off liability for financial stakeholders of moldy buildings. Although publicly exposed many times over the years, the deceit lingers in US courts to this very day.” Sharon Noonan Kramer

Information on Riverstone Residential, the Louisiana Housing Finance Agency, and the owners of Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments in Baton Rouge, Louisiana continuing to allow tenants to be exposed to extreme amounts of mold toxins

Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments managed by Riverstone Residential

Riverstone Residential Litigation

Mold Inspection Reports

Photos of Mold in Apartment

Attorney Malpractice

Posted in Environmental Health Threats, Health - Medical - Science, Toxic Mold | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Fed-up tenants sue, demand city fix nightmare Bedford-Stuyvesant apartments

BY Jeff Wilkins 
DAILY NEWS WRITER

Friday, February 26th 2010

Tenants of the Bed-Stuy Rehabs, a three-building complex on Willoughby and Throop Aves., filed a lawsuit against the city Housing Authority in December after living with the conditions since the 1980s.

“We’re tired of being treated like NYCHA’s foster children,” said Cassandra Harrell, president of the Bed-Stuy Rehabs Tenant Association, who said years of living in her mold-filled apartment left her stricken with asthma. “We want our apartments fixed.”

The three small buildings with 81 apartments were originally part of Woodhull Hospital, and were converted into public housing in 1983.

Right from the start, said longtime tenants, their apartments had problems. They said Housing Authority officials promised fixes that were never made.

If the work is done, they added, it’s shoddy or takes a long time to get scheduled.

In one case, a tenant at 281 Throop Ave. said workers showed up as late as 9 p.m. to repair a collapsed ceiling.

“Every time they say they’re going to fix something, they don’t do anything,” said Luisa Figueroa, 33, pointing to a hole in her wall that isn’t scheduled to be repaired until June. “It’s just talk, talk, talk.”

Retired postal worker Kathleen Green, who has lived at 675 Willoughby Ave. since 1983, has gone without heat three or four days at a time for years.

“It gets really cold in here in the winter, like you’re living outside,” she said. “I wake up and turn my oven on at 6 a.m. just to get some heat.”

Green said she has phoned in countless complaints. Workers have come and looked at her radiators, promised to send someone to make repairs – and rarely do.

“Ten years ago, I gave them a list of all my problems,” said Green. “Ten years later, they’re still not fixed.”

Housing Authority spokeswoman Sheila Stainback denied the agency had neglected the buildings, and said they have repeatedly responded to tenants’ requests for repairs.

“NYCHA staff has addressed and worked on the repairs needed for Bedford-Stuyvesant Rehabs and will continue to do so,” Stainback said in a statement.

Residents of 281 Throop Ave. used a lawsuit to force the Housing Authority to repair the building’s leaky roof in 2005.

nydailynews.com

New Action Committee – ACHEMMIC- Urges Transparency in EPA Policy Over Mold & Microbial Contaminants

FEMA Using US Chamber Fraud in Katrina Trailer Litigation; EPA, GAO & Both Isle$ of Congre$$ Turn Blind Eye$

Certain Corporate and Government Interests Have Spent Huge Sums of Money and Resources DENYING THE TRUTH about the HEALTH EFFECTS of TOXIC MOLD

Political Action Committee – National Apartment Association (NAA) files Amicus Brief in mold case (two infant deaths in mold filled apt – Wasatch Prop Mgmt) citing US Chamber/ACOEM ‘litigation defense report’ to disclaim health effects of indoor mold & limit financial risk for industry

“Changes in construction methods have caused US buildings to become perfect petri dishes for mold and bacteria to flourish when water is added. Instead of warning the public and teaching physicians that the buildings were causing illness; in 2003 the US Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform, a think-tank, and a workers comp physician trade organization mass marketed an unscientific nonsequitor to the courts to disclaim the adverse health effects to stave off liability for financial stakeholders of moldy buildings. Although publicly exposed many times over the years, the deceit lingers in US courts to this very day.” Sharon Noonan Kramer

Information on Riverstone Residential, the Louisiana Housing Finance Agency, and the owners of Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments in Baton Rouge, Louisiana continuing to allow tenants to be exposed to extreme amounts of mold toxins

Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments managed by Riverstone Residential

Riverstone Residential Litigation

Mold Inspection Reports

Photos of Mold in Apartment

Attorney Malpractice

Posted in Environmental Health Threats, Mold and Politics, Toxic Mold | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Justice! – Political moneyman Bob Perry (biggest campaign contributor in Texas & major figure in tort reform) ordered to pay $51 million

