Riverstone Residential’s Enclave Apartments

“Just like the Bush Administration this as well will come to a horrible end and the truth will come to light.  I am a Former tenant and I AM NOT AFRAID!!!” – avickerie

Enclave Apartments
11215 Oak Leaf Drive
Silver Spring, MD 20901

WATCH OUT!

From: disguted0421
Date posted: 10/31/2008
Years at this apartment: 2008 – 2008
5 responses

I moved in Dec ’07. The place was amazing to look at and the leasing representative did a real sales job. The workout area, pool table room and computer areas are great. What they didn’t tell me was that they were only available when the management office was open! That meant no work out in the AM or after getting home from work. I had a 2 bedroom and had leaks over and over again in both bedrooms and the dining area. It was awful. The laundry room between my apartment and the elevators flooded frequently. Once I was walking to the elevators and slipped, fell and hit my head plus hurt my back and shoulders. I still have pain from it. While the maintenance people were great, the management are pure elitists.

Recently I got cancer. My income dropped over $1500 a month and I had to move out. I was behind in rent. It was humiliating and embarrassing. I tried to talk to the management about moving into a studio but they wouldn’t even talk to me about it. I explained the situation and they would not work with me. I faxed, mailed and hand delivered my intent to vacate letter as directed by the Landlord Tenant Board.

Defeated I went to court knowing I was in the wrong having not paid my rent. I didn’t have the money. While waiting, I was called out of the court by a Riverstone representative to work things out. I was told I didn’t have to wait for the judge. I explained in tears and in anger, my emotional fault, that I couldn’t pay the rent. The Riverstone representative, a woman, said she had not seen my letter of intent to vacate and knew nothing about it. She said I should move out as quickly as possible and let them know and remember to turn in my keys. She asked that I fax her a copy of my letter of intent to vacate and she would send me a 3 month payment plan on the balance I owed per the letter.

I believed her. I was getting sicker and sicker and preparing for surgery. I moved out that week, called them and told them. I faxed my letter over the this woman who described herself as a representative of Riverstone, saying she represented all properties, not just Enclave. I never received anything from her. I did receive a letter from the Enclave 2 days from the end of the month stating I owed way more than she and I agreed on and that I would be responsible for a month to month payment for the apartment of $2503.80 starting November 1, that would be tomorrow.

I was unbelievably upset and lost my temper when I called and was given the run around. Everyone kept saying they hadn’t heard that, read that, seen that and the woman I spoke to at court denied the conversation I remembered and said she wished she had a tape recorder that day. All this while after having cancer surgery yesterday, which I had told her. I am someone of no consequence that can’t possibly fight for lack of money and being ill. I now must find someone who can drive me 1 1/2 hours tonight before they close to hand them my keys or I will be charged for next month. This is a nightmare. I have pleaded, cried, screamed, thrown up and been defeated. All I wanted was a break and all I got was tricked out of talking to the Judge and getting a little consideration. The place is very nice, but God help you if you fall on hard times. They don’t give one thought about you, not one thought. They just don’t care.

From: avickerie  Date: 11/03/2008 

To the poor former tenant, I am very hurt and some what distraught behind the position and actions taken against another tenant.

I too had many interactions with the staff and management of theEnSlave and many are less then favorable but I knew they were pro-economics and less interested with people after that some what secret military meeting/conference that was held in our front office complete with all heads of military and state attending where no one from the complex was allowed nowhere near the place (main office).

I cannot wait until the right lawsuit brings this place down and this once high and mighty Liver-stone management.

They only cater to Government green $$$ the one that has less human problems like lay offs short hours or getting ILL. Why give people with children a fair chance when we can put 50 more army personnel in our rat and roach and mold infested boxes we call apartments.

Just like the Bush Administration this as well will come to a horrible end and the truth will come to light.  I am a Former tenant and I AM NOT AFRAID!!!

Reviews

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Gimme Shelter – Tax Shelter-Funded Affordable Housing – Affordable Housing Kings

Texans for Public Justice is proud to release its new series investigating abuses and misuses of public assets for private gain.  “Watch Your Assets” will expose ways in which private interests benefit from resources that should be protected for the public good. — Lauren Reinlie – Project Director

Excerpts from article

Although affordable-housing advocates in Texas typically describe the tax-credit program as “the best we’ve got,” it also is virtually all that Texas has got. This inefficient system produces “affordable housing” that is beyond the reach of Texans with the greatest housing needs. Yet this program does have its constituency. It has transferred hundreds of millions of public dollars to a small group of politically connected private developers.

TDHCA’s Ongoing Scandals

TDHCA’s tax-credit program was plagued with corruption scandals in the 1990s. TDHCA’s staff and board awarded tax credits to friends and friendly business associates at times receiving lucrative stock options or business deals in exchange. Florita Bell Griffin, whom then-Governor Bush appointed to the board, was convicted of bribery, theft and money laundering in 2000. Griffin helped secure tax credits for two Bryan developers, who rewarded her with a major interest in a contracting company. During the trial, prosecutors said that Griffin stood to make at least $425,000 from the deal.

Developers formally apply to the TDHCA to obtain federal tax credits. The agency’s staff and governor-appointed board use a scoring system to weed through the applications. Winning developments must meet certain criteria, including a commitment to renting units at 60 percent of the area’s median family income. (With the government setting the bar at 60 percent, few tax-credit recipients rent units at less that half of median family income.)

Developers turn to syndicators to liquidate tax credits quickly. The syndicators sell the credits to corporations at a discount, producing revenue for the syndicators and developers alike. Developers are entitled to use their cut for construction costs as well as developer fees and payments to contractors. In 1999, developers could skim off as much as 15 percent of their tax-credit revenue for developer fees.4 Many developers retain even more of these funds by hiring one of their own companies—or those of a partner—as the project’s general contractor and the property manager.

This report analyzes the $1.3 billion in tax credits that TDHCA awarded from 2004 through 2006. The agency awarded tax credits to many of the same developers year after year, with most of these federal funds going to a small group of politically connected developers. During the period studied, tax-credit recipients contributed $782,685 to Texas political committees and candidates and spent up to $1.9 million more to lobby state officials.

Creating another appearance problem for Texas’ affordable-housing system, some TDHCA staff and board members who left the agency at the height of the 1990’s scandals have gone on to receive TDHCA tax credits of their own. After resigning under fire in 2001, former TDHCA tax-credit manager Cherno Njie received $11.2 million in tax credits in 2006 for the Langwick Senior Residences in Houston.

Affordable Housing Kings

From 2004 through 2006, TDHCA awarded almost $622 million worth of tax credits to the 20 development companies listed in the accompanying table. These developers accounted for almost half of all tax credits that the agency awarded in this period.

Total Value
of Tax Credit
(Over 10 Years)
  Company                   
 Major Company  Representative            

No. of
TDHCA Projects
$52,598,910   CGB Southwest, Inc.  Printice Gary 7
$41,396,280   Lankford Construction  Michael & Claudia Lankford 5
$41,371,710   AIMCO Equity Services  David R. Robertson 5
$38,165,900   Zimmerman Investments  Vaughn Zimmerman & Family 8
$36,834,840   Hettig Construction  John E. & Marianne Hettig 5
$36,357,340   Landmark Affordable Housing  Kent Ronald Hance Family* 4
$35,056,900   Tropicana Building Corp.  R.L. Bobby Bowling & Family 5
$32,669,310   Charter Contractors  R.J. Collins 5
$31,788,540   Three B Ventures, Inc.  Doak & William Brown 4
$30,749,970   Realtex Development Corp.  Rick J. Deyoe 6
$28,370,420   Oak Timbers  Mary Petty & Winfred Myers 3
$28,268,670   Safari Construction  Michael & Ann Parr 6
$28,101,900   Alpha Construction Company  Daniel Allgeier 5
$27,976,430   Galaxy Builders, Ltd.  Arun K. & Karuna Verma 3
$27,129,260   Construction Supervisors, Inc.  Ron W. Mostyn 4
$26,844,120   Investment Builders, Inc.  Ike J. Monty 3
$26,396,450   ICI Construction, Inc.  Russell Cobb 3
$26,396,450   Churchill Residential, Inc.  Bradley Forslund 3
$25,960,430   Kegley, Inc.  Anita M. Kegley 3
$25,936,500   Affordable Housing Construction  Brian & Cheryl Potashnik 3
$621,973,880†  TOTALS   87†

* Includes Hance’s children (Ron Hance, Jr. & Susan Sorrells).
†Total adjusted to avoid double-counting credits to joint ventures of ICI Construction and Churchill Residential.

Affordable Housing Politics

During the same period 88 TDHCA tax-credit recipients contributed $782,685 to Texas political committees and candidates. Top donor Kent Hance accounted for 43 percent of this total ($334,939). The 11 developers who donated $10,000 or more were associated with $2.4 million in TDHCA tax credits.

State Political Contributions From TDHCA Tax-Credit Recipients, 2003-2006

Contributor/Tax Credit Recipient  Business Interest
Sum of
Contributions
Value of
Tax Credits
 Kent R. Hance  Lankford Interests
$334,939
$1,478,222
 G. Granger & T. Justin MacDonald  G.G. MacDonald, Inc.
$58,615
$190,800
 James “Bill” Fisher II & III  Odyssey Residential
$36,850
$7,500
 P. Rowan Smith  Texas Regional Construction
$27,000
$165,000
 Royce Faulkner  FCI Operating Co.
$24,850
$202,000
 Chris Richardson  Blazer Residential
$16,375
$55,000
 Patrick Barbolla  Fountainhead Construction
$15,500
$55,000
 Randall J. & Gregory Bowling  Tropicana Building
$27,842
$105,320
 Albert E. Magill  Magill Development Co.
$12,625
$40,000
 Willie J. Alexander  Scott Street Group
$11,500
$62,500
 Vernon R. Young, Jr.  Artisan/American Corp.
$10,000
$80,000
 
TOTALS:
$576,096
$2,441,342

 

Governor Rick Perry, who appoints TDHCA board members, received the largest share of this money: $119,750.  Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst received $90,157, followed by former Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn, who received $73,500.

In addition to their campaign financing activities, TDHCA tax-credit recipients spent up to almost $2 million to lobby Texas officials from 2004 through 2006. With the aid of Rep. Talton, this lobby almost repealed a host of TDHCA reforms in 2005.

A handful of politically connected individuals are raking in substantial profit off the low-income housing tax credit system. While this program is successful at helping to foster a lucrative industry with incentives for building more affordable housing, the program has failed to serve the Texans with the greatest housing needs.

On June 28, 2007 members of Congress introduced—for the third session in a row–a bill to create a National Housing Trust Fund as an alternative to this system. The trust fund would dedicate money to produce and rehabilitate 1.5 million affordable homes over 10 years. At least 75 percent of these funds would be reserved for those who make less than 30 percent of their area’s median income. While the low-income housing tax credit program has helped to serve people making 60 percent of median family income, the program does nothing for needier families earning even less. Earmarking part of the federal housing budget strictly for serving the needs of the lowest income families could be a more direct, efficient use of taxpayer dollars to help serve the needs of those facing substantial housing hardships.

“Some will rob you with a fountain pen” – Woody Guthrie

Watch Your Assets is a Texans for Public Justice project.
Lauren Reinlie – Project Director

Thanks to TPJ Intern Omair Khan who assisted with this report.

Full Article – “Watch Your Assets”

Posted in Louisiana Housing Finance Agency, Politics, Riverstone Residential | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Fema Trailers – Why CDC Responded With ‘Lack of Urgency’ to Formaldehyde Warnings – top government officials worried about lawsuits from the beginning

by Joaquin Sapien

The Centers for Disease Control study (ATSDR fema) sounded reassuring when it was made public in 2007. Hurricane Katrina survivors didn’t have to worry about reports that there were harmful levels of formaldehyde in their trailers. The air was safe to breathe and the contamination would not reach a “level of concern” as long as they kept the windows open.

Today, senior CDC officials acknowledge that the study was based on a fundamental error.

An agency standard says that people exposed to as a little as 30 parts of formaldehyde per billion partsKatrina of air (ppb) for more than two weeks can suffer constricted airways, headaches and rashes. The trailers all measured above that level.

But the scientists who conducted the study used a much higher agency standard to evaluate the formaldehyde in the trailers: instead of 30 parts per billion, they said health dangers wouldn’t occur until the substance reached 300 ppb, 10 times greater than the long-term standard. According to the CDC, people exposed to that amount for just a few hours can suffer respiratory problems and other ailments.

The story of the Katrina survivors and the trailers has been told many times in Congressional hearings and in the media. But it has been unclear until now why government officials continued reassuring residents the trailers were safe, at least a year after they should have been warning them to get out.

A reconstruction of how CDC and other government agencies handled the formaldehyde problem, drawn from documents, interviews and a new congressional report (ATSDR Staff Report), suggests that top government officials were worried from the beginning about lawsuits by the people living in the trailers.

Communications among government agencies broke down, so much so that the CDC wasn’t aware that other government agencies were continuing to rely on a flawed study.

CDC’s reaction to the formaldehyde problem was “marred by scientific flaws, ineffective leadership, a sluggish response to inform trailer residents of the potential risks they faced, and a lack of urgency to actually remove them from harm’s way,” concludes the report (ATSD Staff Report), scheduled to be released this week by Democrats on the Science and Technology Committee’s subcommittee on investigations and oversight for the U.S. House of Representatives.

The report also chronicles the futile efforts of Christopher De Rosa, a senior CDC toxicologist, to warn top officials of another problem with the 2007 study: It failed to mention that formaldehyde can cause cancer.

Other clues were found by ProPublica, an investigative journalism organization based in New York City, which examined hundreds of pages of e-mails and other documents and interviewed former and current CDC scientists and officials.

The story that emerged is of a government bureaucracy that remained silent as the formaldehyde crisis mounted, straying from its mission to serve the public by “providing trusted health information to prevent harmful exposures and disease related to toxic substances.”

Joe Little, one of the ATSDR scientists who conducted the study, said they chose the higher 300 parts per billion standard because it is the lowest level that is likely to cause a health “effect.” The 30 ppb level, he said, is a “risk” level, meaning that illness is less certain. “Risk and having an effect are two different things,” he said.

A year after the CDC issued its first study, it conducted new tests in occupied trailers. The results were clear. Formaldehyde levels surpassed 100 ppb — more than three times the 30 ppb standard for year-long exposure — in 41 percent of the trailers tested.

“It would be wise for people to be relocated” from the trailers before summer, CDC director Julie Gerberding said in a prepared statement to the media on Feb. 14, 2008.

A CDC official later told Congress that he should have noticed that the first study used the wrong standard.

“I believe everybody who reviewed that document had the opportunity to see that, and we missed that,” said Tom Sinks, deputy director of the CDC’s Agency for Toxic Substances for Disease Registry, or ATSDR.

Early warnings, delayed testing

Katrina survivors started complaining about the air in their trailers almost as soon as they began moving into them, in the fall of 2005. Formaldehyde was quickly pinpointed as a possible cause, because it’s often in the glue used to make plywood and particleboard, which are found in most trailers.

Some people described an almost overpowering “new car smell” in the trailers, which were supplied to them by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Paul Nelson, who moved into a FEMA trailer that September, described it as “kind of a musky smell, but it burns your eyes and sinuses.”

“It gives you excruciating headaches,” he said.

By April 2006, complaints from trailer occupants had grown so loud that the Sierra Club stepped in and tested dozens of units. It found levels as high as 340 ppb in some of the trailers, more than 10 times the amount considered safe for long-term exposure.

FEMA employees working in the hurricane area asked for government testing. But the agency’s lawyers initially resisted. Documents obtained by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform show that litigation was a major concern.

“While I agree that we should conduct testing we should not do so until we are fully prepared to respond to the results,” FEMA attorney Rick Preston said in an e-mail to another FEMA employee. “Once you get results, and should they indicate some problem, the clock is running on our duty to respond to them.”

In a series of conference calls that began in June 2006, FEMA’s lawyers discussed the problem with representatives of the Environmental Protection Agency and the Agency for Toxic Substances for Disease Registry, a little-known division of the CDC that studies how environmental hazards can harm people. One of the ATSDR scientists on the calls later told congressional investigators, “To say initially it was a P.R. problem is probably accurate.”

In September and October of 2006, the EPA gathered air samples in 96 unoccupied trailers. According to an email written by a participant on the conference calls, an EPA official warned that formaldehyde levels in the units might turn out to be “far above” the acceptable level “even after we ventilate them.”

Preston told ATSDR to analyze the samples.

But the instructions given to the two ATSDR scientists assigned to the task — Joe Wright and Scott Little — seemed odd. FEMA told them to establish “a frame of reference,” not to assess the actual health consequences, Little told ProPublica.

When Preston gave the samples to Wright and Little, he attached a letter saying, “No information should be released to any third party without my express permission.”

FEMA did not respond to ProPublica’s questions on the trailers.

It referred ProPublica to previous news releases in which the agency denied influencing the CDC study.

One of the first things Wright and Little had to do was decide how much formaldehyde was too much.

Mistaken standards

Federal agencies use more than half a dozen different formaldehyde standards for different segments of the population, creating confusion for lawmakers, manufacturers, the public and the agencies themselves.

ATSDR itself recommends several standards, including the 30 ppb standard suggested for people exposed to formaldehyde regularly for up to a year, and the 300 ppb standard Wright and Little chose. The higher standard is intended as a guide for physicians treating patients exposed to formaldehyde during a chemical spill or other emergency.

The scientists bolstered their choice of 300 ppb by saying that is the standard recommended by the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygenists. But the group’s chairman, Dr. Terry Gordon, said 300 ppb is intended to be a guide for the maximum amount of formaldehyde that a worker should ever be exposed to for any period of time.

“They should not have applied a worker ceiling limit to 24-hour, around the clock living,” said Gordon, whose organization is comprised of industrial hygienists throughout the nation.

The samples Little and Wright analyzed came from two sets of unoccupied trailers: one with all the windows and vents open, and the other with the air conditioning running and the bathroom vent open. The report found that if all the windows and vents were left open for four days, the average formaldehyde levels fall beneath 300 ppb, although they were still above 30 ppb. But in the set with the air conditioning running and the bathroom vents open, formaldehyde levels dropped beneath that threshold on only two days of the 14 day study.

Glen Nowak, a CDC spokesman, emphasized that FEMA hadn’t asked ATSDR to analyze the impact of the trailers’ air on public health. Despite the publicity swirling around the trailers at this point, he said he didn’t think Little and Wright knew people would be moving into the trailers they were testing.

Vincent Garry, director of environmental medicine at the University of Minnesota, read Little’s and Wright’s report at the request of the subcommittee and told ProPublica he “found it to be naïve.”

In a letter requested by the subcommittee, Garry, who peer-reviewed ATSDR’s guidelines on formaldehyde exposure, said the report did not “take into account that unlike occupational exposures this is a 24 hr per day 7 days per week exposure for children and the old who are sensitive to the chemical for different reasons.”

“I think the report gave us what we were looking for”

In early 2007 a draft of the ATSDR report went to the office of Howard Frumkin, ATSDR’s director, where Wright and Little said it was revised at least four times. Wright’s handwritten notes obtained by the subcommittee show that Sinks, ATSDR’s deputy director, made numerous comments. But nobody questioned the 300 ppb standard or the absence of any mention of formaldehyde’s link to cancer.

Preston, the FEMA lawyer, received the report on Feb. 1, 2007 with a cover letter from Little and Wright summing up their findings: opening windows and vents would bring formaldehyde levels “below levels of concern.”

The two scientists assured Preston they hadn’t shown the letter to anyone else and “as requested” they did not evaluate “health concerns related to potential exposures.” They also warned him that the report was “not intended to establish FEMA’s future policy concerning temporary units.”

Almost immediately, however, FEMA employees began using the report to tell occupants that the formaldehyde did not pose a health threat.

“Thanks, Rick, I think the report gave us what we were looking for,” said an emergency management program specialist said in an e-mail to Preston 11 days after the report was delivered. “Changing air via external venting is effective in reducing the formaldehyde levels.”

A month later, a FEMA trailer maintenance coordinator, told staff in an email that FEMA would use 300 ppb “as a guide in our housing program.”

A whistleblower ignored

The report by Wright and Little showed up on Christopher De Rosa’s desk on February 27, 2007, nearly four weeks after it went to FEMA. Throughout his 17-year career with the CDC, De Rosa had received positive performance evaluations. A few months earlier, however, his bosses had criticized his work on two controversial projects, one on industrial waste in the Great Lakes and the other on a cancer-causing chemical found in some cosmetics.

Although Little and Wright normally reported to De Rosa, they told the subcommittee they sent all their Katrina work directly to Frumkin’s office because they were following a new chain of command Frumkin had developed to get those reports out faster. But Frumkin told ProPublica that the scientists still should have sent the report to De Rosa. And Frumkin told Congress that De Rosa had missed several opportunities to be more involved in the study.

When De Rosa skimmed the report, he immediately called Sinks, ATSDR’s deputy director.

The report downplayed the health risks, he told Sinks, because it omitted the long-term and potentially cancer-causing effects of formaldehyde exposure. He repeated his warning in an email to Sinks and Frumkin that day and attached a letter that he suggested sending to Rick Preston, the FEMA lawyer who had asked ATSDR for the report. It said that “failure to communicate this issue is possibly misleading, and a threat to public health.”

De Rosa told Congress he was so alarmed by those omissions that he missed the more serious flaw in the 12-page document: that it used the wrong safety standard.

When De Rosa hadn’t heard from Frumkin or Sinks a week later, he sent them another email. If he didn’t hear otherwise by the end of the next day, he told them he would notify FEMA of the report’s flaws himself.

A month later, De Rosa’s letter made its way to Preston, the FEMA lawyer. But Preston told the subcommittee he stuck the letter in a file and never shared it with anyone. He also told Congress he had never told Wright and Little not to study the health effects of formaldehyde in the trailers.

“Everything in that letter was already known to FEMA,” he told subcommittee investigators. Preston has since left FEMA and could not be reached for comment.

Not long after Preston put the warning in his file, FEMA began drafting a news release announcing the results of ATSDR’s study. As FEMA staffers scrutinized the release, one of them spotted a problem.

“I guess I’m a little concerned about this paragraph. [300 ppb] is high according to information available to the public,” the employee said in an email to his colleagues, pointing to the 300 ppb standard used by ATSDR. This is “high according to information available to the public.” In a follow-up email he listed the much lower standards made public on Web sites from other agencies.

But FEMA decided to release the report anyway.

For the next several months, FEMA officials – including the agency’s chief, R. David Paulison, and its press spokesman, Aaron Walker – assured the public that the trailers were safe as long as the windows were kept open.

“We have no need, and we see no need, to question the reliability and safety of the trailers,” Aaron Walker told the media on May 10, 2007.

“We’ve been told that the formaldehyde does not present a health hazard,” Paulison told Congress at a May 15 hearing. 

 Less than a week after the hearing, an ATSDR employee sent Frumkin an email that included a link to a FEMA press release announcing that ATSDR had said formaldehyde levels were beneath the “level of concern” if the windows were open. On May 30, Frumkin received another email from someone outside the agency that included a copy of a story quoting Paulison making a similar assurance.

But ATSDR didn’t notify FEMA that it was still using the flawed study, even though Frumkin received several emails mentioning FEMA’s public statements.

“I was not aware of how FEMA was using the information in our report until the middle of ’07,” Frumkin told ProPublica. “We really don’t and can’t routinely monitor what other agencies and organizations say or do with our information.”

Barry Johnson, who ran ATSDR in the 1990s, told ProPublica his staff regularly updated him on media coverage of health studies like the one produced by Wright and Little. “We were able to track the impact of those consultations closely,” he said.

Frumkin also said FEMA’s public statements didn’t come up in the weekly meetings he held with his top staff. Yet documents show references to FEMA trailers, formaldehyde, or news reports about the issue on more than a dozen meeting agendas between January and July 2007. Frumkin said those discussions focused only on an inquiry from a Mississippi congressman about formaldehyde complaints from trailer occupants in his district.

A former high-level CDC employee, who asked not to be named because the individual still does business with the agency, told ProPublica that the CDC normally keeps close tabs on the media, including Web searches for relevant news.

