Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'mold' Tag

WISH ANN BATES A MERRY CHRISTMAS . . . IN GEORGIA

December 22nd, 2010, 12:01 pm by

Ann Bates told me a story I couldn’t believe until I checked it out.

Bates bought a home in the Pinon Sun Townhomes in 1984. Her new unit started flooding during cloudbursts in 1990.

Every couple years a cloudbust brought a deluge that flooded the ravine behind her building, turned it into a lake with water flowing so fast it sometimes pushed through her basement window and gushed inside, ruining her walls, carpeting and furniture.

It happened repeatedly. But no one could seem to figure out why.

After the fourth incident over a 10-year period, Bates became frustrated and in 2004, she sued her Pinon Sun Homeowners Association as well as a neighboring condominium complex, an apartment complex and a church.

Her experts had identfied the neighbors as the source of the uncontrolled runoff causing all the damage.

After years in court, Bates won a $118,000 settlement. And the insurance company for the townhome and condo HOAs spent $270,000 expanding the stormwater sewer to handle the runoff.

Water pours under a fence from the Pinon Springs Condominiums into a ravine behind buildings of the Pinon Sun Townhomes. Photo courtesy city of Colorado Springs.

The work was completed in April 2009. Guess what happened in July? A cloudburst swamped the ravine and flooded her home again. A neighbor has experienced the same trouble, as well.

During the years the laewsuit dragged on, Bates couldn’t live in her home. It filled with mold that contamined the entire place. She stayed with friends for many months before finally moving in with her sister in Georgia. She still lives there in a rented condo.

The ravine behind Ann Bates' Pinon Sun Townhome unit is turned into a lake by runoff from nearby Picturesque Circle, which funnels the water onto a condo complex, over its tennis courts and past a privacy fence into the ravine. Photo courtesy the city of Colorado Springs.

Bates said her life has been ruined by the townhome, valued by the El Paso County Assessor’s office at $172,000.

 She can’t live in it because it would cost $15,000 to $30,000 to remove the mold. Years of paying attorneys and other bills have left her broke. She can’t afford to fix it. And she wouldn’t anyway because of the ongoing threat of flooding. She can’t sell her unit for obvious reasons and she can’t lease it.

Even worse, Bates said, her HOA is punishing her for suing. She describes HOA leaders as abusive. Most recently, the HOA ripped the deck off the back of her home. HOA president Bob Podunovich said he determined the deck was acting as a dam, flooding Bates’ home and her neighbor’s unit.

Water pours under a fence and into a ravine behind Ann Bates' unit in the Pinon Sun Townhomes. Colorado Springs' water engineer Lisa Ross said the city should raise the curbs or build a berm to prevent water from leaving Picturesque Circle and flooding the ravine. Photo courtesy of the city of Colorado Springs.

City officials and water experts disagree. In fact, city water engineer Lisa Ross said runoff from Picturesque Circle was wrongly drains onto private property of the townhome complex, down the ravine and into Bates’ basement.

The city identified the project as a high priority and had plans to fix it. Until, that is, the city’s stormwater fee ended last January and money for drainage evaporated.

So now Ann sits in Georgia with a townhome she can’t use in Colorado Springs. She fears she’ll never be able to live in it again, or lease it, or sell it.

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MY HOUSE IS SUFFOCATING!

July 29th, 2009, 6:06 pm by

Who knew that houses need to breathe? Not Sally Buckley of Woodland Park.

But she learned that hard lesson when she bought a house in May 2008 and discovered its attic wasn’t properly vented, according to experts who examined the house.

Here is Sally’s little house. Notice the lack of rooftop vents, wind turbines or gable vents. Several soffit vents under the front eaves of the house are not visible in the photos.

moldhousewide

Looking at the rear of the house, below, there are no vents in the garage roof or gable, in the foreground. Nor is there a gable vent on the house although there are three roof vents visible along the roofline as well as various sewer vents and furnace venting.

moldroof

 Besides what the experts say is poor venting, the house suffered mechanical problems including a questionable bathroom exhaust system that had pipes running over 20 feet across the attic to reach vents.

Even worse, the pipes were not insulated. And one was broken off, pumping warm, moist air from the bathrooms directly into the attic. The result was nasty toxic black mold, visible in the photo below.

moldexhaustpipe

 Here are more photos of the mold as it spread into Buckley’s house: 

moldassorted2

 In early stages, the mold looks like simple dirt. Below is some of the mold that remained in Buckley’s windowsills Wednesday as crews worked to safely remove it from the house. 

moldwindowsill1

 Powers Thermal Insulation employee Ben Benavidez wraps insulation along the length of the repaired exhaust pipe Wednesday prior to blowing in new insulation.

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 Here is a closeup of baffles to be placed over soffit vents to ensure proper ventilation.

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Bobby Cotten, general manager of Powers Thermal Insulation, sent his crews to Buckley’s house to remove the mold after builder John Tottleben of Jett Construction Co. declined to help Buckley remove the mold.

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