BAY ST. LOUIS, Miss., May 16, 2007

Are FEMA Trailers Making Residents Sick?

CBS News: Homes For Those Displaced By Katrina Can Contain High Toxin Levels

  • Play CBS Video Video People In FEMA Trailers Ill

    The government says 86,000 families are living in FEMA trailers in Katrina's wake. A doctor has noticed a curious link between people getting sick and where they live. Armen Keteyian has more.

  • Video FEMA Trailer Builder's Illness

    Terry Slone, a former employee of Gulf Coast Coach, says he got sick while building trailers for FEMA's Hurricane Katrina recovery effort.

  • Video Katrina: 21 Months Later

    Out of $110 billion in aid from Congress, less than $20 billion has gone to replace homes, schools and hospitals in Katrina-ravaged areas. Where did the rest go? Sharyl Attkisson reports.

    • Angela Orcutt and her son Nicky. The FEMA trailer residents have a host of health problems.

      Angela Orcutt and her son Nicky. The FEMA trailer residents have a host of health problems.  (CBS)

    • FEMA travel trailers at a staging area in Arkansas.

      FEMA travel trailers at a staging area in Arkansas.  (AP)

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  • Blog Primary Source

    Armen Keteyian and his investigative team keep you informed daily on their blog.

  • Special Report Gulf Coast Disaster

    Complete coverage of the effects of Hurricane Katrina on the Gulf Coast, including anniversary coverage.

  • Photo Essay New Orleans Photos

    A gallery of images that illustrate the far-reaching impact of Hurricane Katrina on a major American city

(CBS)  August marks the two-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.

Today the government says 86,000 families are still living in those white FEMA travel trailers across the Gulf - more and more waking up with a host of health problems - tied, medical experts believe, to the place they still call home.

When Hurricane Katrina tore apart homes here in Bay St. Louis, Miss., Angela Orcutt and her young son Nicky found shelter in a FEMA trailer meant for weekend trips.

That trip has now lasted 21 months - something these trailers were never built for. Time has turned them into human Petri dishes - unregulated experiments on the health of thousands still stuck inside.

What were the symptoms?

"Pretty much just the constant coughing,” Angela Orcutt told CBS News chief investigative correspondent Armen Keteyian. “He would just - you could hear it, just in his chest."

Dr. Scott Needle, a pediatrician in Bay St. Louis, was the first to notice Nicky was not alone. Dozens of his patients were suffering from the same symptoms that kept coming back: coughing, burning eyes, nose bleeds, sinus infections.

They had one curious connection.

"Every one of them said, you know, we are living in a FEMA trailer. And not only that, but, you know, little Johnny wasn't having these problems before we moved into that trailer," Needle said.

Trailers with floors and cabinets built with particle board containing the chemical formaldehyde. Under hot, humid conditions, formaldehyde lets off toxic fumes, especially harmful to young lungs.

Blog: FEMA's Documents Tell The Story
Blog: Fumes Felt in Indiana
"It's the long-term carcinogen issue that really concerns me," Needle said.

Terry Sloan was a floor supervisor at a Gulf Stream Coach factory in Etna Green, Ind. Gulf Stream Coach built more than 50,000 stripped-down travel trailers.

Sloane says his crew worked at a breakneck pace for months, which, he says, forced the company to use cheaper wood products.

"Quality suffered dramatically because of the drive and pressure to put these trailers out," Sloan said.

Executives at Gulf Stream Coach declined an on-camera interview. Instead, the company issued this statement saying, in part, "For the FEMA trailers it used components and materials that met or exceeded industry standards."

But there are no federal standards for formaldehyde. The Environmental Protection Agency recommends a workplace exposure limit of .1 parts per million.

Last year the Sierra Club tested 31 travel trailers in Mississippi and found that virtually all - 94 percent - had levels of formaldehyde above that limit.

And CBS News has discovered an internal FEMA document that cites cancer as a potential job hazard for those just inspecting the trailers.

FEMA'S recommendation for fixing the problem? Open the windows and turn on the air conditioner.

David Paulison, FEMA’s administrator, told Keteyian, "I don't know that the trailers are causing" any sickness.

As for Angela Orcutt, she's long suspected something in her home was making her son sick.

So we tested it, using the exact same meter used by FEMA.

Our result read .17. That’s 70 percent higher than what the EPA standard is.

"It's scary," Orcutt said.

© MMVII, CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved
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by rich1620 May 20, 2007 5:13 AM EDT
FEMA IS GIVING AWAY TRAILERS THAT WERE MANUFACTURED WITH "IMPORTED PARTICLE BOARD". This particle board contains super high levels of FORMALDEHYDE. The Bush administration is tired of all the conplaints that these health hazzards are causing FEMA so they are attempting to get them off their inventory. Guess who the luck recipicants are? State and local governments with the police departments requesting the most.
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by michellem99-2009 May 19, 2007 5:25 PM EDT
I live in the west of the Us of A and they showed the TV coverage. A old lady begged for help right on the air. She had diabetes and could not get the medical help. She died. As others did. It was the helpness. I will not judge you but you should the govt.
I haved lived in rental housing that used treated wood and it does make one sick. There are those who have health issues.
They could have a 3 days 3 ways plan but when people have all they could somebody must step upto the plate and be there fot us not overseas giving them aid who are not grateful of America's aid to their nations.There are poor here.
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by phoenix1218 May 18, 2007 2:48 PM EDT
BobEBenson,
I do not think I would go so far as to say "New
Orleans was a dirty, old, drug and crime infested, poluted, corrupt city BEFORE Katrina hit." as you did because there are bad areas of almost every city in this country. BUT you do have a point about the soil and everything that leaked into the soil after Katrina. Have people tested the water and soil? Are people so sure that it is the trailers causing the illnesses and NOT the water/soil? You cannot say you are sure unless water & soil are tested. Have they been? I wonder.
Reply to this comment
by complexities May 18, 2007 2:34 PM EDT
Quoting BobEBenson: "New Orleans was a dirty, old, drug and crime infested, poluted [sic], corrupt city BEFORE Katrina hit."

What a prejudicial and judgmental statement! Let's just paint the entire city and all who inhabited it with the same brush. EVERY city has it's problem areas. But those areas do not define the entire city.

My friend, whom I mentioned in my earlier comment, is a very good person, who readily helps others, is financially sound, and has her PhD. She keeps her house clean, her yard mowed and weed free - as do all of her neighbors. Her house is not tiny; although, it is of older architecture because many of those living in New Orleans have a passion for the character of that style of "old" architecture. Is liking a certain style of architecture a crime?

Before labeling New Orleans, pick up some books on its history, its culture, and then go out and meet the people to learn of their lives and what they've gone through (pre and post Katrina). New Orleans isn't one big blob. It's a city made up of thousands of INDIVIDUALS, each with their own lives, values, financial success (or lack thereof), their own advantages in life, and their own disadvantages they've faced from the moment they were born. Get to truly know the PEOPLE. And maybe you will discover that those who did not receive the advantages that you and I received from birth does not make us superior. And it most certainly does not make those less fortunate be trash that we should just throw away!
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by complexities May 18, 2007 1:36 PM EDT
Thank you, amenar0109!

I have a friend who lives in New Orleans. Her house made it. But the houses of her daughter, parents, sister, sister-in-law, many of her neighbors, friends and extended relatives were ALL destroyed. My friend also lost her mother who died in the floods. Her father and sister were stranded on their rooftop for days.

My friend is back to living in her New Orlean's house, but the loss and devostation everywhere is so overwhelming, she's still having a difficult time trying to absorb it all. Everywhere she goes there is destruction, from houses in ruins to the dead plants and trees to just the ghost town of areas that used to be vibrant and alive with people. She's in her house, but her HOME, as she knew it, is gone. Gone forever.

Depression, suicide and crime have all sky-rocketed. Those who do try to rebuild, are frequently victimized by scam artists who take the money and run. Fiding honest and qualified builders is very difficult because there's more work to be done than builders. Rental prices for the few apartments have also sky-rocketed because there is so much demand.

Jobs are gone. Friends are gone. Stores to shop are gone. Schools are gone. Teachers are gone. Medical services are gone. Entire neighborhoods are gone. The culture is gone. Just to even absorb it all takes time. And then more time to go through the natural steps of grieving the loss of it all.

Rather than cast blame, get off YOUR butt and help these people. They truly need it.
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by bobebenson May 18, 2007 1:18 PM EDT
Someone please help me understand. New
Orleans was a dirty, old, drug and crime infested, poluted, corrupt city BEFORE Katrina hit. Now after all the chemical and petroleum plants were washed into the basin, not to mention all of the houses and stores with detergent, amonia, gasoline, floor wax, bleach, rat poison, oil, solvents, flour, salt, drano, comet,... you get the ieda. WHY would anyone want to live there anyway?? Are you sure that it's the trailers that are making people sick? Has anyone tested the water table?

How would you like to rebuild your home and grow toamtoes in THAT soil?

Just my oppinion.
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by phoenix1218 May 18, 2007 12:47 PM EDT
Sorry, I meant to say I've never sat on rooftops and watched people drown.
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by phoenix1218 May 18, 2007 12:43 PM EDT
resonance360, I've sat on rooftops & see people drown. I've watched my house burn down while only a man pushing 80 tried to do anything by trying to go in my burning home because he thought my sister & I were still inside. I was never put in a stadium, when my home burned we stayed w/family. Where was yours? I'm sure you MUST have family that wasn't devastated by Katrina. Where were they? I was never shot at by police trying to feed my family because I never looted from a store. There are proper ways to feed your family. Whose fault is it that you had no where to go...again I ask where is your family? People lose family members, Some more tragically than others, You're not alone there. I've never been to N.O. I'm sure there are hardworking people who lost much & THOSE are the people (as well as the old & cripple) that deserve to still be in trailers while they wait for the insurance claims to go through. I wouldn't say the damage rivals the Japan bombing because peoples skin was falling off, people were crippled, left barren (no kids), & stuff like that. I don't know anything about the security guards molesting & impregnanting teens...if that's the case why haven'y you brought charges? Don't put that blame on anyone but yourselves....OR the cops who do nothing. If it's cops doing nothing then go above their head & above THAT person until SOMETHING is done to stop it.
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by resonance360 May 18, 2007 11:55 AM EDT

For all those who insist on insulting New Orleans Residents I have a couple of questions

1) Did you sit on your rooftop while helicopters passed by and watch your friends and family drowned in filthy waters?
2) Were you herded into a football stadium with thousands of other people without food or water?
3) Were you shot at by police while trying to get food to feed your family in a drowning city?
4) Were you told to evacuate by a government who, if the cared to look, knew you had no means or other places to go
5) Did you have family members lost... still... two years later
6) Have you been there, to New Orleans, have you seen the destruction that rivals post atomic bomb Japan? Not in the French quarter but the lower ninth where well meaning hard working black people lost houses that had stood fore decades?
7)Did the government threaten to bull dose your house if you didn't fix it but then give you no resources to fix it
8)Were you put in a formaldehyde infused FEMA trailer park where the security guards molest the residents, deal drugs, and impregnate teenagers, for two years with little options?

There are so many more questions but I think (if your mind is open) you get the point.
Don%u2019t be so quick to judge a situation you have never had the horror of living through. Go to New Orleans, to the trailer parks and working class black community, listen to their stories then instead of passing your judgments %u2013 help someone.
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by phoenix1218 May 18, 2007 9:26 AM EDT
solace9,
Your parents actually owned there home so it is understandable why they are still in a trailer. I can only assume the insurance company is giving them a hard time. What a lot of people are talking about is the people who rented. I know it takes a while to make things better after something like Katrina but if you can't find a job then it would stand to reason you go where the jobs are and get one. ralan40 talked about hearing the warnings and living under sea level...people in the New Orleans area knew what they were getting into when they lived there and stayed even after they heard the warnings of Katrina. They shouldn't expect help from the government and should try to help themselves, like your parents are doing by working.
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by solace9 May 18, 2007 4:52 AM EDT
My parents live in Southern Miss, 14 feet ABOVE sea level. Both are high school teachers. They own their gutted out home and remain in a FEMA trailer, paying for a gutted out home they cannot sale and are trying to fix up TO SALE. They work. They fix up. They live in the trailer. They are not trashy money greedy morons. They do not choose alternative 'plans' of just giving it back to the bank. They've just had an unfortunate thing happen, and now they have a plan. Yes 'kind folks', let us understand that each family has its own scenario and realize that one cannot simply bounce back instantly or as easily as others. And some people actually choose to work off this monumentous incurred debt rather than taking the easier bankruptcy route. Thank you FEMA for your help, health problems and all.
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by ralan40 May 17, 2007 11:37 PM EDT
Without critisizing the people who stayed behind, I think the big lesson here is to not count on the government to help you out. For decades, I've heard warnings of impending disaster if a hurricane hit the gulf coast area. We heard warnings about terrorist attacks in the US. yet when these things actually happened everyone acted like it is a big surprise. Helloooo? If you live under sea level in a hurricane prone region, don't acte all shocked when your house is destroyed or stick around expecting the govt to help you out. We must all be aware of the potential of disasters in the areas we live. Imagine what will happen when the big one hits the west coast or Tenn.
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by jfinster10 May 17, 2007 10:11 PM EDT

Send all your medical bills to President Bush.
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by rich1620 May 17, 2007 9:16 PM EDT
%u201CFEMA and GSA SELLING USED FEMA TRAILERS WITHOUT WARNING THE BUYERS OF HIGH LEVELS OF FORMALDEHYDE%u201D.
I bought a 2005 Cavalier built by Gulf Stream from FEMA (through GSA in Atlanta, Ga) last fall. Since I purchased the trailer I have been sick. I have had one reoccurring round with sinus infections, sore throat, irritation of my bronchial tubes, wheezing in my chest, a tickling so far down my throat that it is very difficult to cough hard enough to get the infection up. I have had symptoms of chronic fatigue for about eight months. In March, I was diagnosed with glaucoma (internal eye pressure of 29).
I have told my wife several times that I felt like I was being poisoned or that I had something inside that was slowly killing me. Also, when I awake my t-shirt is soaked from my upper chest up. I change wet t-shirts twice a night.
FEMA and/or GSA are not alerting the public/buyers on their auction site at gsaauctions.gov that the used Cavalier trailers that were mass produced for FEMA by Gulf Streams have dangerous levels of formaldehyde present.
I know that it is in my body or has done permanent damage, because I haven't been in the trailer in about a month and I haven't gotten much better.
Robert Richardson 205-681-5509 rich1620@bellsouth.net



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by lastdance2 May 17, 2007 8:40 PM EDT
RE : gunnerv1

POGO =
The Project On Government Oversight Archives

Research :

POGO Katrina Contracts campaign manager for Bush's 2000 election
Copy and Paste - (Google)

You have been reported :

Lastdance
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by amenar0109 May 17, 2007 8:24 PM EDT
It amazes me how people who have subscribed to a news agency's website could be so incredibly ignorant. And then these ignorant people choose to spread their views like an uninformed viron infecting the rest of their internet.

How many of the people who have commented have been to New Orleans since the Hurricane?

Exactly what jobs do you propose people find in the skeleton of a city that is New Orleans today?

And how would they transport themselves to their job, with the Katrina water laden vehicle that was washed away by the storm?

What about the people who are living in trailers who are handicapped, retired, even blind? What jobs are they supposed to acquire? FEMA's job is to assist the victims of natural disasters. This does include providing housing. If you lost:

Your house
Your job
Your car

And possibly your family, your credit, and countless other parts of your life that cannot be bought with money, how long would it take you to rebuild your life?

I think longer than two years. Have some compassion for your fellow Americans, patriots.
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by phoenix1218 May 17, 2007 7:47 PM EDT
SusanT,

I am going to say somehting many peole on here have been tip toeing around and answer your question as to where we think they should live...They should get off their lazy buts, stop mooching off the government (for crying out oud, it has been almost 2 years), get a job and move into a home. Plain and simple. The only reason they are still in the trialers are either waiting for insurance claims to go through (acceptable reason) OR they are too lazy to get a job and DO something.
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by dylanxxv May 17, 2007 7:43 PM EDT
Uhhhh...So why don't you fools stop sucking on the governments *** and get a house?
In 1975 we (me,wife and 3 kids) had a fire and lost everything but the clothes on our back and the car...We had NO insurance...
It was extremely hard but we sacrificed and a year later we bought another house...Except for the initial week when the Salvation Army helped us with an apartment, we did it on our own...

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by bobnjersey May 17, 2007 7:21 PM EDT
[These homes (trailers)have a very high concentration of formaldehyde and if the trailers had been closed and locked for a period of time the smell and irritation to the eyes is too much to bear. So we just bought a brick home ]

everything's made of brick?
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by proudla May 17, 2007 7:07 PM EDT
SusanT

Amen!!!!
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