John,
 
Try this web site out.  It is the EPA (National Environmental Health).  Lots of 
information on there about remediation.  I haven't read all the details on this 
site, but I think that if you go to the "Commercial / Schools Site and get into 
the brochure there, it will give you some guidence and also the residential 
mold site as well.  Might take a little bit of time and some manuvering, but 
there is good basic information there..
 
Cleaning the mold up is the easy part.  The tricky part is figuring out where 
the "water intrusion" is coming from.  Is it a leak?  Is it a moisture problem 
from the basement wall?  Is it a cold space where the cold will cause the 
humidity to condence on a smooth hard surface such as the finished paneling?
 
They say, and I believe it, that 95% of all mold and mildew problems come from 
"water intrusion"  Correct the water or moisture problem and clean up the mold 
/ mildew and it shouldn't come back.  
 
Actually, something as simple as turning the heat and air off for an extended 
period of time and the chronic intrusion of the outside humidity can be a 
problem.   For instance, the schools used to turn their HVAC off in classrooms 
only to have to come in before school opening and clean up the "green powder" 
off of all surfaces!
 
It's not like we can completely get rid of the mold and mildew permanently.  
It's like insects or rats, you know.  We have to exist with it and we always 
will have it.  BUT, if we can control it by not giving it all the things it 
needs to grow and reproduce, then we have it made!
 
http://www.epa.gov/mold/cleanupguidelines.html

Best,
 
Max
 
--- On Thu, 12/10/09, John Sherrer <[email protected]> wrote:


From: John Sherrer <[email protected]>
Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Mold on Wood Paneling
To: [email protected]
Date: Thursday, December 10, 2009, 3:17 PM


  



Hi folks
I have a bedroom in the basement that has no windows, and one wall has mold on 
it. This is a daylight basement, but the room is opposite the windows. The wall 
is wood ppaneling.
Any ideas on how to remove the mold without damaging the wall? What can be done 
to keelp mold from returning?
We do have a dehumidifier set to 60% humidity.

John
http://WhiteCane. org
http://BlindWoodWor ker.com
http://HolyTeaClub. comcom\whitecane
http://anellos. ws

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