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DANGER:
Agents in Maine examine
chemicals believed to have been used to make meth.
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States confront meth-lab threat to environment
Do-it-yourself labs can turn homes into hazmat zones. Some US
states have enacted laws to address the risks.
By Ben Arnoldy | Staff writer of The Christian Science
Monitor
BOSTON
Hotel rooms, apartment complexes, and homes aren't your
typical toxic waste sites. But then, methamphetamine isn't your
typical drug.
The drug - which makers often cook up in their kitchens using
household chemicals and tools - is potent enough to transform
homes into hazmat zones. When law officers bust a meth lab, the
drugmaking materials are carted away. But what happens next to
such former sites - numbering more than 100,000 across the
country - varies dramatically.
Some states, led by Colorado, have enacted tough regulations
that require former lab sites to undergo a formal safety
assessment - and more cleanup, if needed - before they can be
reinhabited. The laws are prompted by the extreme toxicity of
the chemicals used to cook meth, and suspicions about the
long-term effects of chemical remnants in the air and on
surfaces. Other states mandate home sellers to disclose the
presence of former meth labs.
The patchwork of state approaches reflects the uneven spread
of the drug, the potential costs of cleanup, and concerns about
setting safety standards in the absence of definitive scientific
research, experts say.
"Until we fully understand what the potential health effects
can be, we feel that it's better that states are more proactive
as opposed to reactive," says Shawn Arbuckle with the National
Jewish Medical and Research Center in Denver. Better safe than
sorry, he adds.
Cooking meth just once contaminates a building with traces of
acids and iodine in the air, as well as large amounts of meth on
surfaces ranging from sofas to ventilation ducts, according to
research done at National Jewish. Hydrochloric acid is an
irritant to the eyes, skin, and respiratory tract, and iodine
can trigger asthmatic reactions, says Mr. Arbuckle.
Business contractors have sprung up to assess and
decontaminate former meth labs. Basic cleanup involves hauling
away carpets, furniture, drapes, and other items that can absorb
airborne particles. Then all surfaces are thoroughly cleaned,
including ceilings and walls. Sometimes dry wall must be
replaced.
Meth Lab Cleanup Co., based in Texas, charges about $300 to
$500 for a consultation, assessment, and site sampling. Basic
decontamination costs from $4,000 to $6,000 for a modest home.
But expenses can quickly skyrocket when further work is
required.
Joseph Mazzuca, the company's operation director, says cooks
sometimes disconnect stove vents to prevent neighbors from
smelling suspicious fumes. Instead the vent pipe is stuffed into
the insulation, creating a bigger mess. He's also had to move a
home to remove topsoil contaminated by dumped chemicals. While
he has yet to see a well contaminated by dumping, he has seen
PVC piping melted away.
Three-quarters of his calls are to sites that never involved
law enforcement, suggesting there are many labs beyond the
100,000 reported to the Drug Enforcement Agency since 1998.
"Our estimate is that there are about a million and a half
meth labs in America, and less than 1 percent of them have been
decontaminated," he says.
He's noticed other disturbing trends. He sees children's
clothing or toys at most sites. And 75 percent of labs are
rentals. "Typically landlords, especially on the bad side of
town, don't worry about [cleanup] so much unless there's a law,"
he says.
Increasingly, states are addressing that, particularly those
that have dealt with the problem the longest, such as in the
Midwest and West. Colorado has been at the forefront, forcing
property owners not only to have the mess cleaned up but to
adhere to a very specific set of procedures and testing
requirements.
Northeastern states - which have yet to see high numbers of
home labs (see map, page 2) - have been slower to adopt new
laws.
Connecticut released a new set of nonbinding guidelines
following a bust last year of two labs in East Hampton. After
federal authorities came and went, the landlord of one of the
properties, a small ranch house on a wooded road, began his own
cleanup. He then sold the home, according to a local public
health official and a former resident, without notifying the
health department or telling the buyer beforehand of the
existence of the former lab. (The attorney involved in the sale
declined to comment, and neither the current owner nor the
selling landowner could be reached.)
Connecticut still does not compel an owner to decontaminate
except in serious cases, and property sellers still are not
required to disclose former meth labs - a requirement now in 14
states.
"There is not uniformity across all of the states, and
frequently people look to the federal government to step in at
that point [to put] out something that can serve as a standard
for all states to at least consider," says Kevin Teichman, a
scientist with the Environmental Protection Agency.
The EPA aims to offer standards by 2011 tied to demonstrated
health risks. Arbuckle says that determining what is a healthy
level of exposure over a long period of time will require more
research - something Mr. Teichman says the agency is pushing.
Federal money is also going to assessments and cleanups. The
EPA has revised its definition of brownfields to include former
meth labs, though grants can go only to groups such as nonprofit
organizations, not homeowners. The DEA offers free training and
equipment to first responders and shoulders much of the bill for
a contractor to remove lab materials whenever called to a scene.
"Technically the contractor has cleaned it out," says Steve
Robertson, a special agent assigned to DEA headquarters. "If it
was my property I would rip out the carpet, I would scrub the
floors, I would repaint everything, because these ... are very
hazardous chemicals."

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