Mold Inspection USA

Mold issues and the litigation involved!!!

Mold issues and the litigation involved!!!

PITTSBURG — Tenants of an apartment complex here are suing their management company over claims that it failed to remove mold that made them sick.

About 30 residents of Portofino Apartments on Loveridge Circle are signing onto a lawsuit, said attorney Bob Levin, against management company Riverstone Residential Group, citing poor living conditions and retaliatory responses to complaints. Levin said he plans to file the suit “within the statutory period,” once he meets with all prospective plaintiffs.

The common thread among the tenants’ complaints is allegations of mold growing on walls, in carpet, and in windowsills and doorjambs. Other complaints include cockroach and rodent infestations, broken heating and air conditioning systems, and faulty smoke detectors.

Residents say their concerns have been ignored, and instead were met with eviction threats.

“I have investigators looking into other aspects of this,” said Levin, who is considering seeking class-action status. “I don’t know how far this thing’s going to go.”

Katie Fleischer, a representative for Riverstone, said the company had no comment.

Trina Henderson, who was the first Portofino resident to contact Levin, said she had been living at the complex for a month when the dizziness, nausea and breathing problems began this spring.

Though she already suffers from an autoimmune disease, Henderson said these symptoms were new. Soon, Henderson found what she believes to be the culprit: black mold around her windowsills, on the ceiling, and spreading into the carpet.

When management told Henderson in writing that they found “no infestation of mold/mildew” in her apartment, Levin arranged a mold inspection that confirmed Henderson’s suspicions: elevated levels of airborne mold, as well as surface mold.

The May 24 report, by Folsom’s Environmental Services, noted leaks from window sills and mold growing at the living room’s sliding glass door.

“The longer we’re staying in here, the sicker we’re getting,” said Henderson, who lived in the unit from February until last week with her 23-year-old son.

Now, other Portofino tenants, including Kim Carlson, have come forward saying they are sick from toxic mold. They say the management company has refused to fix it, and that their complaints have been met with retaliation.

Carlson said her infant grandson became sick after management failed to fix a roof leak, and she began finding mold growing on her walls behind furniture. She said the baby was hospitalized at Children’s Hospital Oakland for two months for a nervous system disorder, and that doctors suspect mold exposure as the cause.

An Environmental Services’ inspection of Carlson’s unit done June 4 found “visible mold growth” in the kitchen, bedrooms, bathrooms and living room.

After notifying management of the situation, Carlson said she was wrongfully evicted from the apartment. Carlson said she would have left on her own but couldn’t afford the expense.

She said she recently lost her job and home to foreclosure, and will be homeless when she leaves Portofino on July 18.

“People don’t care,” Carlson said. “They don’t want to help people like me.”

On www.complaintsboard.com, a former tenant of a Riverstone property in Walnut Creek complains of a similar situation in which he received what he perceived as a wrongful eviction notice after complaining of a mold problem. Internet research also turned up similar consumer complaints about Riverstone properties in Louisiana, North Carolina, Texas and Washington.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, evidence has been found linking indoor mold exposure to respiratory problems in children and adults suffering from other ailments, such as autoimmune disorders and asthma.

According to city, state and county officials, tenants whose landlords won’t address mold infestations have little recourse other than legal action.

Pittsburg building official Curtis Smith, who inspected Henderson’s apartment at her request, said his department’s purview extends mainly to structural and building code issues.

“We just don’t get involved in mold,” Smith said. “We just don’t have the expertise.”

Contra Costa County hazardous materials specialist Melissa Hagen said landlords are responsible for repairing any water leak that causes mold to grow. If landlords aren’t responsive, Hagen said tenants can legally withhold rent to pay for the repairs, or can take them to court.

State Consumer Affairs spokeswoman Kim Brown said that because scientists differ on the health effects of mold exposure, it may be difficult for tenants to prove what has made them ill.

“I would say they had a legal battle ahead of them,” Brown said.

Now that she has moved out, Henderson said she wants to recoup her medical and moving expenses through the lawsuit, and prevent future tenants from having the same problems.

“My main goal,” she said, “is to make them clean these apartments up.”

Dan Rosenstrauch/Staff
Portofino Apartments resident Trina Henderson holds a report this month showing elevated mold levels in her apartment.

Increased exposure to allergenic mold spores.

AUSTIN, Texas, July 12 (UPI)
Lots of rain and lots of summer humidity can increase exposure to allergenic mold spores — an important trigger of allergies, a U.S. allergist says.

Dr. Henry Legere of Greater Austin Allergy in Austin, Texas, says mold can be found inside and outside the home, but mold can be brought inside the home on skin or pets, clothing, shoes or indoor potted plants and once inside it needs only a food source, warm environment and moisture to grow.

Large infestations of mold can usually be seen — black stains or specks of black, white, orange, green and brown on surfaces — or smelled. However, mold can be INVISIBLE.

“Mold spores contain allergens, substances that some immune systems recognize as dangerous,” Legere says in a statement. “Exposure to mold can trigger allergic reactions such as nasal stuffiness, eye irritation, wheezing, coughing and hay fever-like symptoms.”

Mold can be found in basements, crawl spaces, near windows, under sinks, near leaky pipes, heavy vegetation, in piles of leaves and in grass.

BEFORE removal of mold, the most important step is first having the infested area tested, as different species of mold can create different level of mycotoxins, and improper removal or cleaning can cause a chain reaction therefore causing cross contamination throughout the rest of the dwelling.

The first step is to eliminate the moisture or water intrusion. Then have the testing performed to verify species of mold before cleaning, and then have a certified remediation specialist perform the removal following the NY City Remediation Guidelines.

For more information: Please contact me at any time.

Russell Mayeaux (the mold guy)

CMIA

www.toxicblackmoldtesting.com

Office:(337) 786-4664

New Inspection Services in Louisiana

Mold Inspection USA is servicing South, Central and North West Louisiana with our full range of services. All inspections are conducted through the eyes of science. All samples are sent to a Certified Lab.

Louisiana Mold Inspections

Protect your family because they are the most important people in your life!
Before you rent or buy a house be sure to call us for a mold inspection.
Not sure if you have mold or not?
A simple walk through utilizing a State-of-The-Art Thermal Imaging -Only $99.00

Know that your families health
is not at risk!

You can Contact Us anytime at the following numbers:

Office: (337)786-4664

Mold Inspection USA
Translate »
SiteLock