Drywall from China blamed for problems in homes
http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/housing/2009-03-16-chinese-drywall-sulfur_N.htm

Karin Vickers, 45, bought her Homestead, Fla., house in 2006. S

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Enlarge image
  Enlarge By Allison Diaz for USA TODAY

Karin Vickers, 45, bought her Homestead, Fla., 
house in 2006. She fears issues with tainted 
drywall have hurt her home's value.

By 
<http://www.usatoday.com/community/tags/reporter.aspx?id=335>Julie 
Schmit, USA TODAY
Real estate agent Felix Martinez thought he'd 
found his dream house when he bought the 
3,500-square-foot beauty in Homestead, Fla., two years ago.

Then, he says, his large-screen TV mysteriously 
failed. Next, the air conditioner went. His bath 
towels smelled like rotten eggs. Visitors noted 
an odor in the house. Martinez says he's suffered 
new sinus problems and sleep apnea. His wife and son sneeze a lot.

The walls in the home, a recently filed 
class-action lawsuit alleges, were built with the 
same kind of Chinese-made drywall that tests have 
shown emit sulfur gases that corrode copper coils 
and electrical and plumbing components.

Similar problems have been linked to hundreds of 
Florida homes. Tens of thousands of homes there 
and in other states could be affected, say 
lawyers who have filed lawsuits on behalf of 
Florida homeowners. The discovery has created a 
firestorm that's engulfed an international 
building supplier, large and small home builders 
and dozens of subcontractors. The issue also has 
revived concerns about quality-control procedures 
of U.S. companies that use Chinese-made products, 
following episodes in recent years involving 
contaminated toothpaste and pet-food ingredients, 
lead-tainted toys and defective tires imported from China.

A leading U.S. home builder, Lennar, and a 
Chinese drywall manufacturer, Knauf Plasterboard 
Tianjin, say tests show the gases given off by 
the drywall pose no health hazards. Florida 
regulators and the federal Consumer Product 
Safety Commission are investigating.

Lawyers say far more testing needs to be done.

"If it can put holes in metal coils, how do we 
know it doesn't cause problems in children or 
adults?" asks attorney Jeremy Alters of 
Florida-based law firm Alters Boldt Brown Rash 
Culmo. Alters says he has clients who developed 
respiratory ailments "out of the blue" after 
moving into allegedly affected homes.

Knauf says Chinese drywall imports started in 
significant amounts in 2005 as a result of a 
shortage driven by the booming housing market and 
rebuilding after Hurricanes Katrina and Wilma.

In addition to lawsuits on behalf of Florida 
homeowners, a class-action lawsuit was recently 
filed by an Alabama home builder that has made 
air conditioning repairs on two dozen Alabama 
homes, says attorney Steven Nicholas. A 
class-action lawsuit has also been filed on behalf of Louisiana homeowners.

Lawyers say they're investigating more complaints in other states and Florida.

"We know for a fact that this product is in 
Virginia, Louisiana and California," says Charles 
LaDuca, of Washington, D.C.-based law firm Cuneo 
Gilbert & LaDuca. "The breadth of the problem is just unfolding."

Investigations began in 2004

So far, Florida is ground zero. Up to 1,000 homes 
in the southern part of the state may be 
affected, says Jack Snider, president of American 
Management Resources Corp. (AMRC). Working for 
homeowners and builders, the environmental 
consulting firm has tested drywall for gases and 
checked homes for odors and corrosion.

AMRC first began investigating odor complaints in 
2004 and found drywall to be the cause. Because 
most drywall doesn't identify its origin, Snyder 
says, it took until 2006 before foreign-made drywall became the focus.

Homeowner lawsuits allege that the drywall has 
corroded air conditioning and refrigerator coils, 
microwaves, computer wiring, faucets and copper tubing.

Tests paid for by Lennar say the drywall appears 
to emit sulfur gases that can damage air 
conditioning coils, electrical plumbing components and other material.

In one test, copper pipe turned black after four 
weeks when placed in a sealed container with a 
piece of affected drywall, according to a lawsuit 
filed Jan. 30 by Lennar against Knauf Gips of 
Germany and its Chinese affiliate, Knauf 
Plasterboard Tianjin, and others. The pipe then 
started to corrode, Lennar says.

Lennar alleges that Knauf produced "defective" 
drywall. It also says subcontractors put it in 
homes without Lennar's knowledge. Lennar has said 
it has more than 80 affected homes in Florida and 
dozens more under review. It is relocating 
residents while it installs new drywall in homes.

"Lennar stands alongside its homeowners as a victim," its lawsuit says.

Plaintiffs' attorneys say residents have suffered 
a host of health issues, including rashes, new 
allergies, asthma and sore throats. Along with 
receiving compensation, they should be monitored 
long-term for health issues, says attorney Ervin 
Gonzalez of Colson Hicks Eidson. "This has been 
an economic, physical and emotional problem for 
victims," he says. Based on import records, he 
estimates that up to 60,000 U.S. homes may be 
affected, with about half in Florida.

Testing air

Drywall is made from gypsum, a mineral. 
Manufacturers also make synthetic gypsum by 
processing residues produced by coal-burning power plants.

Normally, drywall doesn't smell or emit sulfur 
gases, says Nancy Spurlock, a spokeswoman for 
National Gypsum. It doesn't import drywall or ingredients from China, she says.

Lennar, which refused interview requests, says it 
discovered the issue after noticing frequent air 
conditioning problems in homes.

Its consulting firm, Environ International, 
tested air in 79 affected Florida homes late last 
year and found sulfur compounds at levels well 
within health and safety limits or on par with outdoor air.

Knauf's testing firm, the Center for Toxicology 
and Environmental Health in Arkansas, recently 
tested 20 Florida homes with discolored wiring.

It found results similar to Environ's, says 
toxicologist Phillip Goad, who oversaw his firm's 
testing. Levels of carbonyl sulfide were in the 
range of salt marsh air. Exposure to carbon 
disulfide were well within safety levels set by 
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.

At higher concentrations than found in the homes, 
carbonyl sulfide can irritate eyes and the 
respiratory system, and have other effects, says 
Goad. Carbon disulfide can produce symptoms 
including irritated eyes, headaches and fatigue.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission dispatched 
staffers to Florida late last month to 
investigate and will do health hazard testing, says spokesman Joe Martyak.

The Florida Department of Health is also testing. 
Its website says it has not "identified data 
suggesting an imminent or chronic health hazard at this time."

In January, the state inspected 12 homes built 
from 2004 through 2008 to assess possible health 
hazards and set up more sensitive testing 
protocols. Results are pending, it says.

Mine was changed in 2006

Knauf says odor complaints about its Chinese 
drywall surfaced in 2006. Its investigation 
determined that the drywall smelled like drywall 
made from natural gypsum in China. The drywall 
from one China mine used by Knauf contained iron 
disulfide, a naturally occurring mineral. That 
would account for the smell, Goad says.

Knauf says it stopped using the mine ­ which 
other manufacturers also used ­ in late 2006 
after the issues arose. It says it's being 
"unfairly" tainted because it labels its imported 
drywall from China while others do not.

Knauf says it was responsible for just 20% of the 
Chinese drywall that came to the U.S. in 2006. It 
also says that Lennar has identified homes with 
odor and copper issues that included non-Knauf drywall.

Consultant Snider, too, says that other drywall 
makers "have not been as noticed as Knauf."

Lennar and Taylor Morrison, a home builder based 
in Arizona with a dozen affected Florida homes, 
say they're absorbing the expenses of relocating 
residents for the several months it can take to repair affected homes.

Lennar says it used the Chinese-made drywall in a 
small percentage of Florida homes built from 
November 2005 through November 2006. It's not 
being used in new homes, it says. Lennar and 
Taylor, both of which build homes outside of 
Florida, say they're not aware of homes outside of Florida being affected.

South Kendall Construction of Florida built 
Martinez's home. The company is still assessing 
the situation, according to its attorney, Kieran 
Fallon. It has tested several dozen Florida homes 
and expects about 50 to have problems, he says.

Martinez says he can't afford to rent another 
place while South Kendall figures out what to do. 
"We're caught between a rock and a hard place," he says.

Karin Vickers, a 45-year-old certified public 
accountant, is in the same situation.

She bought her Homestead, Fla., home across the 
street from Martinez, also in 2006, for $485,000. 
"I love the house," she says. But the air 
conditioning didn't work properly and was just 
replaced. Her TV also failed after a year. Her 
wall sockets turned black, and her bathroom 
smells like burned matches, she says.

Even if her house is repaired, she worries that issues could crop up again.

The real estate crash has knocked her home's 
value down about one-third, Vickers estimates. 
"It's dropped more now because of this," she says.


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