April 4, 2010 7:34 AM

Feds: Gut U.S. Homes with Chinese Drywall

By
CBSNews
Updated at 11:49 p.m. ET

Thousands of U.S. homes tainted by Chinese drywall should be gutted, according to new guidelines released Friday by the Consumer Product Safety Commission.

The guidelines say electrical wiring, outlets, circuit breakers, fire alarm systems, carbon monoxide alarms, fire sprinklers, gas pipes and drywall need to be removed.

"We want families to tear it all out and rebuild the interior of their homes, and they need to start this to get their lives started all over again," said Inez Tenenbaum, chairwoman of the federal agency charged with making sure consumer products are safe.

The CBS News investigative unit first reported last year about the thousands of Americans forced out of their homes by defective, rotting drywall. But the investigative unit also found that there maybe be problems with American-made drywall.

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?

About 3,000 homeowners, mostly in Florida, Virginia, Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana, have reported problems with the Chinese-made drywall, which was imported in large quantities during the housing boom and after a string of Gulf Coast hurricanes.

The drywall has been linked to corrosion of wiring, air conditioning units, computers, doorknobs and jewelry, along with possible health effects. Tenenbaum said some samples of the Chinese-made product emit 100 times as much hydrogen sulfide as drywall made elsewhere.

The agency continues to investigate possible health effects, but preliminary studies have found a possible link between throat, nose and lung irritation and high levels of hydrogen sulfide gas emitted from the wallboard, coupled with formaldehyde, which is commonly found in new houses.

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., said now the question is who pays to gut the homes.

"The way I see it, homeowners didn't cause this. The manufacturers in China did," Nelson said. "That's why we've got to go after the Chinese government now."

Southern members of Congress have sought to make it easier to sue Chinese manufacturers and to get the Federal Emergency Management Agency to help homeowners pay for costs not covered by insurance. They also say the U.S. needs to pressure the Chinese government, which allegedly ran some of the companies that made defective drywall.

About 2,100 homeowners have filed suit in federal court in New Orleans against Chinese manufacturers and U.S. companies that sold the drywall. U.S. District Judge Eldon Fallon is expected to rule soon in a pivotal case against the Knauf Plasterboard Tianjin Co., the only Chinese company that has responded to U.S. suits.

Separate claims by thousands more homeowners against Chinese manufacturers are pending, said Jordan Chaikin, a Florida lawyer whose firm represents about 1,000 homeowners.

They are "continuing to live in their homes with Chinese drywall, patiently waiting for this thing to be resolved so they can move on with their lives," Chaikin said. "We're not waiting for the government to move quicker than we are in the courts."

In some cases, homebuilders have paid to gut and rewire homes. In others, homeowners who can afford it have paid for the work themselves.

On Friday, Knauf Plasterboard agreed that high hydrogen sulfide levels appeared to be the main concern, but it noted the commission's studies were preliminary and may not reflect conditions inside a home. The company said its studies have shown that drywall should be removed, but that plumbing and wiring do not need to go.

Daniel Becnel, a New Orleans lawyer representing Chinese drywall plaintiffs, including Sean Payton, the head coach of the Super Bowl champion New Orleans Saints, said the government guidelines issued Friday were "word for word what our experts said."

He also said Congress should give homeowners grants to cover the cost of home gutting.

"Get these people out of this environment," he said. "You're making these people sicker and sicker and sicker. You will have long-term effects."

In Cape Coral, Fla., Joyce Dowdy, 71, and her husband Sonny, 63, plan to move out of their $150,000, 1,600-square-foot home while it is gutted to get rid of tainted Chinese drywall.

Joyce Dowdy said she suffers from nose bleeds and her husband has a persistent cough. They blame the drywall.

"We can't live like this anymore," Dowdy said.

They're borrowing money to do the gutting, which means that instead of a mortgage-free retirement they will be paying monthly bills cover the costs of repair.

"It's costing us as much as we paid for the house," Joyce Dowdy said. "But we can't just walk away ... Our house is worth nothing at the moment."

But Randy Noel, past president of the Louisiana Home Builders Association, said the Chinese drywall problem has been exaggerated. He called the new guidelines "overkill."

"Nobody has come up with a house yet that has caught on fire from the Chinese drywall, no one has come up yet with a house that leaks water or gas because of Chinese drywall," he said.

He has examined numerous homes containing Chinese drywall and found minor problems, he said.

"It's a black soot on top of the copper, brass and silver," he said. "You wipe the stuff off and it looks as good as new."

CBS/ AP
Add a Comment See all 30 Comments
by toldyouso21 April 4, 2010 1:48 PM EDT
If the homes and wiring and plumbing are to be gutted--you may as well just build new homes. the interior or finishing of homes comprises about 70% of construction costs--and the cost should not only be borne by the Chinese government but also the US government who were and remain lax in international imports oversight.
Reply to this comment
by ClownsOnLeft_Jokers2Right April 3, 2010 11:10 AM EDT
A whole bunch of homes built in the Southwest during the peak of the boom will need to be torn down very shortly. Most of them were built with with unskilled illegal labor and inferior materials.
Reply to this comment
by JavMD April 3, 2010 6:47 AM EDT
WAIT, this ripped out drywall debris should ALSO be sent back to china for disposal.

AMERICANS... WAKE UP. START BUYING MORE of things truly .. MADE IN USA !!!!
Reply to this comment
by I_am_me1953 April 3, 2010 9:21 AM EDT
You did read the entire articel right?


The problem isn't just with Chinese-made drywall. American-made drywall is also being blamed.
by barbaram99 April 3, 2010 3:01 AM EDT
Is the govt going to pay them homeowners whom they order yer to do this..Well..
Reply to this comment
by K. Daraa April 3, 2010 2:21 AM EDT
We worry about Chineses-made drywall, leather furniture, powedered milk, and a number of other items made with toxic chemicals. Why are US retailers allowed to sell China-origin food products such as the flood of fish products being sold in our supermarkets nationwide? According to the US Food and Drug Administration's "Fish and Fishery Products Hazards and Controls Guidance (21 CFR 123) processors of fish and fishery products are required "...to develop and implement Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP) systems for their operations." Those final regulations were published in the Federal Register on December 18, 1995 and became effective on December 18, 1997. There is literally NO ability of FDA to verify these systems are in place with these products.
Reply to this comment
by guest173 April 3, 2010 1:17 AM EDT
another superfund project. it is kind of alarming how many of those there are if you look at your city on their website, considering they deal with a lot of toxic waste issues...
Reply to this comment
by novamba April 3, 2010 1:15 AM EDT
Do I smell another bailout? I wonder what demografic was affected by this most and what part of this will turn into a government program accordingly?
Reply to this comment
by s0055d April 2, 2010 11:33 PM EDT
Let the greedy importers pay. After all they imported it.
Reply to this comment
by eiddam April 2, 2010 6:55 PM EDT
Remember when the trade talks broke down between China and the Bush administration, and all we heard was about China's exports, for months, everything, and anything was wrong??? --Now since Clinton was in China, and I suppose they didn't agree with her, now we are back to China again. Also- something like when we wanted to invade Iraq, that is all we heard, and now it's Iran. Day in and Day out.-- Revenge!
Reply to this comment
by myopinionpal April 2, 2010 5:52 PM EDT
Thousands of U.S. homes tainted by Chinese drywall should be gutted, according to new guidelines released Friday by the Consumer Product Safety Commission.


Well lets gut our homes of all Chinese products that are sold at Walmart and everyone else.
Reply to this comment
by myopinionpal April 4, 2010 2:18 PM EDT
Correction:

Well lets gut our homes of all Chinese products that are sold at Walmart and everywhere else.
See all 30 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook