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Recent News on the Keywords, tests + fema + trailers , Related to the Article Below:


The Associated Press
Tests: Chemical in FEMA Trailers in Ark.
The Associated Press - Apr 1, 2008
FEMA had a contractor test some of them to see if they were suitable for storm victims in Arkansas and Tennessee, which were hit by deadly tornadoes on Feb. ...
Formaldehyde Limits Set for FEMA Trailers
Newsinferno.com, NY - Apr 14, 2008
The CDC tests confirmed that the FEMA trailers posed a serious danger to residents still living in them. The average formaldehyde levels found in the toxic ...

The Associated Press
Arkansas Accepting Some FEMA Trailers
The Associated Press - Apr 3, 2008
About 34000 remain occupied, but FEMA has stepped up efforts to move residents. Thousands of unused FEMA mobile homes remain in storage. Tests on 32 of them ...
US Democratic lawmakers blast CDC on FEMA trailers
Reuters - Apr 2, 2008
In February, the CDC reported its tests of 519 trailers provided to Katrina victims by the Federal Emergency Management Agency showed potentially dangerous ...
FEMA Limits Formaldehyde in Trailers
The Associated Press - Apr 11, 2008
Recent tests on 32 trailers set aside for tornado victims in Arkansas showed that three had formaldehyde levels above 77 parts per billion ? considered high ...
Formaldehyde Problems Not Limited to FEMA Trailers
Newsinferno.com, NY - Apr 8, 2008
The tests confirmed that the FEMA trailers pose a serious danger to residents still living in them. The CDC trailer tests revealed average formaldehyde ...
Scientist: CDC Bosses Ignored Warning
The Associated Press - Apr 1, 2008
The CDC said in February that tests on hundreds of occupied FEMA trailers and mobile homes found formaldehyde levels that were, on average, about five times ...
FEMA tests trailers for flood, tornado victims
Arkansas Democrat Gazette, AR - Mar 29, 2008
In the rush after the 2005 storms, FEMA bought the mobile homes and travel trailers direct from the manufacturers as well as off lots around the country. ...
FEMA Trailer Resident Details Health Problems for Lawmakers
Newsinferno.com, NY - Apr 3, 2008
In February, the CDC released preliminary tests of formaldehyde fumes in the FEMA trailers. The tests confirmed that the FEMA trailers pose a serious danger ...
Beebe: Arkansas accepting some FEMA trailers
Pine Bluff Commercial, AR - Apr 3, 2008
Later tests by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found a batch of mobile homes and travel trailers had an average formaldehyde rating of 77 ...
Source: Google News
   
   

Some of the thousands of mobile homes stored for possible use by disaster victims have formaldehyde levels rivaling those of housing already deemed unsafe for victims of 2005 hurricanes on the Gulf Coast, test results show.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency test results, obtained Tuesday by The Associated Press, show that three of 32 mobile homes tested for use in Arkansas had levels high enough to put possible residents at an increased risk of cancer and respiratory illnesses. Above half the homes tested had levels higher than the average home.

One offered to Tennessee tested at levels 16 times higher than the average home.

The more than 7,500 mobile homes are being stored at Hope Municipal Airport. FEMA had a contractor test some of them to see if they were suitable for storm victims in Arkansas and Tennessee, which were hit by deadly tornadoes on Feb. 5.

Arkansas is still deciding whether to accept any FEMA mobile homes; Tennessee has taken 37 but set a formaldehyde limit.

Alexandra Kirin, a FEMA spokeswoman, downplayed the test results Tuesday.

"We'll provide the information to the states and they can make an informed decision," Kirin said. "But I think the levels are secondary to the fact we are providing very full and complete information to the states."

FEMA announced in February that many of the mobile homes it had provided to victims of hurricanes Katrina and Rita had high levels of formaldehyde, and that it was stepping up efforts to tens of thousands of occupants into different housing.

Formaldehyde, a preservative commonly used in building materials, can cause respiratory problems and has been classified as a carcinogen by the International Agency for Research on Cancer and a probable carcinogen by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Hurricane victims have complained of headaches and nosebleeds after living in the homes, and some lawsuits have been filed. About 34,000 mobile homes remain occupied by victims of the 2005 hurricanes, down from a peak of more than 143,000, FEMA says.

There is no federal limit for formaldehyde, but officials in Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Tennessee are discussing whether they should set a uniform standard of what an acceptable level of formaldehyde in emergency housing should be.

Matt DeCample, a spokesman for Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe, said the governor would meet with advisers Wednesday to discuss whether the state should accept any of the mobile homes.

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"Obviously, we want to get some information out to our storm victims as quickly as we can," DeCample said.

Jeremy Heidt, a spokesman for Tennessee Emergency Management Agency, said his state decided to only accept homes that had formaldehyde levels below 40 parts per billion. He said the mobile homes offered by FEMA came from their Selma, Ala., holding site.

The average formaldehyde level in tested homes used by hurricane victims was 77 parts per billion, more than five times the amount in an average modern home.

In Oregon, FEMA shipped 21 mobile homes for those affected by December flooding in the logging community of Vernonia, just northwest of Portland, said Jennifer Bailey, a spokeswoman for Oregon Emergency Management. She said the mobile homes had an average formaldehyde level of 22 parts per billion.

"The formaldehyde levels were so low it just wasn't even an issue," Bailey said.

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Associated Press writer Kristin M. Hall in Nashville, Tenn., contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company


 

 

 

 

 
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