3/1/2010
Wayne Slater/Reporter 
 
A jury has ordered Houston homebuilder Bob Perry to pay $51 million to a retirement-age Mansfield couple who fought for a decade over a defective house that Perry Homes refused to fix. Perry is the biggest campaign contributor in Texas and a major figure in tort reform championed by Gov. Rick Perry (no relation) to limit lawsuits and cap jury awards against business. Bob and Jane Cull say Perry wouldn’t fix their house and so went to arbitration, where they won an $800,000 judgment. The homebuilder refused to pay. He appealed for years through the court system to the Texas Supreme Court, which overturned two lower courts and sent the case back to district court in Fort Worth. Every member of the high court had each received contributions from Perry – more than $260,000 from Perry, his family and his political committees.

On Monday, a jury in Fort Worth ruled in the Cull’s favor – $7 million in actual damages and $40 million in punitive damages. The warranty company that failed to live up to its warranty and fix the house was ordered to pay $4 million more in punitive damages.

“It feels like a modern day David and Goliath triumph. Certainly, God had a hand in this justice,” said Jane Cull’s sister, Judy Noble. “At last, truth and right trumps power and money.”

Anthony Holm, a spokesman for Perry, did not return a telephone call for comment.

The fight between Perry and the Culls underscores the difficulty that some homeowners have in trying to get builders to fix their mistakes – especially politically well-connected businessmen with deep pockets. The Culls began their fight against Perry Homes a decade ago after cracks and other problems developed in their $230,000 home in Mansfield. The Culls said Perry Homes applied some cosmetic fixes, but didn’t repair the house. Instead, Perry launched a long battle in court that the Culls say was apparently designed to wear them down. Perry is the biggest campaign contributor to Gov.Perry, who has supported the homebuilder’s efforts to limit lawsuits against business and who helped create a state agency that critics say was designed to protect homebuilders against complaints from homebuyers. The Legislature last session abolished the agency.

Court Decision Document 1

Court Decision Document 2

trailblazersblog.dallasnews.com

New Action Committee – ACHEMMIC- Urges Transparency in EPA Policy Over Mold & Microbial Contaminants

FEMA Using US Chamber Fraud in Katrina Trailer Litigation; EPA, GAO & Both Isle$ of Congre$$ Turn Blind Eye$

Certain Corporate and Government Interests Have Spent Huge Sums of Money and Resources DENYING THE TRUTH about the HEALTH EFFECTS of TOXIC MOLD

Political Action Committee – National Apartment Association (NAA) files Amicus Brief in mold case (two infant deaths in mold filled apt – Wasatch Prop Mgmt) citing US Chamber/ACOEM ‘litigation defense report’ to disclaim health effects of indoor mold & limit financial risk for industry

“Changes in construction methods have caused US buildings to become perfect petri dishes for mold and bacteria to flourish when water is added. Instead of warning the public and teaching physicians that the buildings were causing illness; in 2003 the US Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform, a think-tank, and a workers comp physician trade organization mass marketed an unscientific nonsequitor to the courts to disclaim the adverse health effects to stave off liability for financial stakeholders of moldy buildings. Although publicly exposed many times over the years, the deceit lingers in US courts to this very day.” Sharon Noonan Kramer

Information on Riverstone Residential, the Louisiana Housing Finance Agency, and the owners of Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments in Baton Rouge, Louisiana continuing to allow tenants to be exposed to extreme amounts of mold toxins

Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments managed by Riverstone Residential

Riverstone Residential Litigation

Mold Inspection Reports

Photos of Mold in Apartment

Attorney Malpractice

Posted in Civil Justice, Mold and Politics, Politics, US Chamber of Commerce | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

KPLC-TV – Sulphur, Louisiana – Woman says she was evicted for speaking out about mold in Town & Country Apartments

Note –

Yes, you will be evicted for speaking up about mold in your apartment. This is illegal but the general rule.

Yes, the apartment management is ALWAYS SHOCKED at the mention of mold. Of course that is what they will say and then claim you are scaring other tenants (which might be in their best interest).

See – Defamation??? Amazingly Riverstone Residential is upset some may actually choose NOT to move into toxic mold filled apartments at Jefferson Lakes after viewing reports & still claiming they did not (and still don’t) know of toxic conditions!

Funny, when professional testing shows high levels of indoor molds (and it is so infested you can smell it), the testing done by the complex, city, housing authority, etc., ALWAYS comes back normal. In this case it just says an “inspecton” by the City of Sulpher.

