Archive for the ‘South Florida’ Category
Chinese drywall causes problems on the Treasure Coast
PORT ST. LUCIE — Martin and St. Lucie counties are two of nearly a dozen counties where complaints of possible exposure to the contaminated drywall in new homes have arisen.
The problem may have been sparked by drywall imported during the local construction boom of 2004 and 2005.
Some common symptoms are irritated eyes, coughing, sneezing, difficulty breathing, and symptoms similar to bronchitis and asthma.
The contaminated Chinese drywall may be emitting one of several sulfur compounds including sulfur dioxide or hydrogen sulfide. While exposure to fumes from sulfur dioxide can create irritation and breathing disorders, exposure to hydrogen sulfide can be deadly.
Exposure to 50 parts per million of hydrogen sulfide for more than ten minutes can cause extreme irritation. Inhalation of 500 to 1,000 parts per million can cause unconsciousness and death through respiratory paralysis and asphyxiation, according to environmental experts.
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Chinese Drywall Investigation in Florida
Defective drywall, believed to have been imported between 2005 and 2008 from Chinese manufacturers and used in the construction of tens-of-thousands of new homes in Florida, has many homeowners concerned about the effects the drywall may have on their health.
One of the components of the drywall is sulfur, and many experts believe that when combined with the high humidity levels, it emits a gas that smells like rotten eggs. In addition to the foul odors, air-conditioning related problems, and copper pipe corrosion has been reported, according to a recent report by MSNBC Fort Myers.
Both homeowners and home builders are the victims in this situation. It is currently unknown as to how many homes may have been constructed with the defective drywall, however the state attorney general has launched an investigation into the matter, at the request of the Florida Home Builders Association.
Jay Carlson, president of the Florida Home Builders Association, said, “any time homeowners start to question the safety of the products in their home, we have a serious problem that we need to address right away.”
Lennar and Taylor Morrison are two of the most notable home builders affected. Lennar filed a 105-page lawsuit earlier this month, and has worked with homeowners to have their defective drywall replaced with a suitable substitute.
Kristin Culliton, a Lakewood Ranch resident whose Taylor Morrison home was constructed with defective drywall manufactured by Knauf Plasterboard Tianjin Co. Ltd., filed a class-action lawsuit against the firm. Knauf Plasterboard has reportedly shipped millions of pounds of drywall to Florida since 2006, according to a recent article by the Herald-Tribune.
In an analysis conducted by the Herald-Tribune, of Chinese drywall shipping records, the amount of drywall imported to the United States was potentially enough to construct over 60,000 homes.
Florida Senator Bill Nelson has requested that the U.S. Consumer and Product Safety Commission investigate the Chinese drywall. If determined hazardous, further sales of the product could be halted.
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Source: http://www.newhomessection.com/blog/chinese-drywall-investigation-in-florida/2009/02/26/
Chinese drywall may be sulfur source
Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Monday, March 23, 2009
Residents in suburban Delray Beach’s upscale Vizcaya development are the latest to complain of problems stemming from Chinese drywall in their homes.
Citing air-conditioning coils that turn black and fail, tarnished jewelry and strange odors, a small group met with attorneys on Friday to discuss options
Chinese-made drywall is suspected as the cause of sulfuric gases corroding wires, pipes and home fixtures, all the while throwing off a bad smell.
On Monday, the Florida Department of Health, which is tracking Chinese drywall complaints statewide, released preliminary study findings confirming that Chinese drywall exposed to heat and moisture generates a sulfuric odor.
Conducted for the state by an Illinois firm, the study tested one sample of U.S.-made drywall, two samples marked as being from China, and one unmarked piece that had characteristics similar to the Chinese-made products.
The latter three samples registered higher levels of organic material and sulfuric compounds – particularly strontium sulfide – than the U.S. plasterboard. “There is a distinct difference in drywall that was manufactured in the United States and those that were manufactured in China,” the report concluded. In an especially troubling finding for Floridians, the study also found that, “It is clear that exposure to moisture accelerates the release of volatiles from the drywall.”
