Drywall Lawsuit in Alabama, Florida & Mississippi
Chinese Drywall Emits Toxic Sulfur Fumes
Americas Watchdog and its Homeowners Consumer Center are expanding their national investigation of imported toxic Chinese drywall into every US state, and every major US metropolitan area. The group has now identified numerous victims in Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, Virginia, Arizona, Ohio, New Jersey, Georgia, Nevada, the Carolinas and Texas. The drywall may have been used in more than 100,000 homes, according to some estimates, including houses rebuilt after Hurricane Katrina.
Alabama Chinese Drywall Lawsuit
Dozens of homeowners in the Southeast have sued builders, suppliers and manufacturers. The Chinese Drywall Lawsuit claims the very walls around them are emitting smelly sulfur compounds that are poisoning their families and rendering their homes uninhabitable.
The Homeowners Consumer Center fears the Chinese dry wall was used in the post Hurricane Katrina metro areas of New Orleans, Texas, Mississippi and Alabama. According to the group, "the imported Chinese drywall is coast to coast, and it is so toxic, that it will corrode air conditioning coils, and electrical wiring. This mentions nothing of the health affects related to exposure."
A federal lawsuit alleges that fly ash residue from Chinese power plants was used in drywall that's the subject of growing scrutiny in Florida.
“Defendants' drywall was made with waste material from scrubbers on coal-fired power plants, also called ‘fly ash.’ These materials can leak in the air and emit one of several sulfur compounds including sulfur dioxide and hydrogen sulfide."
The Homeowners Consumer Center is saying, "we think there is about to be a seismic shift from Florida, to the entire nation and in particular the West Coast. Most people we talk to never realized the problem with their home was the drywall. This is the worst environmental mess we have ever heard of." If you are a homeowner in a new home built since 2001 in any state, that has a rotten egg, or sulphur smell, and you have charred, or black electrical wires." You may have toxic chinese drywall in your home.
At the height of the U.S. housing boom, when building materials were in short supply, American construction companies used millions of pounds of Chinese-made drywall because it was abundant and cheap.
Now that decision is haunting hundreds of homeowners and apartment dwellers who are concerned that the wallboard gives off fumes that can corrode copper pipes, blacken jewelry and silverware, and possibly sicken people.
More Information: How To Tell If Your Home Has Toxic Chinese Drywall
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