November 23, 2009 10:29 PM

Homeowners Charge U.S. Made Toxic Drywall

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  The CBS News investigative unit first reported this spring about the thousands of Americans forced out of their homes by defective, rotting drywall.

Monday, the Consumer Product Safety Commission said it has found what it calls a "strong association" between some Chinese-made drywall and the corrosion of pipes and wires. But there may also be problems with American-made drywall, as CBS News chief investigative correspondent Armen Keteyian reports.

The damage being blamed on defective drywall is ugly: corroded copper coil, electrical wires eaten away and a noxious odor fouling the air. Health complaints range from itchy eyes to headaches and bloody noses to breathing problems.

"If it's doing this to our house, it has to have some effect on our bodies," said Jill Swidler, a Florida homeowner affected by the noxious drywall.

Thousands of homeowners in 32 states have been affected.

"This is devastating," said Sen. Mark Warner, D.-Va. "People are losing their homes; they're being foreclosed upon; they're declaring bankruptcy."

It's believed that "bad" drywall produces corrosive sulfur gasses. The reason remains unclear, but lawmakers and federal authorities have left little doubt who's to blame: China, China, China.

But a CBS News investigation has found problems with defective drywall may reach beyond China and include products made in the United States.

Related:
U.S.: Chinese Drywall, Corrosion Linked
Feds: Chinese Drywall Reports Inconclusive
U.S. Meets with China Over Safety Issues
Insurers: Chinese Drywall? Go Away
CBS News Investigates: Homeowners' Nightmare
Company: We Didn't Make Toxic Drywall
Early Show: Is Your Drywall A Rotting Health Hazard?
See images of defective
drywall and learn more from the Florida Dept. of Health



The Consumer Product Safety Commission has received more than 2,000 complaints to date. The agency recently released details on 44 of them under the heading "imported drywall." But CBS News discovered that 10 of the cases - nearly a quarter - actually involve drywall made in the United States.

That "says we need to be proactive in looking at all drywall," said Inez Tennenbaum, head of the CPSC. "The majority of our complaints has to do with the Chinese drywall - but we are not going to ignore a problem if it's made in America."

In fact, CBS News found a number of families that had to abandon homes built, they claim, with American-made drywall. There were cases in Florida, in Georgia and in South Dakota, where Brandon Gades says his electrical wiring went haywire and his wife was overcome by fumes.

In addition, three separate lawsuits have been filed against American manufacturers: one against National Gypsum, two others against Georgia Pacific, including one by Jill and Michael Swidler.

"We don't have Chinese drywall," Jill Swidler said. "It was made in the United States."

Drywall gained popularity with builders back in the booming 1950s as a way to frame walls - a lighter, cheaper alternative to plaster. Traditionally, drywall was made the white mineral gypsum. In its pure form gypsum emits no gas or odor. Bad drywall, however, is darker.

CBS News wanted to compare American and Chinese drywall, so we purchased random samples of new American-made drywall in six U.S. cities, and new Chinese-made drywall in China. We also collected samples of drywall from five damaged U.S. homes.

We sent everything to the University of Florida to be tested by a team of researchers led by professor Tim Townsend, a scientist and leading expert on the effects of drywall on the environment.

His team spent five months running a multitude of tests on the samples we provided. The results were revealing.

"It's not as black and white as saying the Chinese drywall is bad and all other drywall is good," Townsend said.

As expected, the contaminated Chinese samples gave off high levels of sulfur gases. But all but one of the U.S. samples emitted sulfur gases, as well - not at levels as high as the defective Chinese product, but unexpected.

Perhaps more surprising, "There were some American products that we tested that had higher emission than some of the new Chinese products that we tested," Townsend said.

Nancy Spurlock, communications director for National Gypsum, says all their testing found no problems with their product.

"Domestic wallboard, including National Gypsum, is not a problem," Spurlock said. "There's sulfur gasses everywhere. ... There's sulfur gasses in water. There's sulfur gasses in the air; to the extent they will corrode cooper, no."

Georgia Pacific declined an on-camera request for an interview, citing pending litigation. but a company spokesperson said, "We take customer complaints seriously, and stand behind the quality of our products."

Yet Townsend remains concerned about what could be hidden inside these walls.

"The results tell me that we shouldn't just be focused solely on defective Chinese drywall," he said. "We need to be backing up and looking at the product of drywall itself."

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 54 Comments
by desarm24 November 26, 2009 5:24 PM EST
The interior of drywall consists of calcium sulfate, otherwise known as gypsum or plaster of paris. There are many common anaerobic bacteria that utilize sulfate, in the absence of air and presence of water, as thir oxygen source, converting the sulfate to sulfide.
The interior of drywall is a good anaerobic medium, and if such bacteria are present and the humidity is adequate, the calcium sulphate is converted to calcium sulfide, which reacts with water to produce the gas hydrogen sulfide. This gas corrodes many metals and is also highly poisonous.
If water can be removed from the drywall (perhaps by heating) and an impervious coating applied, this process cannot occur.
Reply to this comment
by Ordflyer November 26, 2009 12:50 AM EST
Are they kidding? The country that makes and exports poison milk (China) and poisonous lead covered toys (China) and executes prisoners to sell their organs (China) is suddenly not the cause of this????????

