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Kids Getting
Sick from School
FAIRFIELD, Conn., June 5, 2002
(CBS) At McKinley Elementary School in Fairfield, Conn.,
school's out -- not just for summer, but maybe for good, reports CBS
News Correspondent Jim Axelrod.
When a number of teachers and kids reported a rash of unexplained
symptoms, local allergist Dr. John Santilli, put two and two together.
He had testing done for mold in the school.
"They found the typical indoor molds aspergillus, penicillium.
But what they found that was significant was stachibotrys," said
Santilli. "Once we started getting the testing results back it
became obvious that McKinley was not a problem, but a huge
problem."
Santilli estimates some 40 to 60 students and staff got sick from the
mold. Two cases were serious enough to require hospitalization.
According to town selectmen Ken Flatto, the problem started with some
late summer flooding. "When I went in to clean out materials in a closet, the materials
had black mold all over them," said Joellen Lawson. That cleanup took the 23-year teaching veteran out of the classroom
and into the hospital, under the care of Santilli.


"I felt like something was standing
on my chest.
My skin was crawling. I had hives and my face was
puffed up like a pink."
Portland teacher Janis Ingersole

"He said my symptoms -- the respiratory symptoms, the
neurological, the sensory disturbances that I have been suffering for
years were totally consistent with exposure to high levels of
mold," she said.
Santilli says he has a dozen kids and teachers homebound. "I
won't let them go back to school." Stories like Lawson's become even more alarming when one realizes some
14 million American children attend schools with poor environmental
conditions. In the last decade the rate of allergic disease -- like
asthma -- has doubled in the nation's classrooms. Many say that's also
the place to look for the cause.
In Portland, Ore., parents started asking questions when students and
teachers at Whitaker Middle School started complaining of fatigue,
head aches and flu-like symptoms. Said teacher Janis Ingersole, "I felt like something was standing
on my chest. My skin was crawling. I had hives and my face was puffed
up like a pink."
When the school was tested, what was first thought to be radon turned
out to be mold. Leaks from an old, poorly maintained, drainage system
caused flooding. The flooding spawned mold. "How many more teachers have to get sick before people realize
this is a serious public issue?" asks Lawson. She is now pushing
Connecticut legislators to enact new air quality standards in state
classrooms.
"Children should not have to attend school where they are going
to acquire a life-long illness." Joellen Lawson is making the dangers of mold her last lesson -- now
that it's left her unable to teach anything else.
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