Ten Mold Facts for Homeowners, Landlords,
Tenants, and Employers
by Phillip Fry
Homeowners, landlords,
tenants, and employers should use these ten mold facts to cope
with mold in homes, apartments, and workplaces, advises Phillip
Fry, Certified Mold Inspector and author
of the book Do-It-Best-Yourself Mold Prevention, Inspection,
Testing, and Remediation.
1. Airborne mold spores are everywhere both indoors and
outdoors. Resident and employee health is at serious risk if
there are elevated levels of mold spores indoors, as compared
to an outdoor mold control test.
2. The most dangerous indoor molds are Alternaria, Aspergillus,
Chaetomium, Cladosporium, Fusarium, Mucor, Penicillium, and
Stachybotrys. Laboratory analysis is required to identify
specific mold species.
3. Molds spores can cause serious health problems even if the
spores are dead or dormant (inactive while waiting for more
moisture to resume growth). Even the smell of dead or dormant
mold can make some mold-sensitive persons ill.
4. It is impossible to get rid of all mold spores indoors. Some
mold spores will always be present in house dust and floating
in the air.
5. The mold spores will not grow into mold colonies if there is
insufficient moisture. Indoor mold growth can and should be
prevented or controlled by controlling moisture indoors. If
organic materials are wet for more than 24 hours, mold growth
can begin.
6. Mold grows by eating and destroying organic building
materials and other cellulose-based materials such as
carpeting, upholstery, and clothing. The longer that mold
grows, the more mold damage to the building.
7. Cellulose is the main substance in the cell walls of plants
(and thus of wood), and it is used in the manufacture of many
organic building materials such as drywall, plasterboard,
plywood substitutes, and ceiling tiles.
8. Mold can grow hidden and undetected inside wall and ceiling
cavities; beneath wallpaper, paneling, and carpeting; and
inside heating and cooling equipment and ducts, attics, crawl
spaces, and basements.
9. Mold growth is often the result of a structural or
construction defect, or of maintenance neglect, that allows
moisture to enter the building.
10. The owner or employer must first fix the water problem
(roof leak, plumbing leak, high indoor humidity) that enables
the mold to grow. Effective mold remediation requires killing
the mold with an EPA-registered fungicide, removing it, and
treating the cleaned area with an EPA-registered preventive
fungicidal coating.
For more information about mold, visit---
http://www.moldinspector.com
http://www.certifiedmoldinspectors.com
http://www.mold.ph
http://www.moldmart.net
http://www.envirosurf.com
About the author:
Phillip Fry, Certified Mold Inspector and Certified Mold
Remediator, and author of 3 mold books including
Do-It-Best-Yourself Mold Prevention, Inspection, Testing, and
Remediation
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