STARKE, Fla. -

Starke Elementary School will reopen Tuesday after it was closed in August due to the school having "unacceptable air quality," according to the Bradford County School District.

The school closed on Aug. 23 after Superintendent Chad Farnsworth reviewed a building health report which determined the school had unacceptable air quality.

Students resumed classes at alternate locations on Sept. 3.

"To date we have been able to complete enough of an assessment to identify what we feel are the primary causes of the mold growth," architect Paul Stressing said in a letter to Farnsworth last year. "The contributing factors found appear to be failed or compromised mechanical equipment, automated controls, insufficient outside air ventilation and building pressure, and various breaches in the perimeter building thermal envelope."

READ: Letter from Paul Stressing to Superintendent Chad Farnsworth

"The voids in the thermal envelope appear to be the result of shifting, settlement, and sagging of insulation due to age and expansion and contraction of building materials, which we are still in the process of documenting," Stressing continued. "New automated controls have been ordered and installed on the current 15+ year-old equipment that has been recently repaired until the newly ordered mechanical equipment arrives."

Stressing said the new mechanical equipment would take more than 12 weeks to arrive, therefore making it necessary to both repair the existing aged equipment and add supplemental portable dehumidifiers. Stressing said it was necessary "to accelerate the dry out efforts of some of the interior spaces and bring the interior condition space to a controllable environment that prohibits mold growth."

"Once the new mechanical equipment arrives it will be installed, the ductwork cleaned and or replaced. While waiting for the mechanical equipment the thermal envelope repairs and provisions for equipment accessibility to the mechanical mezzanine will occur," Stressing said. "At the completion of the repair and replacement efforts the interior spaces will receive a top-down cleaning to remove existing mold. Cleaning will be performed by a Florida licensed mold remediation contractor with direction from a mold assessment consultant. Once complete, the buildings will be retested and when found acceptable the buildings will be certified by an independent air quality testing company before allowing student occupancy."

School district officials said the total cost of the project was expected to range from $1.5 million to $2 million. The Bradford County School District allocated $177,100.72 from Fund 360 (Capital Outlay & Debt Service Fund) and $935,990.98 from Fund 370 (Local Capital Outlay Fund) for the project.

See more here:
District worked to fix mold problems

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March 18, 2014 at 1:59 am by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Mold Remediation