The former employee said Sinks and Frumkin are genuinely dedicated scientists, but that getting the CDC to admit it made a mistake would be extremely difficult, because the agency is hobbled by top-heavy, overly cautious management.

“The agency as a whole should have stepped in,” the former official said.

Unsatisfactory performance

It wasn’t until July 19, 2007 that Congress and the public learned that FEMA had been using flawed information to assure trailer occupants the trailers were safe.

Mary DeVany, an industrial hygienist, was called in as an expert witness by the House Oversight and Government Reform committee, which was holding hearings on FEMA’s response to the formaldehyde issue.

She testified that ATSDR had “arbitrarily” chosen the 300 ppb limit “and applied this high level to the results as if it were a safe and applicable limit,” said DeVany, who has spent much of the last three years testing the trailers for a lawsuit against the trailer manufacturers. She told ProPublica that her company’s employees’ constant exposure to the chemical has left some of them suffering the same ailments as the trailer residents.

After that hearing, Frumkin, Sinks and other top CDC officials began talking about doing more tests.

But De Rosa thought immediate action should be taken. He sent another e-mail, this time addressing it to CDC officials as well as to his bosses at ATSDR.

Yes, more testing was needed, he said. But what was being done in the meantime to make the trailer occupants safe?

“I am concerned that the reported clinical signs are a harbinger of an impending public health disaster,” he said in the July 24, 2007 message.

Mike McGeehin, director of the CDC’s division of environmental health hazards, answered De Rosa in an e-mail.

“The type of data on which to base a decision whether to uproot 66,000 families is lacking,” McGeehin wrote. He asked De Rosa to discuss future concerns over the phone or in person. “Emails can be interpreted so many ways by different readers inside and outside the agency,” McGeehin said.

On Aug. 10, 2007, Gerberding, the CDC director, echoed De Rosa’s concerns in an e-mail to Frumkin. “I realize that good science takes time, and good regulations can take an eternity,” she said. “But in the meantime, this issue is festering, and these people are suffering.”

By then De Rosa’s career with the CDC was crumbling.

In October, he and Frumkin attended a conference for the Collegium Ramazzini, a body of 180 recognized experts in occupational and environmental health. It was held in Carpi, Italy. De Rosa took along his father, who is Italian and had never been to Italy.

At an awards ceremony during the conference, Frumkin walked over to De Rosa and his father and handed the toxicologist an unsatisfactory performance evaluation, the first in his 27-year government career. A memo attached to the performance evaluation told him he was being reassigned.

When questioned about De Rosa’s status, Frumkin told Congress that “the reassignment of Dr. De Rosa was not in any way a retaliation for his actions in this case. His reassignment was a result of personnel actions that are best not discussed in a public forum like this.”

Several former and current CDC scientists interpreted De Rosa’s reassignment as a message that CDC employees should be wary of criticizing CDC projects.

Susan Kess, a former senior medical officer in ATSDR’s division of toxicology, who left the agency in 2005, said that by removing De Rosa from his position, “They are squelching scientific integrity within the agency, and that is an injustice to the public.”

De Rosa is now contesting his reassignment in mediation hearings.

In December 2007 and January 2008, two years after FEMA trailer occupants had begun complaining about burning eyes and labored breathing, the CDC conducted the federal government’s first formaldehyde tests on trailers where people were actually living.

Two years later, risk officially revealed

In February the CDC announced that preliminary results showed the formaldehyde levels in many of the trailers were high enough to increase the risk of cancer and respiratory illnesses. FEMA began urging people to move out.

The CDC has asked its independent Board of Scientific Counselors to investigate how the flawed formaldehyde report slipped through the agency’s bureaucracy. The agency also has agreed to study how the children who lived in FEMA trailers may have been affected by their exposure to formaldehyde.

More than 100,000 of the trailers now sit, unused, at sites throughout the country.

News Story – propublica.org

Posted in Environmental Health Threats, FEMA Trailers, Health - Medical - Science, Politics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

So much for rankings – New Louisiana Ethics Board might have violated law at 1st public meeting

The new members of the Louisiana Board of Ethics seemingly ran afoul of the state’s public meetings law at their first meeting last week.

First up on the board agenda was the election of a chairman.

Two names were put in nomination — Frank Simoneaux and Scott Frazier, both Baton Rouge lawyers.

Board member Lafayette lawyer Blake Monrose immediately asked about the possibility of going into executive session so members could chat with the nominees before a vote.

“We are all new on this board,” Monrose said.

State law allows executive sessions in limited circumstances, such as discussion of litigation and the character and competence of individuals, and in the case of the Ethics Board, complaints and investigations.

Simoneaux, a former state legislator, suggested the board recess and talk individually, then return and vote.

The board recessed and gathered in a separate room outside of public view.

When a reporter and House staffer entered the room, board members were standing around in a circle discussing the election situation in private.

The board emerged a short time later and elected Simoneaux chairman and Frazier vice chairman.

Article – http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/33705954.html?showAll=y&c=y

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After Mold Filled Katrina Damaged Home – Fungi Geneticist Warns of Sick Building Syndrome

By Emily P. Walker, Washington Correspondent- MedPage Today
Published: October 29, 2008
Reviewed by Zalman S. Agus, MD; Emeritus Professor
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 29 – It was the smell of her Hurricane Katrina-damaged home that transformed fungi geneticist Joan Bennett, Ph.D., from a sick building syndrome skeptic into a believer.

Dr. Bennett, who had spent years studying the genetics of fungi, was so cynical about claims of sick buildings that she had even testified as an expert witness for insurance companies, heaping scorn on homeowners’ claims about pathological mold and fungi.

But when Dr. Bennett stepped into her New Orleans home after the hurricane-driven floodwaters had receded from the brick and plaster structure, her dubious shell began to crack.

“The overwhelming obnoxiousness of the odor and of the enveloping air made me start to believe in something I never had before — sick building syndrome,” she said at the Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, held jointly with the Infectious Diseases Society of America meeting.

Dr. Bennett’s confession came during a press conference before a symposium on the links between human disease and molds.

Absent actual infection, such as athlete’s foot, Dr. Bennett’s had thought fungi could not cause illness, especially the seemingly disparate sick buildings afflictions — impotence, headaches, and hemorrhages.

Then came Katrina.

The hurricane left her home uninhabitable and many of her possessions had to be destroyed — victims of the way fungi “eat.”

“Fungi have a strange way of gaining nutrition,” Dr. Bennett said. “They put enzymes and acids into the environment, they turn everything out there to slime, then they reabsorb it. They literally live in their food and in their waste.”

That process, she now thinks, may release volatile organic compounds that can have an effect on human health.

“Perhaps what we’re dealing with was not spores associated with fungi, but some volatile compound,” suggested Dr. Bennett, who left Tulane University in New Orleans after the hurricane to work at the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences at Rutgers.

Dr. Bennett is in the early stages of analyzing the fungi in New Orleans homes and then testing the biological effects of fungus-generated volatiles on worms.

In the long run, she hopes to understand — with the help of animal models — how fungi might affect the health of humans.

There are more than 3,000 volatile compounds produced by each individual fungus, making it difficult for researchers to pinpoint which fungus produces which volatile compound and what effect it might have on human health, said David Denning, M.D., of North Manchester General Hospital in Manchester, England.

“You’ve got multiple different fungi, multiple different chemicals, and different susceptibilities and symptoms to work there,” Dr. Denning said. “It’s quite a complex area.”

Dr. Denning’s own work, presented here, concerned a randomized clinical trial in which 60 severe asthma patients were treated with the antifungal medication itraconazole or given placebo.

He said the patients given the itraconazole had a “very significant benefit in quality of life,” among 60% of the patients. They also relied on fewer steroids and inhalers to manage their asthma.

The reason for the success of the treatment, he suggested, is that some people are “hypersensitive” to fungi.

“These individuals are sensitized so we can detect an abnormal immune response, and those fungi seem to aggravate their asthma,” he said.

Article – http://www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/ICAAC-IDSA/11529

Primary source: ICAAC-IDSA Meeting

Note – I suggested in a previous post that Terry Danner – CEO – Riverstone Residential go spend 3 months in the apartment his company leased to us even though they know of the extreme infestation of several molds that cause serious illnesses.  katy

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