UCI study targets TOXIN – Researchers find a protein IN MOLD on nuts & grains is key to making a POISON THAT CAUSES CANCER

By Candice Baker
October 20, 2009
 
UC Irvine researchers have discovered that a certain protein is the growth trigger of a cancer-causing toxin that profoundly affects people who live in developing and newly industrialized nations.

Aflatoxin, produced by mold that contaminates stored nuts and grains, and other such toxins might be responsible for liver cancers that lead to an estimated 10% of deaths in places like China, Vietnam and South Africa.

Regulation in such countries is either shoddy or absent, the researchers said, which leads to chronic exposure to large amounts of aflatoxin, sometimes hundreds of times higher than safe levels.

“It’s shocking how profoundly these molds can affect public health,” Sheryl Tsai, UCI molecular biology and biochemistry, chemistry, and pharmaceutical sciences associate professor, said in a news release.

She is the lead author of a study appearing Thursday in the journal “Nature” that reports the finding.

The toxin colonizes on nuts and grains either before the harvest or while they are stored, researchers said. Within the United States, the FDA says it is an “unavoidable” food contaminant, but sets maximum allowable limits in the food supply.

The toxin affects people’s immunity and metabolism, and can cause severe malnutrition and cancer by impacting a cancer-preventing gene.

Tsai worked with a graduate student, Tyler Korman, and undergraduate Oliver Kamari-Bidkorpeh, along with Johns Hopkins University researchers, to find that the protein PT is needed for aflatoxin to grow in the mold.

In the past, no one knew what triggered the toxin’s formation, so the mold itself was destroyed — an expensive process.

“The protein PT is the key to making the poison,” Tsai said. “With this knowledge, perhaps we could kill the PT with drugs, inhibiting the mold’s ability to make aflatoxin.”

Researchers hope the protein can be destroyed through chemoprevention.

dailypilot.com

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Why dogs do not like Halloween

From an email

Please do not send this to the PETA people!!!

dogs1dogs2dogs3dogs4dogs5dogs6dogs7dogs8dogs10dogs11dogs12dogs13

This last one must be from Louisiana!

dogs14

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WHO’S IN CHARGE HERE, ANYWAY? – ‘Who’s my landlord?’ – A bill before City Council would reveal the people behind each LLC – City Limits.org

By Nekoro GomesOctober 19, 2009

Mike Grinthal, a staff attorney with South Brooklyn Legal Services who often finds himself working for tenants and trying to locate the owners behind an apartment building’s limited liability corporation, describes the inspiration for a new bill before City Council as incredibly simple.

“I go out to tenant meetings a lot,” says Grinthal. “The first question I get is: ‘Who’s my landlord?’”

Grinthal says the standard practice of incorporating the owners of a multi-unit apartment building as a single limited liability corporation, while perfectly legal, also allows for abuse by landlords who don’t want to respond to tenants’ clamoring for repairs or other requests.

After meeting with the Bushwick, Brooklyn-based community-organizing group Make The Road New York about creating legislation to address the issue, Grinthal helped to draft a bill that was introduced in August by City Councilwoman Melissa Mark-Viverito from East Harlem.

The bill would require anyone owning more than 25 percent of a corporately owned multi-unit apartment building to register their individual names, residences and business addresses with the city’s Department of Finance.

“Apartments in my district are often found to contain mold or insect and rodent infestations, which are known to trigger asthma attacks,” Mark-Viverito wrote in an e-mail. “Issues like these become difficult to resolve for my constituents when the only way to reach their landlords is at P.O. boxes and unanswered telephone numbers.”

In addition to disclosing their individual names and contacts, owners would also be required to disclose the number of unoccupied units in a building before filing a registration statement with the city.

That’s because landlords for rent-stabilized buildings are allowed to raise the cost of rent for an apartment unit by 20 percent once it becomes vacant, and an abnormally high number of vacant units “can be an indication that there’s a plan to convert the building to condos,” said John Whitlow, a supervising attorney with Make The Road New York.

Advocates for the bill point out that making information on a building’s owners and vacant units easier to locate could also benefit the city by aiding in the identification of scofflaw building owners, as well as reducing the number of lawsuits brought by tenants and adjudicated through the city’s housing courts.

But Frank Ricci, government affairs director for the Rent Stabilization Association, a lobbying group for landlords and property managers, says the bill is largely a redundant measure, as information on building managers and owners is available through the city’s Department of Housing Preservation and Development and the Department of Finance.

Ricci points out that tenants in need of serious repairs to their building can just as easily reach out to the city in order to get them addressed: “Ultimately you want the person who’s responsible for making repairs, and that’s what [tenants] get already, which is why we have the system set up the way that we do.”

For the time being, both opponents and advocates for the bill are taking a wait-and-see approach as it sits in Council’s committee on housing and buildings. Ricci says his group will give its opinion if the bill comes up for a public hearing.

And Make The Road New York deputy director Javier Valdes says the group will work to build coalitions with other housing and immigrant advocacy organizations as it waits until after next month’s elections to push Council members for the bill’s passage.

citylimits.org

Note – Information on Riverstone Residential knowingly exposing tenants to extreme amounts of mold toxins at Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.  katy

Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments managed by Riverstone Residential

Riverstone Residential Litigation

Mold Inspection Reports

Photos of Mold in Apartment

 
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Affordable housing set at former school – The Capital Area Alliance for the Homeless and a New Orleans developer have teamed to transform an old Baton Rouge school into an apartment building

Note – Just looking at the picture of the old school that will be transformed into apartments, it looks like a haven for mold growth. Homelessness and being exposed to unnatural levels of toxins from molds in an indoor environment are equally horrific. If they even test this place and it is not safe, I hope they don’t just ignore it and allow people to move in as was done when the State of Louisiana, the Louisiana Housing Finance Agency, and the owners of Jefferson Lakes Apartments did when they just ignored the mold inspection reports and STILL allow people to lease there.  katy

Homelessbeds

By STEVEN WARD
Advocate staff writer
Oct 20, 2009

The Capital Area Alliance for the Homeless and a New Orleans developer have teamed to transform an old Baton Rouge school into an apartment building and to build a center that will provide housing and services for those searching for an affordable place to live.

Randy Nichols, executive director of the alliance, said the Scott Elementary School on North 19th Street, which is on the national Register of Historic Places, would become a building housing 16, 1-bedroom apartments and four efficiencies. A separate new building will also be built adjacent to the renovated school, he said.

The one-stop homeless services center will be a hybrid project with small apartment units on the first two floors and various services for those searching for affordable housing on the bottom two floors, Nichols said. Its location has not yet been finalized, he said.

The alliance has partnered with The Gulf Coast Housing Partnership, a nonprofit developer, on both projects as a partial way of addressing the need for more bed space for the homeless in East Baton Rouge Parish.

According to a 2009 alliance survey of homelessness in the parish, there were about 1,200 people living in shelters, temporary housing or on the street. That homeless snapshot came out of a survey conducted in a 24-hour period in January.

The apartment building and the one-stop services center would provide an additional 100 beds to the parish, Nichols said. Currently, there are about 1,200 beds in the emergency shelters, transitional housing and permanent supportive housing for people with disabilities, Nichols said.

The services at the one-stop center would include case management, showers, laundry facilities, meals, access to telephones, medical services mental health screenings and employment services such as job training, Nichols said.

Nichols said the two projects will cost about $8.5 million each and most of the money will come from federal housing grants, neighborhood stabilization program grants, federal home loan bank affordable hosing grants and low-income housing tax credits.

Kathy Laborde, president of the Gulf Coast Housing Partnership, said one of the problems with providing affordable housing for someone who needs to follow up with case management is getting the person to follow up with the case managers.

The positive aspect of the one-stop services center concept, Laborde said, is the people who live on the top two floors are already on site to follow up with the services they need to eventually better their circumstances.

“The housing is permanent, not temporary, but you want to help people out so they want to better themselves and hopefully they can make that next step,” Laborde said.

2theadvocate.com

Note – Information on Riverstone Residential knowingly exposing tenants to extreme amounts of mold toxins at Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.  katy

Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments managed by Riverstone Residential

Riverstone Residential Litigation

Mold Inspection Reports

Photos of Mold in Apartment

 
Posted in Environmental Health Threats, Louisiana Housing Finance Agency, Mold and Politics, Toxic Mold | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

WHO Submission of Additional Publications Regarding Molds & Mycotoxins – Cheryl Wisecup’s response to request by the EPA

From Cheryl – I sent my WHO Submission to the EPA. They thanked me for the information and asked me to submit the 3-4 most important questions that need to be addressed in regard to mold.

Cheryl’s response

I appreciate you asking me to submit 3-4 questions that need to be answered.  It’s good you asked for only 3-4 questions, because I could easily send you many more. 

As I mentioned in my previous message, my focus is on the health issues.  Specifically, my focus is on protecting and saving the lives of people who are (or will be) exposed to toxic mold. 

In response to your request, I submit the following 4 questions:

1.  How do we cure or reverse the damage that toxic mold causes to our health?

2.  What are the appropriate medical tests and procedures that lead to the correct medical care and treatment for health problems caused by toxic mold?

3.  Are some people more susceptible to the health effects of toxic mold and, if so, why? 

4.  What treatment can be provided to prevent the “sicker quicker” effect for people who have more than one exposure to toxic mold?

Some might say these 4 questions have been answered.  There are a variety of answers to these questions, but we do not have a consensus nor a resource for sharing these different approaches.  We need to bring the experts together and create a comprehensive solution based on each of their respective points of view.

I would also like you to keep these next two questions in mind as you proceed with your work on this issue.

a.  Why have world leaders allowed the insurance industry and other stakeholders to hide the truth about the health effects of toxic mold?  (The tobacco companies were allowed to hide the truth about the dangers of tobacco for 50 years, and the insurance industry is using that same strategy to deny the health effects of toxic mold.)

b.  When are the world leaders going to expose the truth and educate physicians so patients can receive proper medical care?

There are many more issues that need to be addressed regarding this issue including:

  • passing meaningful federal and state laws
  • preparing a handbook for physicians and hospitals that advises them about the health effects of toxic mold and the appropriate treatment
  • establishing a federal budget to fund ongoing research
  • appointing someone at the federal level to oversee this issue on a national level so there is a coordinated approach for dissemination of information and solutions
  • establishing state agencies to understand and address the complex issues involved, to provide advice and assistance to people who are effected, and to coordinate resources with other state agencies
  • creating a marketing campaign to disseminate accurate information throughout the country
  • coordinating research efforts in the U.S. with research being done in other countries in order to avoid duplication and to share ideas and information
  • gathering and organizing information from the many groups and individuals who have firsthand experience and knowledge
  • issuing an accurate and comprehensive set of mold remediation guidelines
  • establishing requirements for people who want to work as mold remediators

Thank you again for taking the time to respond and asking for my input.  I appreciate the opportunity.

See – Submission of Additional Publications Regarding Molds & Mycotoxins – 2009 Who Guidelines for Indoor Air Quality – Dampness and Mold

Posted in Environmental Health Threats, Health - Medical - Science, Mold and Politics, Mold Litigation, Toxic Mold | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment