CANADIAN NATIONAL TOXIC MOLD CENTRE

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Sick school syndrome

Teachers are complaining, children are suffering, even Health Canada admits that mould is 'toxic' – but the schools of Lambton Kent District still haven't been able to get anyone to clean up their classrooms

From Saturday's Globe and Mail

PETROLIA, ONT. — The fall of 2005 marked a fresh start for Jackie Pynaert, a veteran teacher beginning a new eighth-grade teaching assignment at Queen Elizabeth II primary school in Petrolia, Ont. Her homeroom was P1, a portable classroom across the hall from two friendly teachers who had a long history with the school.

Still, it wasn't long before Ms. Pynaert, then 42, found herself having a tough time in class.

“I started having flu-like symptoms, chills for two months, and I couldn't shake them,” she said. “I was coughing, wheezing, we're talking coughing until you nearly bring up a lung. I had rashes all over my face.” The students told her that the teacher who had the room before her coughed the same way.

Puzzled, Ms. Pynaert began to dig into building maintenance records. The school where she worked, a one-storey brick building in the Lambton Kent District School Board, had gone through several additions during its 56 years, including one that resulted in a cluster of eight temporary classrooms (one of which was Ms. Pynaert's) being tacked onto the school's west wing to accommodate an influx of students.

Enlarge Image

Seven-year-old Ethan Dickhout, scarred from the lesions that he developed after being exposed to mould, apparently from the school that he attended in Chatham, Ontario. Ethan is with his mother Billie Jo Robertson at her work in the near town of Merlin. (Fernando Morales/The Globe and Mail)

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Ms. Pynaert was horrified by what she learned from the records. As far back as 2002, teachers were reporting “squishy” floors and rotting wood in the portables. In 2004, teachers were complaining about headaches and constant colds. The last teacher in her room went to the emergency room twice with symptoms similar to her own: breathing difficulties, chronic fatigue, headaches, nausea. He also had painful sores in his nose.

When class was out, his symptoms would fade or disappear.

By December of 2005, Ms. Pynaert's lips were swelling when she entered her classroom, pockets of liquid had begun pouching beneath her eyes and a white, filmy fungus was growing on her face. She also coughed “until I sprayed urine. I was losing bladder control. My bladder muscle was giving out.” She couldn't shake the belief that something in the classrooms was making people sick.

Ms. Pynaert is not the first teacher to develop such a hunch. In nearly every province in recent years, educators have raised alarms about strange illnesses they think are caused by mould.

Health Canada says mould is “toxic,” and no amount of it indoors is safe, but there are no laws or policies that require school boards to search out hidden moulds. And because the boards fall under provincial jurisdiction – and the provinces have no official policies on what specific tests should be done by boards to ensure schools are mould-free – how mould complaints are handled by school boards can vary considerably.

Many whistle-blowers have been able to muster enough public pressure – often with the help of intense local media coverage – to force school administrators to deal with the problem.

However, no group of mould-battling teachers has succeeded in creating a strong enough precedent for subsequent sufferers to draw on. Often, when teachers' symptoms disappear, so does the mould issue from public discourse – until the next round of unknowing teachers is struck.

The battle over mould in Lambton Kent, which covers a sprawling rural area with 67 schools, 54 of which house elementary teachers and students, began brewing more than five years ago, when several teachers from across the district independently began making health complaints.

Some had itchy red rashes, constant congestion, phlegm buildup, ear fungus, bloody noses or hives. For others, there was unexplained facial swelling, skin lumps, growths, coughing attacks, bowel problems, stomachaches, searing headaches and chronic fatigue.

THIS ARTICLE CONTAINS 12 PAGES, BUT IS WORTH  READING - To read the entire article, please email us and we will be happy to send you the conplete article.

 

Education minister confident board will solve mould issue

LINDSEY COAD

For: www.theobserver.ca

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- Wednesday, April 04, 2007 @ 09:00

Education Minister Kathleen Wynne says she has confidence in the public board's ability to deal with ongoing mould problems in area schools.

"This is an issue I've heard of. I don't have the details on it. What you're talking about is a local issue and I would really hope that the trustees would be able to work with their communities to make it clear how they are dealing with the repair issue," Wynne told The Observer.

"I have confidence and I expect that the board will be able to deal with their community on this."

Wynne said the Liberals have invested $280 million so boards can basically leverage $4 billion worth of repairs.

"For nearly a decade, school trustees had to defer maintenance because there really wasn't money in their budgets to deal with maintenance issues. They're catching up and every board is doing the best they can to deal with its specific issues. There have been all manner of physical problems in all boards."

Window and furnace replacements are happening and plumbing is being upgraded.

"It's only acceptable to have safe learning environments for our kids," Wynne said when asked if mould in schools is acceptable. "It's the board's responsibility to use that money to make sure that the schools are safe."

 

 

 

Mould returns to school that was cleaned recently; TEACHERS UNION, PUBLIC SCHOOL BOARD AT ODDS OVER TESTING

LINDSEY COAD

For: www.theobserver.ca

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- Wednesday, April 04, 2007 @ 09:00

Parents and teachers are asking for more invasive testing after mould resurfaced at a recently-cleaned Sarnia school. Low concentrations of several moulds were found in Lansdowne Public School's port-a-pac following a cleanup over the March break, said Gayle Stucke, education director at the Lambton Kent District School Board.