Perhaps they pulled this routine – Apartment Management orders 24 hour air test for mold instead of 5 day so accurate mold levels will not show up

It will be assumed you will not be able to afford an attorney and this will go away (all except the MOLD).

If you do get an attorney, there is a VERY good chance your rights will be violated AGAIN. katy

Riverstone Residential Litigation

Attorney Malpractice

Feb 28, 2010 
by Brandon Richards

SULPHUR, LA (KPLC-TV) – A Sulphur resident believes she was evicted for speaking out about the living conditions at a local apartment complex.

In November, Amber Meche and Shelly Benglis went before the Sulphur City Council to talk about the living conditions at Town and Country Apartments.

Benglis had been approved for Section 8 at the apartments, but she refused to move in because she was unsatisfied with the living conditions of the two apartment units she was to choose from.

“There was a lot of stuff wrong with it and when we walked into the apartments, you [could] smell the mold,” said Benglis.

Benglis asked Meche, a friend, who was then a tenant at the apartment complex, to speak to the city council about the living conditions at the facility. Meche went before the council and said she was concerned about mold and other problems in her apartment.

Just days after speaking to the council, Meche said she received an eviction notice. Meche said she had been a good tenant for as long as she had lived there and could think of no other reason why she was evicted, except for the fact that she spoke out about living conditions at the apartments.

“That’s what she (manager) does,” said Meche. “If you speak up against her, she throws you out.”

According to a report published in the Sulphur Daily News, the manager of the apartments said she was “shocked” after hearing about Meche’s comments to the city council. The manager told the newspaper Meche had started “scaring” other tenants. The manager said she had never had any complaints about Meche before this.

Meche and Benglis next appeared before the Sulphur Housing Authority, arguing that Meche’s eviction was unfair. The Housing Authority tabled the matter until last week, when it announced unbeknownst to both Meche and Benglis that their problems had been resolved.

Meche and Benglis said they did not get an opportunity to present the latest evidence they had gathered to the Housing Authority board, which includes results of a lab test performed by Booth Environmental Services, LLC. According to the report, the samples, which were to have been taken from Meche’s apartment, were found to have four types of highly elevated molds, Chaetomium, Trichoderma, Aspergillus/Pencillium, and Stachybotrys (black mold).

Those lab results are in direct conflict with inspection reports from the City of Sulphur.

According to the chairman of the Sulphur Housing Authority, Franklin Foote, city inspections are the only thing the board can go by when making decisions like this. Foote said city inspections show there are no major problems with the apartments in questions.

Meche also said she and her daughter had been diagnosed with illnesses because of the unhealthy condition of her old apartment.

Foote said the board will probably convene a special meeting this week so they can explain their decision to Meche and Benglis, since the pair was not allowed to speak last time.

Meche said despite what the Housing Authority decides, she plans on fighting the treatment she received.

Because she was evicted, Meche is no longer on Section 8. Meche plans on reapplying soon, even though she’ll likely to be put at the end of the line. Benglis no longer has Section 8 status either.

“Everyone that lives there has young children and they’re pretty much put in the same situation as me,” said Meche. “They either have to deal with it and live in pretty much slum, because if they speak up about it, or complain about it, they get evicted.

I just hope something’s done about it.”

kplctv.com

Information on Riverstone Residential, the Louisiana Housing Finance Agency, and the owners of Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments in Baton Rouge, Louisiana continuing to allow tenants to be exposed to extreme amounts of mold toxins

Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments managed by Riverstone Residential

Riverstone Residential Litigation

Mold Inspection Reports

Photos of Mold in Apartment

Attorney Malpractice

New Action Committee – ACHEMMIC- Urges Transparency in EPA Policy Over Mold & Microbial Contaminants

FEMA Using US Chamber Fraud in Katrina Trailer Litigation; EPA, GAO & Both Isle$ of Congre$$ Turn Blind Eye$

Certain Corporate and Government Interests Have Spent Huge Sums of Money and Resources DENYING THE TRUTH about the HEALTH EFFECTS of TOXIC MOLD

Political Action Committee – National Apartment Association (NAA) files Amicus Brief in mold case (two infant deaths in mold filled apt – Wasatch Prop Mgmt) citing US Chamber/ACOEM ‘litigation defense report’ to disclaim health effects of indoor mold & limit financial risk for industry

