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Gina DeMartis' son
had constant headaches and occasional nose bleeds. Mina Bibeault's daughter
complained of frequent headaches and burning eyes, while her son often had a
runny nose. Donna Ortoli's son also suffered from similar health ailments.
These three Hamilton
Avenue School parents are among those worried that their children's health
symptoms are linked to conditions at the modular school building. Officials
shut down the school last month after officials found a significant mold
infestation in the roof eaves and crawl space.
"My child has a
cold now, is it related?" DeMartis asked. "Maybe the mold spores
are on the books they got from the classroom? You don't know what to believe
anymore."
With Hamilton Avenue
School students dispersed to different schools across the town, parents are
calling on the Board of Education to allow their own experts into the moldy
modular buildings to perform their own tests and investigation.
But while officials
said they welcome parents hiring their own specialists, the Board of
Education stopped short of giving them access to the buildings. Officials
said that re-testing was unnecessary.
"We believe the
protocol that has been used for the environmental testing is really high
quality and we welcome any specialist you would like to bring to sit down
with the specialist (who has) been in the building and has done the test to
review the protocol and the methods involved and I think you would be
satisfied," Board of Education member Leslie Moriarty told parents at a
meeting Thursday.
School officials also
said a separate second consultant has been retained to review the findings
and Michael Long, director of environmental health services for the town
Department Health, has been briefed.
"I think we did
our due diligence," Superintendent of Schools Betty Sternberg said in an
interview Friday.
But parents said they
have lost all trust in the school district.
"If the Board of
Ed has nothing to hide, they should allow us in," Bibeault said.
"Board of Ed, if you feel 120-percent confident in your results, you
should roll out the red carpet."
Some parents also are
concerned that furniture, books and other items taken out of the modulars may
harbor mold spores that would spread to other schools if moved there. But
Charles Schwartz, head of Scarsdale, N.Y.-based Environmental Assessments
& Solutions, who performed the tests for the district, said tests show
that items from five classrooms registered a normal "background
level" of mold.
"There is
absolutely no harm," he said. "If this stuff was going to my
child's classrooms, I would have no reservation."
Schwartz said mold is
naturally occurring and at low levels presents little danger.
"It's part of
the normal background environment that is in your house and in my
house," he said. "If we were to test my house dust, we would get
the same levels, if we were to test your house dust, we would get the same
levels."
Another indoor air
quality specialist also not connected to the Hamilton Avenue School testing
said there are no hard and fast rules.
"It's very hard
to comment because there's no one size fits all answer," said Paula
Schenck, assistant director of the Farmington-based Center for Indoor
Environments and Health at the University of Connecticut. "You have to
look at the individual situation."
She said while mold
is easily cleaned from some furniture, particularly metal, it is more
difficult to rid from paper and other organic materials. Schenck said that
while some small amount of mold can be naturally occuring indoors, it should
be kept to an absolutely minimum.
"It's
complicated because what you don't want is mold growing on materials
inside," Schenck said. "Mold is a very normal part of our ecology
but you don't want it growing inside. It's not a healthy environment
inside."
In addition to mold,
parents also fear the presence of formaldehyde in the modulars. Schwartz said
the chemical is present in ultra-low concentrations, but parents also dispute
that finding and want their own tests. Formaldehyde causes cancer in lab
animals and may cause cancer in humans, according to the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency.
"What irks me
about the formaldehyde is it could be a good five years before my kids get
diagnosed," Bibeault said.
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