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Mold
Problems Grow in Shops, Hotels, Offices
By Ray A. Smith
MOLD HAS BECOME a huge legal and financial problem
for homeowners and insurers, not to mention a significant health
concern. Now it is turning into a big headache at commercial properties-from
apartments to hotels to shopping centers.
Archstone-Smith, a major owner of apartments in 22 states, recently
said it will have to spend close to $20 million to contend with
a mold outbreak at one of its high-rise properties in southeast
Florida.
Hilton Hotels Corp. in July shut one of six towers
that comprise the Hilton Hawaiian Village in Waikiki after investigators
discovered mold. Hilton so far has taken charges totaling $20
million for the cleanup. A spokesman says the 453 guest rooms
in the 25-story tower would remain closed for at least six more
months.
Mold is even affecting big real-estate transactions.
Last summer, a buyer at the last minute abandoned a $30 million
deal to purchase a 250-unit apartment complex in the Southwest
because it had mold, according to Jones Lang LaSalle Inc., a Chicago
real-estate services firm that represented the apartments' owner.
Real-estate attorneys say mold inspections are increasingly becoming
part of the industry's due-diligence process before taking on
a transaction.
The fungal growth, found in damp or wet conditions,
has been blamed for a number of health problems, including breathing
difficulties, headaches, nausea, gastrointestinal ailments, skin
rashes, severe allergic reactions and neurological damage. Mold-related
expenses cost companies that underwrite homeowners' insurance
$1.3 billion in 2001, a number that is expected to grow this year,
says the Insurance Information Institute, a New York-based trade
group. The problem has been most severe in California and Texas.
Insurers and real-estate professionals contend
the recent attention about mold has been stoked in part by trial
lawyers. Jones Lang LaSalle estimates that more than 9,000 claims
of personal injury, property damage or other loss caused by mold
are pending in the nation's courts, and awards for property damage
alone typically range from $200,000 to $400,000. Most of the cases
involve single-family homes.
But the fact that mold problems are creeping
into bigger properties is spooking commercial real-estate owners
and insurers. Some of them fear mold may become an issue as big,
contentious and costly as asbestos.
In August, an Orange County, Calif., mother and
her three children won a $900,000 settlement after claiming that
their mold-infested rental apartment made them sick. The family
won the settlement from the apartment complex's owner, KDF North
Hills of Orange County, as well as a contractor who made repairs
there, the property manager and the former owner, according to
the attorneys for the family. KDF declined to comment.
The owner of a shopping center in Mission Viejo,
Calif., was sued last year by its insurer, which claimed the mold
found at the property wasn't covered under its policy. A judge
sided with the insurer; the owner, the estate of James Campbell,
is appealing that decision.
Robert P. Hartwig, chief economist at the Insurance
Information Institute, says most insurers have reported triple-digit
increases in the frequency of mold-related claims in commercial
buildings over the past year. The cost of these claims is difficult
to quantify, he says, because mold is lumped into categories such
as construction defects or water damage, not broken out separately.
"It's an area of concern because you want
tenants and occupants to be healthy in your buildings, but it's
also one of the drivers for extremely high insurance costs,"
says Roger Platt, senior vice president at the Real Estate Roundtable,
a Washington-based lobbying group whose 200 members include real-estate
owners, developers and managers. "And it's a concern because
there is a rash of litigation. The fact that courts have become
more open to mold-related claims has resulted in a lot more activity
in that area."
Taking their cues from insurers that provide
homeowner coverage, commercial insurers have begun excluding mold
coverage in some of their liability policies when customers renew.
American International Group Inc. began eliminating mold coverage
for commercial real-estate owners within the past 12 months. CNA
Financial Corp.'s CNA Insurance Cos. also started excluding mold
this year in part "because of the change in the legal environment
and in the plaintiff environment," says Dave Toombs, senior
vice president, casualty underwriting. Chubb Corp. is examining
its policy on mold, says a spokesman. Some insurers have even
started excluding mold from their property-damage policies as
well, says the Insurance Information Institute. Previously, mold
claims were allowed when they arose from the accidental discharge
or overflow of water or steam, or due to a windstorm, according
to the Insurance Services Office Inc., a Jersey City, N.J., provider
of statistical data for the property-casualty insurance industry.
Others are considering excluding mold coverage
in their traditional policies but offering it under separate environmental
policies. The cost of such environmental premiums rose 5% to 10%
in 2002, according to insurance broker Marsh, a unit of Marsh
& McLennan Cos. of New York. Insurers expect these premiums
to increase 10% to 15% in 2003, but the increases could expand
over time. "Increases will be nominal until insurance underwriters
begin to pay claims," says Eric T. Schake, a managing director
at Marsh. "When they start to pay claims, increases will
be substantial."
Meanwhile, legislators across the country are
calling for more research into mold. States including California,
Texas, New Jersey, Indiana and Maryland have established task
forces or proposed legislation that will develop guidelines and
regulations on the problem.
Earlier this year, Rep. John Conyers Jr., a Michigan
Democrat, introduced a bill that calls for standardized licensing
of mold remediators and inspectors as well as joint research between
the Environmental Protection Agency, the National Institutes of
Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to set
standards on acceptable levels of mold. The bill also calls for
a federal toxic mold insurance program and a tax credit for anyone
who wants his home, apartment or business inspected. A similar
bill is scheduled to be introduced in the Senate in January.
The CDC, meanwhile, commissioned the Institute
of Medicine, a division of the National Academy of Sciences, to
study the health effects from exposure to mold in damp indoor
spaces. The study began in January and is expected to be completed
late summer or early fall of next year, says Stephen Redd, the
chief of the air pollution and respiratory health branch of the
CDC's National Center for Environmental Health.
In the meantime, some building owners and managers
say they have been increasing the frequency of building inspections
for mold. Industry groups and trade associations ranging from
the Building Owners and Managers Association International to
the National Multi Housing Council have been supplying their members,
with guidelines and question-and-answer fact sheets, and hosting
symposiums with health and environmental experts.
Boston law firm Mintz Levin Cohn Ferris Glovsky
and Popeo PC recently held two symposiums on mold for real-estate
professionals. "There's confusion and fear" in the commercial
real-estate industry, says Jeffrey R. Porter, manager of Mintz
Levin's environmental law section. "The real-estate community
is most concerned that they might be subject to lawsuits. whether
they have merits or not that will result in the incurrence of
a lot of defense costs that weren't anticipated."
©
Copyright Wall Street Journal
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