“Changes in construction methods have caused US buildings to become perfect petri dishes for mold and bacteria to flourish when water is added. Instead of warning the public and teaching physicians that the buildings were causing illness; in 2003 the US Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform, a think-tank, and a workers comp physician trade organization mass marketed an unscientific nonsequitor to the courts to disclaim the adverse health effects to stave off liability for financial stakeholders of moldy buildings. Although publicly exposed many times over the years, the deceit lingers in US courts to this very day.” Sharon Noonan Kramer

Posted in Environmental Health Threats, Health - Medical - Science, J Arthur Smith III, Louisiana Housing Finance Agency, Mold and Politics, Mold Litigation, Toxic Mold | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Chicago Takes on Bad Developers, With Mixed Results

Produced by Ashley Gross
Thursday, February 25, 2010

Just a few years ago, homebuyers stampeded into brand-new condos all over Chicago. Then, reality hit. Water started leaking in. Mold crept up the walls. Elevators stopped working. Now the city of Chicago is trying to clean up the mess by chasing after developers responsible for shoddy work. But the city’s good intentions have, in some cases, made life even tougher for the homeowners.
 
If you stand here on West Wabansia in the North Side neighborhood of Bucktown, almost everywhere you look are new condo buildings. The ones I’m standing in front of are red brick with big picture windows. Just looking, you’d never know each building has a stack of litigation sitting in folders at Cook County Circuit Court. Each one has taken up hours and hours of this man’s time.
 
GREG JANES: So here are one file, two file cabinets, three file cabinets full of our cases.
 
Greg Janes is an attorney for the city of Chicago. His cabinets bulge with architectural plans and building permits. Since 2007 he’s led the Bad Developer Task Force for the law department. Janes says the idea came from Mayor Richard Daley who was bombarded by homeowners complaining their new condos were falling apart.
 
JANES: He intended two things: he wanted to make sure the people who caused the problems, fixed the problems, and to also punish bad actors.
 
So Janes and three other city lawyers, along with inspectors from the buildings department, started investigating. They found lots of serious code violations and a few developers that left a path of destruction across the city. Janes and his team began filing lawsuits that now total almost 90. But he says lawsuits weren’t even needed in some smaller cases.
 
JANES: We’ve said, listen, if you do it now, we won’t file a lawsuit, and you know it’s going to cost you $8000 to make this repair, spend that $8000, don’t spend it on a lawyer to defend you on a lawsuit where you’re facing $100,000 worth of fines. So we have been successful that way.
 
PAULA FRANZESE: Chicago is certainly taking the lead in the context of trying to cure or fix a very severe malaise that is afflicting so many regions of the United States.
 
Paula Franzese is a property law professor at Seton Hall University in New Jersey. She says lots of cities are struggling with unfinished or poorly built developments. She’s been fascinated to watch Chicago’s effort, but says it may be a dead-end if developers are broke.
 
FRANZESE: It may not yield the results the city hopes simply because the developers are unable to comply.
 
Greg Janes says most developers here in Chicago have fixed at least some of the problems. But a few companies have left disasters in their wake. Take Equinox Development Corporation. More than a third of the city’s cases have been against that company. I tried to reach Equinox’s lawyer, but he didn’t get back to me. Janes says the company is broke and its owner moved to Arizona without fixing his buildings. Those include the Bucktown condos I talked about earlier. That’s where Scott Shapiro moved with his family in 2006.
 
KIDS: Guys, let’s go back here. Yeah! (laughing)
 
Shapiro’s sons are playing with friends in the basement. It’s the same basement that flooded their first winter here. And their building had no electric meters, just open wiring exposed to rain and snow. Shapiro thought about suing his developer, but the next thing he knew, the city had already done that.
 
SHAPIRO: As soon as the city filed its suit and filed its initial complaint and did an inspection with all the violations, it opened a can of worms we had no idea was there.
 
Everything from more dangerous wires to a balcony that was a hazard for the kids. But Shapiro was lucky. Equinox had a co-developer on the building. While Equinox skedaddled, the other developer came back and fixed the problems. Shapiro says he’s irked the city allowed such shoddy work to be built in the first place. But he says he’s grateful his building is now up to code and he didn’t have to file his own lawsuit.
 
SHAPIRO: It would have been a huge financial hit for us to have to do this. It was a tremendous burden off of us.
 
Still, as condo president, he had to spend many hours in court. But he knows things could have been a lot worse. For Mary Feeney, it has been. She’s pulling up the blind to show me her window.
 
FEENEY: (opening blinds) Uh, you can sort of see the damage on the wood here, and then this is mold that’s developing in the wall, but when they pulled this out it was just water sitting all under the windowsill.
 
