Asbestos removal prompts concern among parents
Marisa O’Neil
Parents of 52 children at Harbor View Elementary School pulled their
children out of class Tuesday as disagreement about the school’s
construction continues.
The walkout came during work to remove or seal asbestos from
classrooms in the school’s final construction phase. Bowing to parent
complaints about the removal taking place with students on campus,
Newport-Mesa Unified School District Supt. Robert Barbot decided the
work will only take place after school hours.
“The parents had concerns,” district spokesperson Jane Garland
said. “There were no problems and it didn’t put anyone at harm. We
did this to relieve parents’ anxiety.”
Notes went home last week telling parents that the work would
start Monday and signs were posted throughout the campus, said Bonnie
Martin, director of project manager McCarthy Construction.
The problems started Monday when gaps appeared in the tent
covering the work area, Principal Mellissia Christensen said.
Work stopped while the plastic was repaired, but parents protested
when it resumed while their children were still in class. Today, 52
students stayed home, Christensen said.
District officials, including Barbot, met with parents Tuesday
morning. Work will now take place from 2 to 6 p.m. this week, and
should finish by Saturday, Martin said.
“We are following, by letter of the law, all procedures and
guidelines from the [Air Quality Management Department] and
[Environmental Protection Agency], over and beyond what is required,”
Martin said. “We hired a third-party company for air-quality
monitoring and all of our levels to date are well below permissible
exposure limits.”
The asbestos in question is in window putty and some plaster
walls, Martin said. Maximum acceptable levels for airborne fiber
particles during the removal are .01 fibers per cubic centimeter.
According to a report from Ambient Environmental, which is
monitoring air quality during the procedure, the samples have ranged
from .002 to .005. The company also uses differential pressure air
filtration devices with HEPA filters to keep fibers in the work area.
If the work is done correctly, the process is generally safe, said
Michael T. Kleinman, a professor of community and environmental
medicine at UC Irvine.
Operating procedures keep the public risk low, he said.
“If I thought it was a safety issue, I’d be leading [students] all
out of the school myself,” Christensen said.
But parents said it’s more than the potential danger to their
students that worries them.
“It should have been caught,” said parent Meg Harrison, who did
not pull her child out Tuesday. “But it took parents making phone
calls to stop it. So many things have not gone the way they said they
would. It’s a question of credibility.”
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