Help on the way for Chinese drywall victims

By Anne Lautzenheiser
St. Tammany News
Published on Monday, June 22, 2009 8:34 AM CDT



An enormous red trash container sits in the driveway of Slidell resident Shawn Macomber’s home, reeking of rotten eggs and littered with pieces of wallboard.

Macomber, a contractor, is filling the container with Chinese drywall. He installed it in his home shortly after he purchased it in 2007, when building materials were still scarce in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. With larger sheets of wallboard in short supply, Macomber went ahead with the Chinese product, readily available in the size he needed.

The material was difficult to work with, and emitted an odd chemical odor.

Slidell resident Shawn Macomber rips out drywall in his 17-month-old son's bedroom. (Staff Photo by Anne Lautzenheiser)

“The salesman told me that gypsum mined in China is yellow, so they bleached it for American markets,” said Macomber. “He said it would dissipate after a while.”

Instead the problem got worse, and earlier this year Macomber, along with countless others around the country learned the drywall was possibly emitting sulfurous gases. He and his family moved out of their Camellia Drive home in April. In May he testified in Baton Rouge at a legislative hearing on Senate Bill 257 introduced by District 6 state Sen. Julie Quinn to address the problem. He was primarily concerned that the language in the bill was too broad.

“It wasn’t specific enough,” he said. “It only referred to ‘substandard building materials,’ but now I believe they’ve changed it to read ‘wallboard made in China’.”

Last week, just a day after federal judges announced that Chinese drywall lawsuits would be consolidated in New Orleans, local legislators met with federal leaders to find monetary assistance for those citizens that have qualified and received Road Home grants and have the toxic substance in their homes.

District 1 state Sen. A.G. Crowe met Tuesday with Louisiana Recovery Authority Executive Paul Rainwater, representatives of the governor’s office and U.S. Senators Mary Landrieu and David Vitter. He requested the meeting last week, after SB 257 stalled and was assigned to the Senate Revenue & Fiscal Affairs committee.

“I’m encouraged by the response of our state and national leaders on this issue,” said Crowe.

“The Louisiana Recovery Authority is meeting with HUD to find a funding source not only for previous Road Home grant recipients but also for those that reached the $150,000 cap as well as those victims that did not apply for LRA grants.”

Quinn’s bill would allow Louisiana residents to collect 100 percent of the damages they incurred due to the defective drywall, along with attorney’s fees, from the manufacturer, distributor or seller of the contaminated product. Currently, homeowners may only collect a percentage of those damages.

Problems with Chinese drywall surfaced early this year, when builders and homeowners along the Gulf Coast and in dozens of other states began to notice unpleasant odors, along with corrosion of refrigerator coils and various other electronic components. It has been tied to a number of health problems, including severe headaches, nosebleeds and respiratory ailments.

The problem has affected hundreds of residents across the Northshore, including New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton.

Payton said Chinese drywall was used in roughly 80 percent of his Mandeville home, built just a few years back. He and his family moved about three weeks ago into a rental home in the same development, and he said they expect to begin tearing out the defective material sometime next week.

“It’s a mess, and the difficult part about it is that it affects so many people that aren’t in a position to move out of their homes,” said Payton. “It affects a lot of people in Florida and Louisiana, anyone who was building after Katrina or the Florida storms.”

Payton said like many others, he and his family would await the litigation, but that it was “good news” that the trial will be held locally in New Orleans.

U.S. District Judge Eldon Fallon will preside over discovery and pretrial hearings. A legal conference was held in New Orleans Thursday for representatives of homeowners, builders, insurance companies and government agencies.

Residents in 33 other states have toxic Chinese drywall in their homes. Congress has set aside $2 million for the Environmental Protection Agency and Consumer Product Safety Commission for testing of the drywall to determine the exact nature of its health and safety issues.

Congress will then use the results of the testing to validate the issuance of funds for the victims assuming the tests are harmful. LRA Executive Director Paul Rainwater says that once funds are identified and secured, channeling the distribution of the money through each parish would be the most effective way of getting residents the help they need.

Crowe said he expects a decision to be reached in the next 10 to 14 days.

As for Macomber, he said while his homeowner’s insurance will not pay for the repairs, he realizes how lucky he is that he did not install the drywall in anyone else’s home.

“Mine was the only house I used it on,” said Macomber. “This would have been a whole lot worse otherwise.”


Comments

6 comment(s)

    Kevin Sparks wrote on Dec 27, 2010 7:45 AM:

    " Has there been anymore information released about the health effects of Chinese Drywall? I posted a comment months back pertaining to my Daughter and her friend across the street (17 years old) both getting Cancer from the same drywall. We were fortunate enough to move from the tainted house three months ago there has ben great improvements with my Daughters Asthma and general overall health. My wife whom was suffering from worsened diabetic comas(reactions)and complexion problems has improved immensley.Thank You Mr.Sparks "

    Kevin Sparks wrote on Oct 16, 2010 2:08 PM:

    " When will the health effects of chinese drywall be addressed. My daughter and her friend next door are in remission from cancer.Both families same neighborhood same drywall "

    Cynthia wrote on Aug 2, 2009 9:32 PM:

    " The defective Chinese drywall debacle has been making news for months now, with homeowners plagued by sulfur fumes that smell like “rotten eggs” and cause air conditioning coils to corrode. Residents complain of sinus and respiratory ailments, eye and skin irritation, persistent runny noses, headaches, and asthma. Some situations were so severe that residents had to vacate their homes. In some cases, victims have been harassed by builders into signing unfair, one-side remediation agreements.

    It seems that the gypsum in drywall, which typically comes from mines, has recently come from a chemical process involving lime or limestone and gas from "

    Horsefly wrote on Jun 23, 2009 8:56 AM:

    " Has anyone even considered the fact that the Chinese did this on purpose. What better way to undermine the people of America by tricking them in to building thier homes with defective dry wall.

    We should hold China responsible for this mess. They are quick to stop the importation of beef if they suspect mad cow disease. We should increase the price of wheat to offset the cost of replacing all this dry wall, and start boycotting all Chinese products until this is fixed.
    Did you know China's demand for gas is raising our price at the pump. "

    Michele Fernandez wrote on Jun 23, 2009 4:23 AM:

    " Thats wonderful for Louisian but what about MIAMI, we have more Chinese Drywall than everybody put together and our local officals are so tight lipped about the problem. Miami Herald wont cover it and local media is afraid to cover it. Wonder why? Well its simple, the Officals ,builders,suppliers etc are all related and or sleeping together. "

    Trent Mueller wrote on Jun 22, 2009 10:45 AM:

    " Good news article on Chinese drywall. There's a laboratory that has a specific 3 part test for determining the good from bad drywall: www . caslab . com/Chinese-Drywall-Testing/ "

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