Feeney’s four-unit building near Logan Square has a big glass façade and windows that jut out in dramatic angles. But its concrete block walls leak like crazy. Feeney and her neighbors contacted their alderman, who said to call the city. They did and the city sued their developer, Jerry Czerwik. But Feeney and her neighbors were also named on the lawsuit.
 
FEENEY: I mean that’s what was so ironic when we were first found as defendants in the same pool as the developer, it was like, well the only reason you have a case is because we called you, and now we’re defendants?
 
City attorney Greg Janes says homeowners are included because they need to know everything in the case and give city inspectors access to the building. In this case, Czerwik tried to fix the problems at first. But inspectors found more and more issues, and he stopped. Feeney says one day, the judge was fed up.
 
FEENEY: I was sitting in court that day and they started to read, like, for this code violation, for every day you’re in violation it’s a $350 fine for a total of $300,000 and on and on. And all the lawyers that were sitting waiting for their upcoming cases were gasping. And one guy turned to me and said, `I’ve never seen the city do this.’ So it felt really great to think the city’s really going after this guy. But he left the country.
 
So here’s where being co-defendants really starts to get painful. Feeney and her neighbors are now on the hook to fix the code violations that their developer caused. That could cost them upwards of $200,000 split four ways. Meanwhile, according to Janes: Czerwik’s off in Poland and owes the city more than $700,000 in fines. He didn’t respond to emails and his lawyer didn’t return my calls.
 
JANES: I personally feel horrible the city wasn’t able to do more.

Again, Greg Janes from the city’s law department. He says it’s frustrating knowing he set out to help people only to have this happen.

JANES: You know, every time we try to work with a building and a general contractor, I think, let’s hope it doesn’t turn out that at the end the unit owners are still on the hook for over $100,000.

Or more, as is the case for Feeney and her neighbors. She says she appreciates Janes’s lawsuit, but on the whole, the city let her down. The rash of complaints by homeowners like Feeney shows what was missing during the boom years: strong oversight by the City of Chicago. Until recently, the buildings department depended on developers to call during construction when they were ready for an inspection, sort of an honor system. Those who wanted to avoid scrutiny could just not call. Many of the developers in Janes’s cases, like Mary Feeney’s, never got a certificate of occupancy showing final inspections had been done.
 
FEENEY: When we all bought our units they took a big chunk of tax out of that. Everyone made money off of this building and we’re the ones stuck with a building that’s not code-compliant. Well, how is it that a person is allowed to sell a building that’s not code-compliant?

And Feeney says she now knows one thing for sure.
 
FEENEY: I will never buy a property in Chicago again. I don’t think there’s any consumer protection for homeowners in Chicago.

That’s the kind of distrust city lawyer Greg Janes hopes to dispel by going after bad developers. But he’s on clean-up duty, trying to fix the mess after the fact. To prevent all this from happening again, Chicago needs to change how it regulates what gets built. I’ll take up that part of the story in my next report.

wbez.org

New Action Committee – ACHEMMIC- Urges Transparency in EPA Policy Over Mold & Microbial Contaminants

FEMA Using US Chamber Fraud in Katrina Trailer Litigation; EPA, GAO & Both Isle$ of Congre$$ Turn Blind Eye$

Certain Corporate and Government Interests Have Spent Huge Sums of Money and Resources DENYING THE TRUTH about the HEALTH EFFECTS of TOXIC MOLD

Political Action Committee – National Apartment Association (NAA) files Amicus Brief in mold case (two infant deaths in mold filled apt – Wasatch Prop Mgmt) citing US Chamber/ACOEM ‘litigation defense report’ to disclaim health effects of indoor mold & limit financial risk for industry

“Changes in construction methods have caused US buildings to become perfect petri dishes for mold and bacteria to flourish when water is added. Instead of warning the public and teaching physicians that the buildings were causing illness; in 2003 the US Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform, a think-tank, and a workers comp physician trade organization mass marketed an unscientific nonsequitor to the courts to disclaim the adverse health effects to stave off liability for financial stakeholders of moldy buildings. Although publicly exposed many times over the years, the deceit lingers in US courts to this very day.” Sharon Noonan Kramer

Information on Riverstone Residential, the Louisiana Housing Finance Agency, and the owners of Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments in Baton Rouge, Louisiana continuing to allow tenants to be exposed to extreme amounts of mold toxins

Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments managed by Riverstone Residential

Riverstone Residential Litigation

Mold Inspection Reports

Photos of Mold in Apartment

Attorney Malpractice

Posted in Environmental Health Threats, Mold Litigation, Toxic Mold | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment