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US: FEMA trailers caused at least 17,000 illnesses among Katrina
survivors
By Naomi Spencer
9 June 2008
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Approaching three years since the devastation of the US Gulf
Coast by Hurricane Katrina, a public health nightmare continues
for thousands of survivors who were housed in government-supplied
trailers.
Many of the 300,000 residents who were relocated into housing
provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) have
developed serious respiratory problems because of excessive levels
of the industrial chemical and known carcinogen formaldehyde,
according to a report by Spencer Hsu published May 25 in the Washington
Post.
Some of the most seriously affected are infants and children,
who have developed chronic asthma and require lifelong medical
care. The cancer rates will not be known for at least a decade,
according to health experts.
While workplace exposure levels are regulated and the health
risks associated with high levels are well known, there are no
federal regulations on the level of formaldehyde in building materials.
The chemical is emitted from glues and sealants used in construction
materials such as particleboard, plywood, paneling, and laminated
surfaces common in low-end housing units. Formaldehyde is released
at the highest levels during warm weather and from newly constructed
units.
The Washington Post noted that tests of many FEMA trailers
revealed formaldehyde levels drastically exceeding the Environmental
Protection Agency and National Institute for Occupational Safety
and Healths (NIOSH) 15-minute workplace exposure limit of
100 parts per billion. This is the limit at which serious adverse
health symptoms begin to appear, and California state health regulators
estimate long-term exposure at this level raises cancer risk by
50 cases per 100,000.
More than four in five FEMA trailers tested by the environmental
group the Sierra Club exceeded this limit in 2006. Sierra Club
testers said formaldehyde concentrations were between 10 and 100
times higher in the trailers than in the worst smog conditions
in Los Angeles.
The Sierra Club conducted another round of tests in April 2007
and found formaldehyde concentrations of more than 100 parts per
billion in fully 96 percent of FEMA trailers. FEMA dismissed these
tests and took counter-samples for its own tests from unoccupied
trailers that were aired out for days in advance.
Testing by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found
levels exceeding 100 parts per billion in 41 percent of the units
it had tested in December and January; the average level was 77
parts per billion, and as high as 590 ppb. The CDC warned that
because of the cold weather the results understated levels.
Citing chronic breathing disorders, dozens of deaths, mouth
and nasal tumors, and cases of cancer, 17,000 Katrina survivors
filed a class-action lawsuit against the federal government and
64 manufacturers of the emergency housing units. Many of the plaintiffs
in the present case, victims of government negligence on multiple
levels, were among those who unsuccessfully filed claims against
the federal Army Corps of Engineers over the levee failures that
resulted in the catastrophic flooding of New Orleans.
In the past month, FEMA has moved to vacate all the remaining
trailers. On June 1 the agency sent out deadline notices for the
24,600 residents still living in emergency units without proposing
housing alternatives.
The problems with the trailers were long known by the federal
government. Residents in the trailer park camps set up throughout
Louisiana and Mississippi filed complaints over severe headaches,
nosebleeds, and breathing difficulties in the months after they
were relocated, but FEMA declined to systematically test the units.
After one resident, a pregnant mother with a young infant,
complained repeatedly of conditions in her trailer, FEMA found
formaldehyde levels 75 times the NIOSH maximum workplace exposure
level. Yet, the agency did not widen its investigation or even
issue a public advisory about the problem. In fact, FEMA continued
auctioning off thousands of unoccupied emergency trailers on the
commercial housing market, and systematically suppressed findings
of toxicity in anticipation of litigation.
FEMA ordered the trailers for some $2.7 billion dollars as
Katrina approached the Gulf Coast in 2005. At the time, manufacturers
were hastily given specifications, which the Post said
were spelled out in just 25 lines with little stipulation for
safety standards. FEMA bought 54,000 trailers and mobile homes
using a single page of specifications for $1.4 billion. According
to the paper, the agency paid another billion dollars to produce
76,800 trailers with eight pages of specifications, but again
there was no mention of formaldehyde, and very limited safety
standards.
Joseph Hagerman, a scientist with the Federation of American
Scientists involved in a government project to develop new emergency
housing, commented to the paper: I still cant believe
that we bought a billion dollars worth of product with a
25-line spec. Theres not much you can do in 25 lines to
protect life safety. Theres over 20,000 parts in these homes.
Two companies responsible for producing tens of thousands of
trailers for FEMA, Fleetwood and Gulf Stream, have insisted they
used only higher-quality, low-emitting wood products.
The Washington Post quoted a letter to congressional investigators
from lawyers from Gulf Stream saying the company mostly
met a longstanding policy to buy components that comply
with mobile home standards, but it acknowledged exceptions
and that Gulf Stream did not conduct any testing on components
or parts.
Manufacturers of trailer components suggested that unregulated
Chinese imports, some of which was said to reek of formaldehyde,
were to blame. According to the Hardwood Plywood & Veneer
Association, the North American market share of Chinese imports
ballooned from 4 to 40 percent since 2001 because of the housing
construction boom in the US.
Robert Feldman, a spokesperson for the Recreation Vehicle Industry
Associationthe trailer manufacturers trade groupabsurdly
suggested to the Post that formaldehyde levels in the trailers
had nothing to do with illness among the evacuee population occupying
them, and that more likely aggravators were mold, Katrina-related
chemical spills, smoking or local climate factors. There
may be a rush to conclude formaldehyde is the issue when in fact
the results seem to suggest the answer is a little more complex,
he said.
In a seemingly unwitting acknowledgment of the dangers of prolonged
formaldehyde exposure and its ubiquitous presence in mobile home
fabrication, a spokeswoman for Fleetwood commented to the paper,
You know, when something hasnt been a problem, you
often dont suddenly consider that it will be. I dont
believe that anybody expected these people to stay in the trailers
as long as people have stayed in them.
The vague government specifications were for all intents and
purposes a blank check for the industry to produce units without
regard to human health. There can be little doubt that after receiving
government orders, manufacturers sped up production and widened
their profit margins by using substandard materials and cutting
corners on safety. But in a broader sense, the extremely high
percentage of trailers found in tests to have excessive formaldehyde
levels suggest that the toxicity in the FEMA units are less an
industry exception than a rule.
Manufacturers of trailers are not held to many of the basic
safety standards required of home manufacturers because they are
classified as vehicles and, as the Post notes, the industry
insists that they are not intended to be used for more than a
few days at a time, a few times a year. In reality, however, millions
of poor families buy or rent trailers around the country because
they cannot afford anything safer or more durable.
In one sense, the public health catastrophe now unfolding among
the post-Katrina population is a concentrated expression of the
plight of the poorest sections of the working class throughout
the country, who live in substandard housing, suffer higher exposure
to pollutants and toxins in their home and work environments,
develop cancer at higher rates, are rebuffed by the courts, refused
compensation and medical aid for illnesses, and die younger of
preventable ailments. In innumerable instances they are victims
of industry and a government incapable and unwilling to regulate
it.
As CDC toxicology assistant director Christopher De Rosa commented
to the Associated Press May 27, Its tragic that when
people most need the protection, they are actually going from
one disaster to a health disaster that might be considered worse.
See Also:
Student volunteers
and the Katrina recovery: Some reflections after visiting New
Orleans
[19 November 2007]
Bush visits New Orleans
on Katrina anniversary: returning to the scene of the crime
[30 August 2007]
US: FEMA slashes emergency
assistance for future disaster victims
Family payments to be cut from $2
[28 July 2006]
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