We should get used to this kind of PROPAGANDA now that CHINA OWNS US!!!
Reply to this comment
by hypnotoad72 November 26, 2009 3:14 PM EST
Ironic. America's corporations that for for "pro-life" political parties use China...

The "pro-life" party in question also no longer treats it as life once the 9 months are over and it slides out...
by Watcher36 November 25, 2009 1:52 PM EST
http://www.gypsum.org/pdf/Gypsum_Association_Comments_on_Chinese_Wallboard_Issue.pdf


In 2007 U.S. gypsum wallboard
manufacturers used approximately
8.3 million short tons of byproduct
gypsum, accounting for approximately
28 percent of all the gypsum
used by members of the
Gypsum Association that year.
Reply to this comment
by dohmz November 25, 2009 1:04 PM EST
After scanning the thread, I would like to add that counterfeiting is rife. Just because drywall has the name of a given company on it, that does not mean that is who made it.

Thanks to a clade of people who apparently think creating lucrative black markets is a really good idea, large parts of America are controlled by criminals, including the retail sector. Therefore, products should be tested AT THE SOURCE when assigning blame -- not at the retail level.
Reply to this comment
by maiingan November 25, 2009 10:40 AM EST
FYI the plural of "gas" is spelled "gases" not "gasses." I know gypsum is a compound containing sulfur already, so what else is in the offending drywall to cause these problems? I see the comment by "porcine_aviator" is very well-educated and informative. How can a consumer tell if some drywall is safe or not, when the choice is being made?
Reply to this comment
by dohmz November 25, 2009 8:33 PM EST
Use plywood! All-American (far as I know), non-toxic, highly durable, re-newable, and (last but not least) I grow pine trees. }:)
by RedWings_ninety_one November 25, 2009 9:46 AM EST
You'll find that all companies make things that don't last very long, so that when it does break or wear out, you'll go back to them and they make more money. That's also one of the reasons that older things like manual vacuums, are better than the currently made products.
Reply to this comment
by oregon10 November 24, 2009 11:36 PM EST
To some of you knuckleheads!

It's not China, Mexico, India ... it's greedy US business owners who are are demanding lower priced goods so they can get a bigger profit margin from people like you and me! Our fellow corporate citizens are the ones tossing us under the bus!

I'm so tired of hearing from ignorant people who think China is strong arming Walmart and Home Desperate into buy their inferior made goods and demanding they sell it to us... REALLY!


Asplooger, they sold you up the river, you need to stop drinking the Kool-Aid and put your big girl panties on and put blame where it really lies - on our own soil!
Reply to this comment
by Overruled1 November 25, 2009 5:30 PM EST
It must be difficult to place the word corporation and citizen in the same sentence.
As I see it, I grade corporations in the US with a bad citizenship score.
They have lobbied congress to remove all those expensive regulations causing these good dependable corporations to earn more with less regulation to worry about.
They never mention the effects we have now been suffering under this "fox watching the henhouse" approach. We have gotten nothing but poisons and defective merchandise from them now in return. I would not be surprised that we have been under attack by China, and have been sickened intentionally....therefore an act of WAR.
by hypnotoad72 November 26, 2009 3:16 PM EST
And when they don't get that, they lay off people, claim big profits, and then wonder why people aren't spending.

Most of us know the corporate sect has the largest share of the blame. "Corporations set the stage for which they blame us on". But if you subcontract subcontractors to get the lowest price...

Corporations made the problems. Let them fix them.
by jxknowles November 24, 2009 1:32 PM EST
We put a new roof on our house with American-made shingles. Within five years, they had all cracked, crumbled and peeled to the point we had to redo the whole thing. The manufacturer gave us a couple hundred dollars to cover the thousands we had to spend for what should have been a twenty year investment. I cannot imagine the pain these homeowners are going through.
Reply to this comment
by asplooger November 24, 2009 7:58 PM EST
Did you buy 20 year shingles. You can buy crap and buy top of the line. If you bought a 20 25 or thirty year shingle the manufacturer will replace the shingles. You must still pay the labor.
by newsworthy8 November 24, 2009 11:18 AM EST
America, always ready to blame someone else..clean up our own crap...
Reply to this comment
by asplooger November 24, 2009 8:00 PM EST
Has been proven China is responsible for the drywall problem. There will always be companies trying to get away with something in this country. Thats why we have codes and rules. Other countries have none.
by sjc_1 November 25, 2009 1:54 PM EST
The builder selected the material and the material company provided it. The liability is clear, no matter who made the product. Go after these people and wipe them out. Make an example of them so NO one tries to pull this crime again.
by rocketjl November 24, 2009 9:48 AM EST
Congress is taxing cigarettes because 'users' are causing higher medical costs. Now that 'dry wall' is doing the same thing, will Congress tax people that owns or live in houses????? I'm sure that we don't really need any answers, because we already know what Congress does.
Reply to this comment
See all 54 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook