FEMA-supplied trailers for displaced Gulf Coast residents have been found to...

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May 13, 2002
49,944
47,801
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Seattle
www.socialistworld.net
#1
FEMA-supplied trailers for displaced Gulf Coast residents have been found to emit formaldehyde vapors, causing serious health problems.

Along the Gulf Coast, in the towns and fishing villages from New Orleans to Mobile, survivors of Hurricane Katrina are suffering from a constellation of similar health problems. They wake up wheezing, coughing and gasping for breath. Their eyes burn; their heads ache; they feel tired, lethargic. Nosebleeds are common, as are sinus infections and asthma attacks. Children and seniors are most severely afflicted, but no one is immune.

There’s one other similarity: The people suffering from these illnesses live in trailers supplied by the Federal Emergency Management Administration.

An estimated 275,000 Americans are living in more than 102,000 travel trailers and mobile homes that FEMA purchased after Hurricane Katrina. The price tag for the trailers was more than $2.6 billion, according to FEMA. Despite their cost of about $15,000 each, most are camperlike units, designed for overnight stays. Even if the best materials had been used in their construction—and that is a point of debate—they would not be appropriate for full-time living, according to experts on mobile homes. The interiors are fabricated from composite wood, particle board and other materials that emit formaldehyde, a common but toxic chemical.
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I AM

Some Random Asshole
Apr 25, 2002
21,002
86
48
#2
Yeah, SHERM TRAILERS!!

Seriously though, it doesn't surprise me, but it does make me mad. Too bad this isn't on every major broadcasting network. It should be.
 

phil

Sicc OG
Apr 25, 2002
7,311
27
0
115
#6
hurricane katrina was a year and a half ago. its time these people found adequate housing. what were they supposed to be given? 3 bedroom 2 1/2 bath brick ranch homes set in cozy cul de sacs???
 
Jul 10, 2002
2,180
18
0
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#7
^^^
New construction takes 6-18 months for people with excellent credit, high income, and significant equity (20% of the projects cost in liquid cash)...

These people lost everything and are doing their damndest to rebuild, their entire community has literally been destroyed, they have lost friends and family members, virtually all of their material possesions, and have no one to turn to for assistance...

Maybe they should all just get a job at walmart or Mcdonalds and start over, oh wait a minute, all of the industry has been destroyed as well...

I don't think you can even begin to fathom the devastation that still plagues the region....
 

phil

Sicc OG
Apr 25, 2002
7,311
27
0
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#8
they dont need to stay there. they can go where there is a job to be had or public housing. how widespread is this problem by the way. are there a couple cases or a large portion.
 

HERESY

THE HIDDEN HAND...
Apr 25, 2002
18,326
11,459
113
www.godscalamity.com
www.godscalamity.com
#9
2-0-Sixx said:
FEMA-supplied trailers for displaced Gulf Coast residents have been found to emit formaldehyde vapors, causing serious health problems.

Along the Gulf Coast, in the towns and fishing villages from New Orleans to Mobile, survivors of Hurricane Katrina are suffering from a constellation of similar health problems. They wake up wheezing, coughing and gasping for breath. Their eyes burn; their heads ache; they feel tired, lethargic. Nosebleeds are common, as are sinus infections and asthma attacks. Children and seniors are most severely afflicted, but no one is immune.

There’s one other similarity: The people suffering from these illnesses live in trailers supplied by the Federal Emergency Management Administration.

An estimated 275,000 Americans are living in more than 102,000 travel trailers and mobile homes that FEMA purchased after Hurricane Katrina. The price tag for the trailers was more than $2.6 billion, according to FEMA. Despite their cost of about $15,000 each, most are camperlike units, designed for overnight stays. Even if the best materials had been used in their construction—and that is a point of debate—they would not be appropriate for full-time living, according to experts on mobile homes. The interiors are fabricated from composite wood, particle board and other materials that emit formaldehyde, a common but toxic chemical.
[end excerpt]
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