"There was one single spore of this more serious mould, stachybotrys," Stucke said, referring to two portable classrooms.

The March test was done during a heavy rain and was inconsistent with testing done a week prior, she said.

Consultants don't believe the spores present a safety concern but are retesting, Stucke said, adding that a second board-hired consultant will test Thursday at the request of parents.

She said staff have asked to teach elsewhere in the school during the retesting.

Trish Bennett was told the drywall in her son's Grade 3 portable had been taken down and rebuilt over the break. Now he's in the gym for class.

"If it was safe, why is it unsafe a week later? We're getting really frustrated."

She supports a call by the Elementary Teachers' Federation of Ontario for a mutually agreed upon third party tester to use thermal imaging versus air quality tests.

Union first vice-president David Clegg said the abatement process was rushed through during the break and left a significant risk.

"It's not simply a matter of fixing it as quickly as you can. The issue is getting it done right. That's the same portable that had the abatement done a year ago earlier."

Nine schools in the district have visible mould, according to tests done by the board last year. Students at five schools have been relocated recently because of mould concerns.

A recent ETFO ad stated that exposure to elevated levels of black mould, or stachybotrys, could potentially cause cancer, learning difficulties and death.

"We got that from several different medical studies. This is information that is available to the public. There's been a significant amount of work done in the United States around it," Clegg said when asked about sources.

ETFO cited the Centre for Integrative Toxicology at Michigan State , the University of Connecticut Health Center and Toronto Public Health as sources for the ad.

Stucke said that's "misinformation" according to the board's best advice from Lambton County's health unit and the Ministry of Labour. "All of those things would say mould  does not cause illness."

She acknowledged that high levels of mould  would aggravate allergies or existing symptoms such as respiratory problems, headaches and rash.

"I'm not minimizing it. It's important that we have safe, healthy learning environments for our kids and our staff. To have a rash, headaches or breathing issues, aggravated by mould, is something we won't accept and we'll remediate, which we've done."

Stucke said the board's Ministry of Labour resources indicate that "if you were to search as avidly as ETFO provincial is directing teachers to do, mould would be found in any school in the province and most every home.

"I believe this media campaign is being driven by a political agenda of ETFO at the provincial level."

Clegg said, "The only agenda we have is the safety and well-being of students and teachers in the schools in which they spend most of their day. It's that simple."

Meanwhile, Brooke Central's port-a-pac will soon be replaced with a year-old unit after unacceptable mould levels were discovered in a storage room and students were relocated as a precaution.

At Tecumseh in Chatham, Jodi Mandeno is teaching her Grade 2s at an alternate location after she developed hives from high penicillium and aspergillus mould spore counts in her regular classroom.

She said the board has responded co-operatively by relocating students and upgrading the ventilation system. "My class and I won't be going back until the spore count is safe," she said.

 

ETFO Home > Media Room > Media Releases > Elementary Teachers and School Board Agree on a Mould Management Plan

http://www.etfo.ca

Elementary Teachers and School Board Agree on a Mould Management Plan

An environmental consultant will be hired to conduct an independent assessment of mould problems in Lambton Kent elementary schools.

The agreement to retain the consultant came about in a mediated settlement between the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario (ETFO) and the Lambton Kent District School Board.

Dr. Om Malik, a highly regarded specialist in the field of environment science, will lead the assessment team. Dr. Malik is Principal of ECOH Management Inc..

“I am sure parents and our members will be pleased with this development,” said ETFO President, David Clegg.  “This agreement is a positive development for all of the Board’s elementary students and staff.”

Gayle Stucke, director of education for the Lambton Kent District School Board, stated: “We are pleased that we have a proactive plan in place to ensure a healthy and safe learning environment for all students and staff.”

The Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario represents more than 70,000 public elementary school teachers and education workers across Ontario, including approximately 850 members working in the 54 elementary schools operated by the Lambton Kent District School Board.

 

Friday August 27, 2007

http://www.exchangemagazine.com/html/newpublic/Q3-week-9-2007.htm

 

Elementary Teachers and School Board Agree on a Mould Management Plan

TORONTO - An environmental consultant will be hired to conduct an independent assessment of mould problems in Lambton Kent elementary schools.

The agreement to retain the consultant came about in a mediated settlement between the Elementary Teachers' Federation of Ontario (ETFO) and the Lambton Kent District School Board.

Dr. Om Malik, a highly regarded specialist in the field of environment science, will lead the assessment team. Dr. Malik is Principal of ECOH Management Inc..

"I am sure parents and our members will be pleased with this development," said ETFO President, David Clegg. "This agreement is a positive development for all of the Board's elementary students and staff."

Gayle Stucke, director of education for the Lambton Kent District School Board, stated: "We are pleased that we have a proactive plan in place to ensure a healthy and safe learning environment for all students and staff."

The Elementary Teachers' Federation of Ontario represents more than 70,000 public elementary school teachers and education workers across Ontario, including approximately 850 members working in the 54 elementary schools operated by the Lambton Kent District School Board.
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES:

Environmental Health Perspectives - "Mycotoxins of Molds & Maladies"  "Providing information on the toxigenic and carcinogenic effects of Aspergillus and an update on research in mycotoxicology." Volume 108, Number 1 January 2000. 

Exceptional site for mycotoxin producing molds.

http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2000/108-1/focus.html