Formaldehyde and Indoor Air Quality

FEMA TrailerToday’s news included the story that testing on FEMA-supplied temporary housing trailers in Mississippi and Louisiana has found extremely high levels of formaldehyde in the air, despite earlier reports issued by FEMA indicating that there was no problem.

Tests by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on more than 500 trailers in Louisiana and Mississippi showed formaldehyde levels that were five times higher than levels in a normal house. The levels in some trailers were nearly 40 times what is normal.

The CDC is saying that people living in these trailers “should move out quickly — especially children, the elderly and anyone with asthma or another chronic condition.”

While there is no federal standard limit for non-workplace formaldehyde exposure, formaldehyde is a toxin, an irritant, and a carcinogen. Some formaldehyde is to be expected in almost any instance when wood is present simply because some slight amounts of formaldehyde are naturally present in wood; however, high levels have been associated with eye irritation, breathing irritation and difficulty, and with triggering asthma attacks. The World Health Organization Working Group on Assessment and Monitoring of Exposure to Indoor Air Pollutants has concluded that indoor formaldehyde concentrations of less than 0.06 PPM were of limited or no concern while a “concentration of concern” was above 0.12 PPM.

One occupational health site lists typical formaldehyde levels found in conventional homes at between 0.02-0.095 parts per million, and typical mobile home levels at between 0.1-0.5 parts per million (which falls right in that roughly 5 times higher range that was reported by the CDC).

Reducing formaldehyde levels is one of the goals of LEED measures for improving indoor air quality. Materials used in construction such as OSB (oriented-strand board), fiberglass insulation, and many adhesives all contain formaldehyde and will emit formaldehyde fumes for long periods of time. Because of these concerns, steps should be taken to minimize the use of materials that will offgas formaldehyde indoors. Extensive flushing of the indoor air prior to occupancy can help further reduce exposure to unsafe levels of formaldehyde.

Image Source: Imfrogmation via Wikimedia Commons

More information:

FEMA to Continue Trailer Distribution – Associated Press

FEMA says formaldehyde conclusions are not true – Daily Advertiser, Lafayette LA

A TALE OF TWO CITIES — WITH MOST ON THE OUTSKIRTS

The Buffalo News (Buffalo, NY) December 30, 1993 The Griffin legacy can best be described as a tale of two cities. go to site free grant money

Frank Ciminelli described Griffin as a can-do guy; Bob Rich claims history will treat James Griffin kindly. Both Ciminelli and Rich benefited greatly over the last 16 years. The other tale comes from the “average Joe,” the middle-lower income individual; in other words, the vast majority of the people who live in Buffalo.

Griffin’s policy over the last 16 years was downtown at the expense of everything else. Yes, we built a few buildings downtown. I say “we” because the citizens paid through the nose.

How? Tax abatements, free grant money, low-interest loans, etc. What did we get? Nothing except low-paying jobs, empty offices, no major league team. In other words, nothing.

Our neighborhoods have suffered the most as a result of this philosophy. A few became richer and many became poorer.

Second, the Griffin administration never understood that our children are our most important resource. Griffin has kept the Board of Education in federal court for most of the last 16 years. Griffin had nothing to do with the success of the magnet schools. However, his administration has had a lot to do with the poor condition of our inner-city schools. go to web site free grant money

His commissioners have been found guilty or have been accused of stealing from the Parks Department and the children’s lunch program.

We should guarantee our kids quality housing, recreational facilities and, most importantly, schools.

Third, the Griffin administration failed miserably on the ethical issues, mainly because the administration is racist. People of color and/or not the right ethnic background were left out.

People have become disenfranchised. The result is a disastrous crime rate, especially among our youth.

The Griffin legacy is one of separation and despair. History will not treat James Griffin kindly but fairly. His administration will remain in the ash heap of history, where it belongs.

JOSEPH J. ILLUZZI Buffalo

 

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Comments

  1. Sharon Troy says:

    Oh my. This makes my asthma flare up just reading about it. Thanks for reporting this information.

  2. Tim says:

    Nice piece, Phillip. A good friend of mine from New Orleans wasn’t ‘fortunate’ enough to get a trailer, she was put on a cruise ship! Even though she hated living in those micro-cabins, maybe she was lucky she didn’t get a FEMAldehyde trailer.

  3. Tim says:

    Nice piece, Phillip. A good friend of mine from New Orleans wasn’t ‘fortunate’ enough to get a trailer, she was put on a cruise ship! Even though she hated living in those micro-cabins, maybe she was lucky she didn’t get a FEMAldehyde trailer.

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