Asthma-Free Housing Act will help Tenants Breathe Easier – re-classifies rats, MOLD, and roaches as immediately hazardous “C violations”

“If there is lead in an apartment, a City inspector will find it,” he explained, and if landlords fail to act immediately, the city sends an emergency repair unit to get the job done. But mold, cockroaches, and rats are deemed less serious “B violations,” akin to landlords failing to paint or clean a hallway, or replace an entry light. As a result, these allergens are often allowed to fester for years with no penalty to landlords.

by Eleanor J. Bader

Margarita Pabon’s daughter was 18 months old when she began to show signs of chronic illness. “It started with a bad cough,” began Pabon, who lives in Sunset Park. “At first we thought it was a cold or the flu, but she kept being sick until one night she could barely breathe.” Early one morning, Pabon took her daughter to a doctor, who diagnosed the child with asthma.

As the doctor outlined treatment options, he asked Pabon if there were cockroaches, rats, or mold in her apartment, all of which are known asthma triggers. Her answer was a resounding “Yes.”

Unnerved to learn that poor housing conditions were literally making her daughter sick, Pabon immediately asked her sister-in-law, the apartment’s leaseholder, to call the landlord and demand repairs. He promised quick action, Pabon said, but did nothing. Pabon’s sister-in-law then phoned 311 and City inspectors were dispatched.

“There was mold everywhere,” Pabon explained. “The ceiling in the bathroom was coming down, the sink and toilet leaked, and the rug the landlord put on the floor was filthy.” But the inspectors didn’t address the mold and rodent problems. Instead, they removed lead they discovered in one of the rooms, and left.

Pabon’s experience is not unique. Asthma is a potentially life-threatening condition, and a growing public health crisis, but one that experts say City policy has failed to adequately address. Brett Tolley, an Immigrant Advocate at La Union, a community organization based in Sunset Park, said a major obstacle is the City’s definition of indoor allergens as property rather than health violations. “If there is lead in an apartment, a City inspector will find it,” he explained, and if landlords fail to act immediately, the city sends an emergency repair unit to get the job done. But mold, cockroaches, and rats are deemed less serious “B violations,” akin to landlords failing to paint or clean a hallway, or replace an entry light. As a result, these allergens are often allowed to fester for years with no penalty to landlords.

As part of a larger organizing effort around the issue, La Union has joined the Citywide Coalition for Asthma-Free Homes, an alliance of seven community organizations working to improve housing conditions in the five boroughs. One of the coalition’s top priorities is ensuring the passage of the Asthma-Free Housing Act, which was originally introduced in the spring of 2008 by Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum and City Councilmember Rosie Mendez. The Act currently has 24 City Council sponsors and, as drafted, would amend the Housing Maintenance Code to reduce indoor allergens—rats, mold, and roaches—in units rented by people with asthma, emphysema, or lung cancer. It would also require landlords to inspect apartments at least once a year, and prove that asthma triggers have been removed. Like Local Law 1 passed in 2003, which mandated the removal of brain-damaging lead from housing units, the Asthma-Free Housing Act re-classifies rats, mold, and roaches as immediately hazardous “C violations,” and authorizes the Department of Housing Preservation and Development to correct infractions if landlords don’t. The Act also requires the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to encourage healthcare workers to report suspected indoor allergens to HPD on their patients’ behalf.

One shortcoming of the Asthma-Free Housing Act is that it only applies to housing units occupied by tenants who are already sick, even though it is well established that respiratory conditions such as asthma often originate with exposure to indoor allergens. Still, advocates support the legislation as a necessary first step in addressing the crisis.

Promises From the City, But Little Progress

Public Advocate Gotbaum said she became interested in indoor allergens after her office began tracking mold complaints and found a whopping 1800 percent increase in calls to the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene between 1999 and 2004. “I was shocked to learn that the Housing Maintenance Code contains no enforceable protocol for mold assessment and clean up,” Gotbaum wrote in an email. “This is a clear-cut public health issue; no one with asthma should have to live in an apartment with pests or mold.”

This conviction was buttressed by further research by Gotbaum’s office revealing that one million New Yorkers, 300,000 of them children, live with asthma. The condition is the primary reason for school absence in the U.S., and the most common cause of hospital visits for those under 14. Not surprisingly, poor and low-income families are at increased risk: A 2003 report by the City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene demonstrated that those earning over $75,000 a year live in units with fewer allergy triggers than those earning $25,000 a year.

Make the Road New York, a community group working to improve health conditions in low-income areas of Brooklyn and Queens, got involved in the Coalition for Asthma-Free Homes in 2005. That same year, according to housing organizer Jesse Goldman, the group conducted a study that found that the asthma hospitalization rate in Bushwick was four times that of other parts of the city. The culprit? Bad housing conditions.

“The Act is a way to hold landlords accountable,” Goldman explained. “It’s about a greener home environment and represents a huge potential savings to the City in terms of fewer Emergency Room visits and missed days of school. The lead bill has lowered lead levels in children; the same could be true of asthma if we remove the triggers that make it worse.”

It seems like a no-brainer. Yet the Act has languished in the City Council since its introduction last year.

Brian Kaszuba, Gotbaum’s Deputy General for Intergovernmental and Legal Affairs, blames the lack of progress on timing. “It was introduced late in the 2008 legislative year,” he said. “This session, the focal points of the Council’s work have been the budget and term limits. The Asthma-Free Housing Act was simply not the main thing on the Council or Administration’s agenda.”

But the seven-member Coalition for Asthma-Free Homes, which includes the American Lung Association, the Urban Justice Center, La Union, Make the Road New York, the Fifth Avenue Committee, the New York Immigrant Coalition, and the Northern Manhattan Improvement Corporation, are determined to get the Act passed.

Landlords in Denial

This past April, tenants from 346 54th street in Brooklyn’s Sunset Park staged a boisterous protest outside the office of landlord Dan Brady. Veronica Mirafuentes lives in one of two occupied apartments in the eight-unit building, and ticks off conditions that would make Jacob Riis weep: black mold, leaks, erratic heat and hot water, rats, roaches, holes in the ceilings, floors, and walls, and garbage piled up by construction crews who began but never finished renovating vacant apartments. HPD lists 301 violations–the roster runs 16 pages—for the building, from faulty boiler valves to broken windows and rampant vermin.

This state of affairs, said Mirafuentes, has exacerbated her son Nicholas’ asthma, which he developed as a toddler. Despite near-daily use of a nebulizer and inhaler, Nicholas misses a lot of school and has difficulty concentrating when he is ill. “If his throat is sore or he is coughing, it is difficult for him to pay attention,” she said.

At her wit’s end, Mirafuentes described call after call to both her landlord and 311. She shrugs, “Nothing has helped.”

For his part, Dan Brady pooh-poohs the complaints. “I’ve never seen evidence of rats,” he said. “I could send an endless parade of exterminators and the tenants would love it, but cockroaches are not endemic to buildings. They come from grocery bags and poor housekeeping. Spraying with toxic chemicals would not be doing the tenants any favors.”

But advocates and city officials insist that less toxic alternative strategies for managing pests are available. Gotbaum and other supporters of the Asthma Act point landlords like Brady to Integrated Pest Management, a system of complementary techniques that does include the use of some chemicals, but is safer than traditional methods of extermination, and is endorsed by the City’s Health Department.

But Brady said that even if he were to decide to fix conditions, it would require him to evict tenants, something he said he does not want to do.

This assertion leaves organizer Brett Tolley virtually speechless. In his view, there is plenty that can be done without displacing tenants. But he’s not discouraged. His organization, together with residents, plans to continue pressuring Brady to repair his property.

Toward that end, Mirafuentes recently presented a dead rat, firmly affixed to a glue trap, to landlord Brady. “This should end his denial of the problem,” she laughed, adding that she is cautiously optimistic that the double-punch of the rat and office protest will get results.

Margarita Pabon, however, finally gave up, and moved her family to a freshly renovated, pest-and-mold-free apartment. She reports that her daughter’s asthma has greatly improved.

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New Book – How to maximize FEMA funding after a natural disaster – blog of new orleans

Posted by: Kevin Allman
May 27, 2009

fema book

It’s $35, but Amazon has a used copy for $26.99.

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Porn star as senator no big deal in Louisiana

By MICHAEL TORTORICH
GateHouse News Service

If you thought the notion of adult film star Stormy Daniels vying for the U.S. Senate seat of incumbent junior Sen. David Vitter of Louisiana was a flash in the pan, think again.

The blonde-haired, blue-eyed, 30-year-old Baton Rouge native has returned to the fray, this time hosting a “listening tour” that included stops at a popular downtown Baton Rouge bar and a New Orleans po-boy shop last week.

The “Draft Stormy” campaign started without Daniels’ knowledge by a New Orleans college student. At first annoyed by the use of her name, she eventually warmed up to the idea.

OK, I must admit, it has been tempting to use the play on words a name like Stormy lends itself to. It’s been even tougher to avoid using double entendres when taking up such a touchy subject. Oops.

After all, the whole thing is a thinly veiled joke that many seem keen on seeing through to next year’s election.

Oh, what a laughingstock Louisiana will be, right? Nah, it’s just good old-fashioned “Loosyana” politics, as some call it, and it’s just about par for the course.

After all, this is the state that led the nation in federal corruption convictions during a nine-year period, according to statistics compiled by the Corporate Crime Reporter. Giving tax dollars to such wolves in sheep clothing is like giving the keys to the liquor cabinet to a bunch of LSU frat boys.

Entertainment

Former governor Earl Long once infamously said that Louisiana voters “don’t want good government, they want good entertainment.” I have to admit following Pelican State politics is much more interesting than anything on prime-time television.

Long was immortalized in the 1989 film “Blaze,” which starred Paul Newman as the flamboyant governor who allegedly had an affair with stripper Blaze Starr.

Hollywood can’t compete with Louisiana’s version of “The Jeffersons.” Not only was U.S. Rep. William Jefferson indicted on corruption charges of his own, but so were his brother, sister and niece.

And no discussion of Louisiana’s political corruption history can omit the 1991 governor’s race, which pitted former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke against the colorful Cajun Edwin Edwards, who was no stranger to accusations of corruption.

Louisiana voters had to bite the bullet and “vote for the crook,” as was the popular saying at the time. Edwards ended up serving four terms as governor. Now in his 80s, he remains in prison after he was convicted on several charges in 2001.

So is it really all that shocking that a retiring adult entertainer is contemplating taking on a family-values conservative who admitted to an affair with a prostitute?

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

Michael Tortorich writes for the Weekly Citizen of Gonzales, La.

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Video – Trussville family settles with HUD over mold infestation

Lisa Crane, Reporting
Lynne Jones, Producer
Jamey Bryan, Photographer/Editor
May 30, 2009

A Trussville family ousted from their home because of a mold problem has resolved their case with the Federal Government.

Leslieanne Johannsen, her husband and two young children had to move out of their townhome on New Year’s Day when they discovered a roof leak in the adjoining unit had caused mold to spread like wildfire into their walls, floors as well as the heating and cooling vents. 

That adjoining unit had become the property of the Federal Department of Housing and Urban Development after the home went into foreclosure in the fall of 2008. 

Local contractors had been handling the situation for HUD.  But the Johannsens were not able to get a satisfactory response.

Once NBC13HD became involved, officials from the Birmingham HUD office took made their first visit to the home to get a first-hand look at the damage.

The Johannsens have now settled with the government.

HUD is paying for the mold removal, the rebuild, and reimbursed them for six months of mortgage and utility payments they had to make when they couldn’t live in their home.

But the Johannsens believe HUD got off easy.  “It was very bittersweet.  The only reason we accepted their offer is because we wanted to get on with our lives.  We’ve suffered enough, my children have suffered enough.  Just no more phone calls, emails no more fighting with them or arguing with them.  It was not what we were looking for, we’re pretty disappointed actually.  But it was either that or take them to court. And no one wants to do that,“ said Leslieanne Johannsen. 

The family said getting HUD to accept responsibility took too long. 

The Johannsens said the problem could’ve been corrected within a month or so, which also would have lessened the severity of the mold infestation. 

In an e-mail HUD told NBC13HD, “The various aspects of work required to this unit i.e., the need for specialized professionals, contract and regulatory requirements and coordination of activity among the many parties, contributed to the delay. The process took longer than we would have liked, but it was necessary to bring about quality results.“

Leslieanne Johannsen says the rebuild work should begin any day and they hope to be able to move back into their home in a month or so.

Video

How it all started – Video – Mold drives Trussville family from home

Lisa Crane, Reporting
Lynne Jones, Producer
Jamey Bryan, Photographer/Editor
April 30, 2009

Imagine being displaced from your home for six months…all because of a mold problem at the neighbor’s house next door.  You’d probably want some kind of compensation…but now imagine that neighbor is the federal government.  That’s the situation a Trussville family is dealing with right now and they say they’ve spent months trying to get it resolved. 