More testing is needed to determine whether the organic material and sulfur is the cause of the odors and corroded metals.
During a conference call Monday to discuss the findings, state toxicologist David Krause said that this study is only the first of many planned to determine what components are in the product, at what level, and whether they pose a health problem.
He said this first preliminary study does not show any “specific” health hazards because it only sought to determine what chemicals are in the drywall.
“It’s not that we are saying it’s safe,” Krause said during the conference call.
The next phase of testing will be to determine the rate of emission of the sulfuric gas to help calculate its indoor air concentration and whether it could exceed set safety standards.
Krause noted that the Florida Department of Health has been in contact with state departments of health in Louisiana, Alabama, North Carolina and Washington regarding reports from builders and homeowners of high sulfur drywall being found in homes in those areas.
At least two class-action lawsuits have been filed regarding Chinese drywall in homes outside of Florida – one in Louisiana and one in Alabama.
In Florida, the state Department of Health is tracking more than 150 complaints of Chinese drywall, roughly 30 in Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast.
Coral Springs-based Centerline Homes, which built Vizcaya in 2001 and whose Promenade development in Port St. Lucie’s Tradition community was also recently found to have Chinese drywall, did not return repeated calls for comment.
Vizcaya resident Deborah Semrau says she hates days when she comes home and finds water on the floor.
“We’ve replaced 10 or 11 times the coil for the air conditioner,” she said. “But then I still come home and open the door to a warm house and water from the A/C on the floor.”
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Source: http://www.palmbeachpost.com/search/content/business/epaper/2009/03/23/a6b_drywallvizcaya_0324.html
Chinese drywall found in Port St. Lucie’s Tradition community
Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, March 04, 2009
PORT ST. LUCIE — Only a few months ago, the term “Chinese drywall” was unknown to Michael Vega, who rents a condo in Port St. Lucie’s Tradition community with his wife.
He knew only that something was corroding wires and metal components in the house and emitting an odor that gave his wife headaches and congestion.
Since builder Centerline Homes brought in an independent analyst to test plasterboard, “Chinese drywall” has become a phrase that consumes Vega’s time and causes him to lose sleep at night.
Chinese-made drywall is suspected as the cause of sulfuric gases corroding wires, pipes and even air-conditioning components throughout Florida and across the country, all the while throwing off a sulfur-like smell.
Once thought to be contained to Southwest Florida, problems with Chinese-manufactured drywall were recently reported in Palm Beach County and along the Treasure Coast.
While Coral Springs-based Centerline Homes has declined comment, Vega said the company’s tests found the drywall in his condo was indeed plasterboard from China.
“Who knows what this drywall could be doing to us?” Vega asked. “If it affects metal, what can it do to flesh?”
Vega is not the only one in Tradition’s Promenade condo development who may have Chinese-made drywall in his home.
According to Promenade property manager Bert Kelly, some owners and renters in the 135-unit complex have complained about unusual and unpleasant odors and air-conditioning units that were not working. Centerline tested an unknown number of the houses for Chinese-manufactured drywall, he said.
Initially, experts dated the problem to 2006, when rebuilds from hurricane damage and a growing housing boom created a shortage of American-made plasterboard. That since has been revised to include houses that had drywall added between 2004 and early 2007.
Chinese drywall manufacturer Knauf Plasterboard Tianjin Co. said it began receiving complaints in 2006. The company said it traced the odor to a gypsum mine and ceased using the mine that year.
Late last year, new tenants at a Promenade condo owned by Boca Raton resident Allison Grant began complaining of a terrible smell, causing her and her husband to investigate. They found tarnish on metal faucets, drains and shower heads.
“I had to act like a sleuth for myself so we could learn what the problem was,” Grant said.
She has found definitive proof that her home’s drywall was manufactured in China, she said.
The Florida Department of Health has documented 119 complaints about Chinese-made drywall in Florida. Of those, 17 were in Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast, including five homes on a single street in Stuart.
Preliminary studies have not concluded that the drywall creates immediate health concerns. Homeowners, however, have blamed it for allergy-like symptoms, including headaches, dry eyes, tightness in the chest and bloody noses.
The department is testing drywall to rule out health risks.
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Source: http://www.palmbeachpost.com/search/content/health/epaper/2009/03/04/a4b_drywall_0305_copy.html
Is Drywall the Next Chinese Import Scandal?
By TIM PADGETT / MIAMI Monday, Mar. 23, 2009

Soon after Danie Beck and her husband bought their two-story town house west of Miami in the summer of 2006, she thought an animal had died somewhere behind the walls. The strong sulfurous odor lingered, she says, and she began having dizzy spells that would keep her in bed for days. She began suffering from insomnia and sore, swollen joints. The house, too, appeared to be ailing: lights began blinking on and off, and Beck noticed discoloration of her wood furniture. The air conditioner, an indispensable appliance in South Florida, kept conking out. “It was an absolute nightmare,” the 67-year-old dance teacher says. “I felt as if something in this house was hammering me into the ground every day.”
It wasn’t until her repairman got fed up with fixing inexplicably corroded air-conditioner coils that Beck finally discovered what she and her home builder suspect is the source of the poltergeist: the Chinese drywall inside the house. Beck is among hundreds of homeowners in Florida alleging that toxic levels of chemical pollutants like sulfur are issuing from contaminated drywall made in some Chinese factories. At least four class actions have been filed in Florida; others have been filed in California, Louisiana and Alabama. (See pictures of China’s electronic-waste village.)
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission is investigating the complaints. If the drywall proves to be the culprit, plaintiffs’ attorneys say tens of thousands of potentially affected homes could see a further drop in prices already hammered by the credit crisis. “A lot of these people are just getting hit over the head a second time,” says David Durkee, a Miami attorney who has filed one of the suits. “This could have a further impact on the mortgage crisis by giving overwhelmed homeowners another incentive to just walk away from their houses.”
During the heady but reckless days of the recent U.S. housing-construction boom, builders were desperate for materials, and drywall was especially in demand. Before 2005, drywall imports to the U.S. from China were negligible; since 2006, more than 550 million lb. of it has been shipped here, mostly to Florida. The imports amount to a fraction of the 15 million tons of drywall produced domestically each year, but it was used to build more than 60,000 homes in at least a dozen states — including some post-Katrina reconstruction in Louisiana.
More than half the homes built with Chinese drywall are in Florida. Some of the suits there target construction companies; others include German drywall manufacturer Knauf and its Chinese subsidiaries — which are in turn being sued by at least one Florida home builder, Lennar Corp. Miami-based Lennar, which is also suing the U.S. suppliers from which it bought the Chinese drywall, has confronted the problem and initiated a program to do inspections and remove the offending wallboard in many homes, including Beck’s. (The process usually involves moving a family out of the house for at least six months to replace its interior.) Another lawsuit defendant, Engle Homes, based in Hollywood, Fla., has also admitted that the drywall problem exists in at least a small number of its homes. In a statement about houses near Fort Myers, Fla., that are part of Durkee’s suit, the company says, “Our initial findings tell us that that this seems to be an isolated incident that has affected a small number of Engle Homes in the Fort Myers, Fla., area and we are currently developing a plan to assist our affected homeowners.”
Drywall is made from gypsum, a soft mineral, that is pressed between thick paperboard. Plaintiffs’ attorneys say the allegedly toxic drywall material probably originated in at least one gypsum mine in China and possibly others. (A few years ago, Knauf and other drywall producers received complaints about a mine in Tianjin, China; Knauf says it stopped using the mine toward the end of 2006.) But Knauf denies that its product is toxic and argues it is not the only supplier of Chinese-made drywall to the U.S. Contacted by TIME, the company referred to a statement by its subsidiary, Knauf Plasterboard Tianjin Ltd.: “Any low levels of sulfur compounds present in the air in homes are not a health risk … The substances identified in testing are in no greater amounts than [in] the air found outside homes or in soil, marshes or the oceans.”
The Florida Department of Health has not yet concluded its own tests of the drywall in question. But Beck and other homeowners insist the common symptoms suffered by the Chinese-drywalled houses and their occupants can’t be mere coincidence. The problem came to light last year as those homeowners began commiserating on the Internet about rotten-egg smells in their houses and rashes of nosebleeds and other ailments. At the same time, exasperated air-conditioner repairmen began complaining to builders about copper-coil corrosion in newly built houses. The air-conditioning companies concluded it was caused by high levels of airborne sulfur and moldy toxins. Wires in outlets, appliances and lamps were going bad too, as was wood. That in turn raised red flags for consumer-protection groups, already alarmed in recent years by the flood of defective Chinese-made products like toothpaste and toys.
Depending on how many homes ultimately prove to be contaminated, the repair costs — Beck says Lennar promised to tear her house down “to the studs” — could run into the tens of millions for builders. And that does not include the unspecified damages sought in the lawsuits. One problem plaintiffs face, however, is that many of the builders being sued have gone bankrupt in the recent housing bust. And even if homes are repaired, they may still carry the taint of having been drywall victims. Beck paid $344,000 for her town house; it is now worth $245,000 — less than the amount owed on her mortgage. And she worries that she may not be able to sell it at some point in the future even after Lennar fixes the drywall problem. “I’ll admit there are moments when I’m tempted to ask Lennar to just buy the house back,” says Beck, whose husband died last year of cancer. (His illness was not related to the drywall.)
Beck’s fortunes have taken a pummeling in recent years. She and her husband bought the town house after an arson fire destroyed the Miami home they had lived in for 39 years. And she has become accustomed to seeing its value jeopardized by the threat of hurricanes and by Wall Street malfeasance. But she wasn’t expecting any trouble from China.
Source: http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1887059,00.html
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South Florida builders replacing tainted Chinese drywall
BY ALLISON ROSS
PALM BEACH POST
PORT ST. LUCIE – Builders of two housing developments in the Treasure Coast are tearing out interior walls in some homes as controversy builds over Chinese drywall.
The imported building material is suspected of throwing off noxious-smelling sulfur gases that corrode wires, pipes and even air-conditioning components.
Homeowners in Lennar’s Woodfield development in Port St. Lucie have received letters stating that they can temporarily move out of their homes while Lennar guts the walls and installs new drywall for free, homeowner Dolores Elvas said.
Elvas said she has talked to neighbors who accepted Lennar’s offer and are in the process of moving out, but said she wants to make sure some sort of clause is included that ensures Lennar helps pay for any potential health problems.
”You know, I’m scared. This is my retirement home and no one knows the ramifications of this,” Elvas said.
The Florida Department of Health is tracking Chinese drywall complaints. Private studies have found no links to illness.
Farther south, work to tear out tainted Chinese drywall has begun in a few townhomes in the Promenade portion of Port St. Lucie’s Tradition community.
On Friday, painters were at a townhome in the Centerline Homes development, putting finishing touches on drywall that had just been replaced this week, workers confirmed.
Centerline and Lennar did not return repeated calls for comment. Lennar has been one of the first home builders to step forward with information about Chinese drywall. It has hired an independent environmental consultant, filed suit against certain Chinese drywall manufacturers and distributors, and brought the issue to the attention of both the Florida Department of Health and the Environmental Protection Agency.
Lennar also has agreed to replace drywall and repair a number of homes in Southwest Florida. The Woodfield development appears to be the first of Lennar’s communities on Florida’s east coast to receive a similar offer.
Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/business/story/949172.html
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