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Environmental Hazards
Our job as your professional home inspector is to alert you, to the extent
possible, to unknown problems and potential environmental hazards in your current or potential house. Ours is a non-invasive
visual inspection of your property. While we may be able to alert you to possible problems, our basic inspections are no substitutes
for specialized contaminant testing.
LEAD Lead is a highly toxic metal used for many years
in products in and around homes. Lead’s adverse health effects range from behavioral problems and learning disabilities
to seizures and death. Because their bodies are growing quickly, children age 6 and under are at greatest risk. Primary sources
of lead exposure for children are deteriorating lead-based paint, lead-contaminated dust, and lead-contaminated residential
soil. Lead might be present in any home built up until the 1940s. Rarely found in source water, lead can enter tap water through
corrosion of plumbing materials. Homes built before 1986 are more likely to have lead pipes, joints, and solder. New homes
are also at risk: even legally “lead-free” pipes can contain up to 8 percent lead and leave significant amounts
of lead in the water for the first several months after installation. Since the 1980s, EPA and its federal partners have banned
or limited lead used in consumer products, including residential paint. Federal regulations limiting the amount of lead in
paint sold for residential use started in 1978. If your property was built before 1978 or you are considering remodeling,
renovating, or repair, you may wish to think about lead inspection. Water quality can be compromised by such other trace elements
as iron, excess acidity, manganese, calcium, magnesium, mineral salts, hydrogen sulfide, selenium, chromium, arsenic, mercury,
and cadmium.
Excerpts from U.S. Department of Environmental Protection, “Lead in Paint, Dust, and Soil”.
RADON Radon
is a radioactive gaseous element produced in the disintegration of radium, a radioactive metallic element. It cannot be detected
by the senses and can be confirmed only by sophisticated instruments and laboratory tests. The gas enters a house through
pores and cracks in the concrete or through floorboards of poorly ventilated crawlspaces, especially when wet ground allows
the gas to escape easily through the soil and disperse in the atmosphere. Radon is a lung carcinogen: the National Academy
of Sciences estimates radon causes some 15,000 to 22,000 lung cancer deaths annually. The U.S. Surgeon General and the EPA
recommend all houses be tested for radon. Houses with high radon levels can be fixed.
Excerpts from U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, “Indoor Radon”.
WOOD-DESTROYING ORGANISMS/INSECTS Termites,
which play a positive role in recycling wood and plant material, become a problem when they consume structural lumber. Every
year thousands of U.S. housing units require termite treatment. These pests cause serious damage to wooden structures and
posts and can also attack stored food, household furniture, and books. Successful termite management requires special skills,
including a working knowledge of building construction and an understanding of termite biology and identification. In most
cases, it is advisable to hire a professional pest control company for the inspection and control problem.
Wood-boring beetle larvae feed on wood and wood products. Adults of some species bore holes into plaster, plastic,
and soft metals. Many species cause problems when emerging from wood in newly constructed buildings because they leave small
circular or oval exit holes in the wood. To avoid these problems, infested wood must be kiln-fried before being used for lumber.
The species Deathwatch Beetles is primarily found in soft woods (girder, beams, foundation timbers, some types of furniture,
with some species attacking books). False Powderpost female beetles bore a tunnel, or egg gallery, into wood or other materials,
then deposit eggs in pores or cracks within the tunnel. Adults of some species bore through such soft metal as lead and silver,
as well as plaster and other non-wood materials. Affected structural wood should be removed and replaced whenever possible.
Wood Wasps and Horntails. Wood wasp damage in buildings is likely to be more cosmetic than structurally
weakening. Emerging wood wasps can chew through any substance: wallboard or plaster walls, hardwood floors, carpeting, linoleum,
non-ceramic floor tiles, and other interior surfaces.
Carpenter Ants. Several species can damage
wood in building and other structures. Though ants don’t eat wood, they bore into it to make their nests, sometimes
causing serious structural damage. Also, they nest in hollow doors, cracks and crevices, furniture, wall voids, and termite
galleries. New building infestation occurs when land-cleaning in the area disturbs existing native colonies.
Excerpts
from University of California Agriculture & Natural Resources, UCIPMOnline, “Statewide Pest Management Program”.
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