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In the first part of the
special report Sick Schools: A National Problem,
Education World news editor Diane Weaver Dunne
describes how environmental conditions in school may
make students sick, yet no federal laws protect
students from exposure to contaminants that pose
potential health risks.
Included: Tips from
the EPA for improving indoor air quality.
Note:
This article is part of a five-part series
originally published in June 2001. Links have been
updated for this reposting of the article.
Ten-year-old Hope Carlson has been
doing her daily schoolwork at home since last winter
-- on her doctor's advice. Though the Windham (N.Y.)
fifth grader had begun the school year in good
health, by last October, her asthma had
significantly worsened. She became lethargic,
developed dark circles under her eyes, complained
about chronic headaches, and no longer wanted to
play with her friends.
"I felt like I was watching her die,"
says Mary Weston, Hope's mother.
Hope's doctor suspected that the
environmental conditions in Hope's classroom might
have been causing her illness -- a condition
referred to as a building-related illness, or
sick-school syndrome.
Hope's classroom was located in an
older addition to the Windham-Ashland-Jewett Central
School. Her symptoms improved soon after she began
studying only at home.
Mary Weston met with school
officials. She strongly advocated closing down the
section of the K-12 school her daughter attended.
School officials responded to her concerns about
indoor air quality and mold contamination by having
the building inspected by the state's department of
health. A state inspection of 13 sections of the
school found three areas with slight to moderate
mold growth. Based on those findings, the state
determined the school did not have a mold problem.
However, Weston countered that the testing was not
an accurate depiction of the environmental
conditions of the classroom, noting that school
staff had filled some of the vents with cement and
removed some of the discolored ceiling tiles.
A subsequent state inspection found
that the classrooms had poor ventilation based on
high carbon dioxide readings. Carbon dioxide by
itself does not make people sick, but it does
indicate inadequate ventilation, the state report
said. Of the 14 carbon dioxide readings, six were
more than twice the recommended level. Carbon
dioxide levels were reduced in some classrooms only
when the windows were opened. But open windows
resulted in a chilly, uncomfortable room, the report
also states.
"My
daughter was going to a school that was not
ventilated, is filthy, and has had a ceiling that
has been leaking for six years," Weston says.
School superintendent Thomas E.
Wolf and the state health risk officer assigned to
evaluate the school did not return calls from
Education World about the school's condition.
Wolf banned Weston from entering
school property after arranging for home tutoring
for Hope. He cited the district's policy governing
public conduct, which lists more than 20 conducts
prohibited on school grounds, as the reason for
banning Weston from school grounds. He did not,
however, specify which rule Weston violated.
In a letter to school parents,
Wolf explained that school officials have contracted
with an industrial cleaning consultant as well as
consultants to conduct further testing of mold,
lead, carbon dioxide, and radon.
Weston's struggle to improve the
environmental conditions of her daughter's classroom
is not unique. Nearly one-fifth of the nation's
population spends its days in school buildings, yet
no federal laws protect students and teachers from
environmental conditions in or near those buildings
that pose potential health risks. In addition, no
federal laws establish indoor air quality or
ventilation standards, guidelines for the use of
pesticides in and outside of classrooms, or
standards for locating new schools near industrial
facilities that emit toxins or on landfills.
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"It is stunning.
Children are at the bottom of the
totem pole. They don't have
political clout," says Claire
Barnett, director of the New York
Healthy Schools Network.
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"Basically, no one is responsible for
sick schools," comments Claire Barnett, director of
the
Healthy Schools Network (HSN), a state-based
advocacy group. "It is stunning. Children are at the
bottom of the totem pole. They don't have political
clout."
Though adults who work in the
private sector enjoy the protection of the
Occupational Safety & Health Administration,
children do not benefit from occupational health and
safety standards, Barnett says. Some states have
adopted OSHA guidelines for pubic employees;
however, OSHA established standards based on
exposure limits for healthy adult males, Barnett
points out. "OSHA has nothing to do with women and
children."
Although no federal indoor air
quality standards protect women and children in
schools, the Environmental Protection Agency does
provide some guidance for schools.
The EPA provides a written
guidebook that schools can use, says Mary Smith,
director of the Indoor Environments Division of the
EPA. The Indoor Air Quality Tools for Schools
guidebook was created in response to a 1995 General
Accounting Office report that found that ventilation
was a problem in many of our nation's schools.
According to Smith, setting
standards for indoor air quality is difficult. "We
do not have a clear sense of what level [of volatile
organic compounds] becomes an issue for health," she
said. Volatile organic compounds, referred to as
VOCs, are characterized as any compounds of carbon,
excluding carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, carbonic
acid, metallic carbides or carbonates, and ammonium
carbonate that participate in atmospheric
photochemical reactions. VOCs are commonly found in
copiers, paints, cleaners, and solvents.
"There is no requirement, federal
standard, or legislation for school ventilation
rates," Smith explains. "It is up to the school
districts." However, voluntary standards are
available that guide the installation of ventilation
systems when new schools are constructed, she adds.
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The Environmental
Protection Agency attributes most
indoor air problems to a variety of
particles and gaseous contaminants
that can be reduced when school
staff follow simple practices. Those
practices include the following:
- Control
pollution sources such as art
supplies and laboratory
activities.
- Control
temperature and humidity.
- Control
moisture.
- Clean up
spills.
- Ventilate
each classroom adequately.
- Perform
regular housekeeping and
maintenance operations.
- Use
integrated pest management, a
method that effectively
eliminates pests while
minimizing the use of
pesticides.
The EPA's
Indoor Air Quality (IAQ) Tools for
Schools Kit can be downloaded
from the EPA's Web site. Or you may
order the kit, which is free to
schools and school districts, by
calling 800-438-4318.
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Article by Diane Weaver Dunne
Education World®
Copyright © 2003 Education World |