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Open Letter: Construction and Renovation in our Schools |
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Do you perceive our nation's schoolhouse environments to be generally
SAFE? It is a common but misguided assumption. A recent U.S.
Government Accounting Office (US GAO) trio of reports found that
our crumbling classrooms need about $112 billion to upgrade them
to good overall condition. Thomas Y. Hobart, Jr., president
of the New York State United Teachers Union, has said: "For
too long, we have regarded schools as safe, clean places to work.
But, today, we know that workers in schools and the students
they serve are subjected to safety and health hazards that threaten
their lives." The World Health Organization estimates that
about 30% of U.S. schools have indoor air quality problems. And
the figure may be even higher for newly constructed or remodeled
facilities. In fact, the building and renovation boom, in school
systems across the country, is backfiring in widespread outbreaks
of building-associated illnesses, which many refer to as THE
SICK SCHOOL SYNDROME. As an environmental health consultant,
specializing in school safety, I am writing to alert everyone
who cares about kids, to look at this issue with a sense of urgency
and commitment.
Renovation can introduce significant new environmental hazards
into the ambient air. If materials are indiscriminately chosen,
if the structure is haphazardly designed, or if precautions are
not taken to isolate the construction area from the occupied portions
of the building, the schoolhouse can become a long-term source
of chemical contamination. The US EPA, in a report entitled "Environmental
Goals for America," to be released at the end of this year,
writes:
"New or renovated buildings can have pollutants up
to 100 times higher than those found outdoors."
This becomes all the more crucial when we learn, that according
to researchers at the University of California at Irvine (Robert
Phalem, director of the Air Pollution Health Effects Laboratory),
children are 6 times more vulnerable to indoor air
contaminants than are adults. In a very real sense then,
a child's health is an ecological mirror or a barometer
of the environment in which s/he functions. In an average
lifespan of 70 years, we breathe some 500 million to one billion
times. The quality of the air our children breathe intimately
affects their personal state of health and vitality.
I have collected more than 2600 case histories of students and
teachers whose health has been compromised because of preventable
schoolhouse exposures. Let me tell you the story of just one 7-year-old,
second grade girl, we will call Kathy, from Pennsylvania. Her
school underwent a major $8 million renovation and demolition
project (asbestos removal, ceiling tile replacement, water leakage
repairs, carpet installation, window replacements, removal of
lead-based paints, upgrading insulation, etc.). During this extensive
work in the occupied elementary school, chunks of concrete fell
into one occupied classroom and a crane boom smashed into another.
Occupants were continually exposed to particulates, dusts, natural
gas leaks, fumes, dislodged molds, solvents and assorted other
volatile organic compounds.
And how did all these exposures affect our little Kathy? She now suffers from asthma, allergic rhinitis and sinusitis. She has had repeated episodes of walking pneumonia. Her Mom says that she looks like an owl with dark circles under her eyes. She exhibits problems with short term memory, an inability to concentrate and "brain fog." She becomes hyperactive after eating certain foods and lethargic on exposure to specific chemicals and molds. This previously happy, healthy and energetic child now appears depressed and cries frequently. Her doctors have diagnosed her with a digestive disorder called "leaky gut syndrome" which causes her to have chronic, extreme stomach pains. They have also said that her immune system has been seriously dysregulated.
Kathy has been out of school since November '96 and is being homeschooled
for 5 hours per week. Her mother reports that at the end of first
grade, Kathy was reading at a second grade level; in second grade
(after just 2 1/2 months of exposure to the renovations), her
reading scores dropped to below Kindergarten level!!!.
Kathy had never received an unsatisfactory grade throughout her
Kindergarten and first grade career. She received four such
grades in only 10 weeks in the second grade, during the renovation.
She just could not function in that toxic environment.
Things are beginning to improve now that she is being homeschooled.
Kathy is not the only victim. A disproportionately large number
of the other students at the school are suddenly having surgery
to remove tonsils, adenoids and to insert ear tubes. Several
teachers have been diagnosed with adult onset asthma and Reactive
Airway Disease. Many of her classmates, and concerned parents
and teachers have signed a petition to protest conditions at the
school, still being renovated. And this scenario is repeated
in school districts across the country. This is a travesty!
A life long legacy of disability and despair is too high a price
to be paid by any youngster in exchange for an education in an
American public school!!! I urge you not to barter the health
of your students and teachers for quick-fix, conventional renovation
techniques. Take the time to study this issue. Safe and effective
schools are predicated on informed choices and decisions,
on environmental risk reduction and source control. I encourage
you to assemble an IAQ Task Force to help design
your renovation plans. We must all work together to provide the
healthiest possible learning environment for our children by eliminating
all chemical obstacles to education. Our future depends on it.
Sincerely,
Irene Wilkenfeld, Pres.
SAFE SCHOOLS