Leslieanne Johannsen shows us pictures of what looks like blue cheese growing in her attic and walls.  “All of that is mold along that.  All that white is mold”, says Johannsen.  Johannsen and her husband had to become quick studies back on New Year’s Day when they discovered mold had infested their Trussville townhome.  “It was in the ventilation system and it was spreading by the second to every room in the house”, says Travis Johannsen.  And mold isn’t just an ugly annoyance…it’s a serious health threat.  Fact:  According to the EPA, molds can trigger allergic reactions, asthma attacks and some can even produce potent toxins and irritants.

The Johannsens say the problem started when a roof leak in the adjacent, vacant townhome went un-repaired for weeks.  Because the two units have a common wall, cleanup crews said they couldn’t clean up the mold until the roof was repaired.  Leslieanne says, “If we remediate our side and they don’t take care of the wall on their side and we rebuild, it can come right back over.”
Fact:  The Environmental Protection Agency agrees.  According to it’s website the key to dealing with mold is moisture control.  But the Johannsens say that’s when the real problems started.  The adjacent townhome is owned by the federal government’s Department of Housing and Urban Development.  HUD contracts with real estate management company Hooks Van Holm out of Atlanta to take care of it.  Hooks Van Holm has subcontracted the work out to the company, Asset Management Specialists, in Chelsea.

“We’ve pretty much exhausted every avenue of trying to get this problem taking care of with HUD and Hooks Van Holmes and Asset Management.”, Leslieanne says.  We contacted Asset Management Specialists.  Officials there wouldn’t comment on this case, and instead referred us to Hooks Van Holm officials who have not returned our repeated calls.  Johannsen says no one seemed to want to take responsibility.  She says even with water pouring into the HUD unit, Asset Management crews wouldn’t even acknowledge there was a leak.  “Just the frustration of everyone covering their own bases and no one taking responsibility”, says Leslieanne. 

And when dealing with mold, time is of the essence.  Fact:  the EPA says it’s important to dry water-damaged areas within 48 hours to prevent mold growth.  But when Johannsen called us in mid-February, the family had been out of their home for 6 weeks, and were getting nowhere with repeated calls to HUD and the companies involved.  She credits our calls to HUD with finally getting the ball rolling.  “Within a day actually (of calling you) they came up with a settlement offer.”

The Johannsens say HUD then fixed the leaking roof in their unit and paid about $5000 to clean up the mold that had taken over the walls, ceilings, floors and vents in the Johannsen’s home.  HUD officials wouldn’t talk with us on camera but in an e-mail told me, “The various aspects of work required to this unit i.e. the need for specialized professionals, contract and regulatory requirements and coordination of activity among the many parties, contributed to the delay. The process took longer than we would have liked, but it was necessary to bring about quality results.“
We went back to visit the Johannsens 6 weeks later.  The mold had been removed and the house had been deemed safe to live in, but there was a lot of work left to do.  The house still needed to be pretty much rebuilt. Many of the ceilings, walls and carpeting had been ripped out because they were full of mold.  But the family says they’re fighting it out with HUD again.  According to Leslieanne, while government officials have agreed to pay for much of the $15,000 it’s estimated to cost to rebuild, they won’t compensate the family for being homeless for what will likely end up being at least 6 months.  That’s something she says would not have been necessary had HUD taken action sooner.  “They knew about mold and they didn’t do anything with it they just left it and let it go.”

HUD’s response: “HUD has been very responsive to the situation, relocating the family and addressing the required repairs to the unit.  HUD’s Atlanta homeownership center has maintained contact with the Johannsens and has apprised them of each step of the process.“

Johannsen says that’s simply not true.  In fact they’ve been living in a friend’s home since the first of the year and HUD had nothing to do with those arrangements.  Leslieanne says, It’s been an emotional roller coaster, my 4 1/2 year old daughter was on the floor crying yesterday.  They don’t understand they want to come home and it’s hard to explain to them that it’s not safe here.”

Again we tried several times to contact representatives from Hooks Van Holm and Asset Management Specialists but were not able to get either company to give us their side of this story.  The Johannsens now have an attorney and have not yet decided whether to take HUD’s settlement offer.

Video

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Video – Bruce Kelman literally laughing at the thousands of citizens who have requested a Congressional Oversight and Government Reform hearing into the conflicts of interest of ACOEM, US Chamber of Commerce and the Department of Justice

Video

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