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Homes and Cars Related News
Add Yet Another Risk to Smoking in Your Home: No Sale!
Source: American Lung Association Health House Program Published: February 12, 2004
SAINT PAUL, Minnesota -- In spite of a healthy housing market, brokers have had more
difficulty finding buyers for homes and condominiums that smell strongly of
tobacco smoke, according to a Feb. 8, 2004 article in the New York Times. The
American Lung Association, which has been warning people of the health risks of
tobacco for more than 50 years, has heard of this secondary financial risk of
smoking before.
"Potential home buyers may not always be able to
articulate exactly what a 'healthy' house is, but they know an unhealthy
environment when they smell it," said Angie Lien, national Director of the
American Lung Association Health House program, the nonprofit's indoor air
quality program. "Our program has received more attention in real estate trade
publications in recent years than anytime during its 10-year existence. While
some of this can be attributed to heightened public concerns about mold, I
believe there is a greater overall public awareness of indoor air problems in
our homes, and the beginnings of a class of better informed, health-conscious
home buyers."
Stephen R. Klossner, a building consultant in Afton,
Minn., with more than 20 years experience in the indoor air quality field, is
not surprised by the New York Times article's conclusions. "Even smokers are
turned off by the smell of secondhand smoke when they are looking for a new
home," he noted. "Just ask anyone in the smoke and fire cleaning business -
nothing sticks to carpet, walls and furniture like smoke."
Klossner, a
consultant with the American Lung Association Health House program, notes the
recent wave of "killer mold" stories in the news media with some irony. "The
hard data linking human exposure to mold with serious health risks just isn't
there - still, mold gets all the attention," he said."Secondhand tobacco
smoke contains more than 4,000 chemicals, 200 of which are known poisons, and
more than 50 of these are known cancer-causing agents. You tell me which one
you would rather have in your house."
The American Lung Association
Health House program offers a variety of consumer tip sheets and workbooks on
its website, http://www.healthhouse.org. In the
addition to tip sheets on secondhand smoke, the site also has useful
information on radon, mold, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), furnace filters,
cleaning products and other issues pertaining to indoor air in the home. For
more detailed information on the risks of secondhand smoke, visit the American
Lung Association's main website at http://www.lungusa.org.
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