Removal of Black Mold
Steps
from your home, office,
or workplace
Here's how to do removal of black
mold step by step.
Take these 25
necessary steps for the removal of black mold, effective mold cleaning and
treatment, mold maintenance, mold killing of all types of mold and high
counts of indoor mold, mold removal, mold remediation of mold damage, mold
mitigation, and mold abatement to get rid of toxic mold, black mold, slime
mold (Stachybotrys), and all other mold contamination and infestation
caused by roof leaks, siding leaks, plumbing leaks, high indoor humidity,
flooding, hurricanes, typhoons, tropical cyclones, tornadoes, storms, fire
and other water damage problems, and removing mold in basement, attics and
inside walls, ceilings, and heating/cooling equipment and ducts.
Just four words neatly summarize what has to be
done in effective and safe removal of black mold: CONTAIN, KILL, REMOVE, and
PROTECT.
(1) CONTAIN the mold from spreading into
uncontaminated areas;
(2) KILL the mold;
(3) REMOVE the dead mold; and
(4) PROTECT the cleaned out area against
future mold infestations.
Whether you plan on
doing your own removal of black mold, or hiring a
Certified Mold Contractor or
Certified Mold Remediator, follow these twenty-five steps to
completely and safely carry out removal of black mold, and to remove mold problems, contamination, and infestation
from your home, condominium, rental apartments, office, warehouse, retail
store or other real estate building. Where relevant, mold testing and
mold remediation suggestions from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
are included below.
The mold removal and
remediation techniques explained below are useful for removing and
remediating mold from wood and other cellulose-based building materials
such as OSB board, drywall, plaster, plywood, and ceiling tile, as well as
mold growing on concrete and masonry surfaces such as bricks, blocks, and
poured concrete walls and floors. To remove mold from furniture,
appliances, clothing, and other personal property, please follow the
detailed mold decontamination instructions and procedures for each
different type of personal property, as explained in the mold self-help
book
Do-It-BEST-Yourself Mold Prevention, Inspection, Testing, and Remediation.
1.
Learn the
techniques and procedures recommended for safe and successful toxic mold
inspection, testing, and remediation---whether your prefer
do-it-yourself or to hire a
Certified Mold Remediator (CMR).
How? Read mold
remediation self-help books and internet mold advice websites, plus get
professional guidance.
Visit the website
Bleach Mold Myth. Read the up-to-date, in depth ebook
Do-It-BEST-Yourself Mold Prevention, Inspection, Testing, and Remediation
[delivered within 24 hours by email attachments to you], plus learn how to
make your own, low-cost, easy-to-make homemade fungicides and
antimicrobial coatings [from readily available, non-bleach household
products and other items readily available in your community] in our
special report
Home Mold Remedy Recipes, both of which are available from
Mold Mart. If you are concerned about mold health problems, plus want
to learn of all available mold medical diagnostic and treatment
procedures, please read our new
Mold Health Guide [ebook]. If you need information about
prosecuting or defending a mold legal claim, read
Mold Legal Guide [ebook]. Each ebook is only $15.00 each, or
buy all five for only $49.total in the
mold library combination.
2. Locate and fix
all sources of mold-causing water intrusion such as recurring
flooding, plumbing leaks, leaky roofs or siding, blocked air-conditioning
condensation drain lines, and
high indoor
humidity [e.g., above 50 to 60%].
Follow the dozens of
water-intrusion prevention and remediation suggestions contained in the
indepth ebook
Do-It-BEST-Yourself Mold Prevention, Inspection, Testing, and Remediation.
3. Inspect and
mold test inside, above, and below each water-penetrated
ceiling,
wall, and floor
with a fiber optics
inspection device, a
hidden moisture meter,
do-it-yourself mold test kits [available at large home improvement and
hardware stores] or a
mold inspection by a
Certified Mold Inspector [CMI], and by cutting small core dry wall
samples. Remove and look in the middle and back of each core for visible
mold growth. You can also cut off thin veneer moldy slices from each core
sampling, and then insert each veneer slice into a do it yourself mold
test kit to watch for mold growth over a 7 day time period. More valuable
to you in mold insights, would be to put each sample into a separate
ziplock bag properly labeled with property address, precise testing
location at that address, date of testing, name of tester [you probably],
and your full contact info, and then to mail your collected samples to the
mold lab you desire to use. For low-cost mold testing, use
inexpensive Scotch®Tape to do lift tape mold sampling and/or do bulk
physical sampling [collect physical pieces of moldy building materials or
other items], and then send the tape samples or bulk samples to a mold lab
of your choice for mold species identification.
4. Find and locate
all toxic mold infestations (visible and hidden) in the entire home or
building by thorough, all-around
mold inspection and mold testing (with mold laboratory analysis and
mold species identification of collected mold samples).
"You may
suspect hidden mold if a building smells moldy, but you cannot see the
source, or if you know there has been water damage and residents are
reporting health problems. Mold may be hidden in places such as the back
side of dry wall, wallpaper, or paneling, the top side of ceiling tiles,
the underside of carpets and pads, etc. Other possible locations of hidden
mold include areas inside walls around pipes (with leaking or condensing
pipes), the surface of walls behind furniture (where condensation forms),
inside ductwork, and in roof materials above ceiling tiles (due to roof
leaks or insufficient insulation)," warns the
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency.
-
For all building locations
wherein you see visible mold, use the clear Scotch tape lift sampling
method, or scrape visible mold particles into a mold test kit [available
at large home improvement and hardware stores].
-
Conduct a mold control test
using a do-it-yourself mold test kit outside your home or building with
the test kit being at least five feet out from any roof or porch
overhang. You need this outdoor control test for comparison of results
from your indoor mold testing.
-
Use a fiber optics inspection
device, a hidden moisture meter, and internal wall and ceiling cavity
mold testing to search for hidden mold growth.
5. Test the
outward airflow from each heating/cooling duct register for elevated
levels of airborne mold spores. If there is a serious toxic mold
infestation anywhere in a building, airborne mold spores from such mold
locations will usually enter and contaminate the heating/cooling equipment
and ducts, as well as the rest of the building. Use do it yourself mold
test kits to collect possible mold spores in the outward air flow from
each register with the system running on fan ventilation.
6. Replace
mold-infested heating/cooling equipment and ducts if the owner can afford
to do so.
Otherwise, do repeated mold spraying with a
mold fogging machine and a
mold home remedy recipe into the return air duct while the system is
running on fan ventilation to deliver the fungicide to internal surfaces.
Do mold fogging for at least one half hour to hour into the return air
duct of the central heating/cooling system.
Air
conditioning-heating equipment and duct mold problems. When humid air
passes over chilled cooling coils, water condenses and drips through the
coils into a collection pan, from which it continuously drains. Problems
with these systems may occur when this water collects and becomes stagnant
either on the coils or in the drip pan. When standing water is present, a
biofilm will develop. This biofilm is composed of bacteria and fungi that
are embedded in a slimy matrix. Other organisms such as amoebae and algae
may also occupy this comfortable growth site, feeding off the accumulated
organic material. Learn how to deal with this important problem at
Cooling Coil. In addition, it is common for the condensation line from
the cooling equipment to become clogged, backing up water into the air
conditioning unit and then, from there, into the house or building.
If there is a serious
mold problem anywhere in a home or other building, airborne mold spores
from those points of mold contamination will enter into the
heating/cooling ducts and/or equipment to mold contaminate both, and thus
the entire building. Of course, the opposite is also true: if there is
mold infestation growing inside the heating/cooling ducts and/or
equipment, the heating/cooling system will efficiently spread airborne
mold spores through out the entire home or building through air
distribution of the running system. In any home or building with mold
infestation, you need to mold test the outward air flow from each
heating/cooling duct register for the possible presence of elevated levels
of airborne mold spores in comparison with your outdoor mold control test.
Use a
Certified Mold Inspector or do-it-yourself mold test kits.
When doing mold
remediation of a house or building, the heating/cooling mold problems
should be fixed first, and then you can seal tightly with plastic sheeting
all inward and outward duct registers. Don't run the system until the rest
of the home has been effectively mold remediated and the building has
passed mold clearance tests done by an independent
Certified Mold Inspector not involved in the mold remediation work, or
by your use of do-it-yourself mold test kits available at a large
hardware, home improvement, or safety store.
If you fog a
mold home remedy recipe
into the return air duct while the system is running on fan ventilation,
you can get substantial amounts of mold remedy delivered throughout the
system. While spraying or fogging a mold fungicide [spraying step 1] and
subsequently a
Mold Home Remedy Recipe [spraying/fogging step 2] inside the
heating/cooling ducts and equipment, no one [except the protected
applicator] should be in the home or building during the spraying or
fogging application. The person doing the spraying or
fogging application needs to wear proper personal protective gear, as
explained at point 13 below.
7.
If any residents or workers are experiencing any possible toxic
mold health symptoms, or if
there is a strong smell of mold, or if there are visible signs of major
mold growth anywhere in the
building, or if the building tests positive for elevated levels of
airborne mold spores, the occupants should move temporarily to a mold-safe
place until after successful mold remediation and clearance testing.
Hot Tips:
Do you want or need quick and immediate mold relief? The first
immediate action you can take is to remove almost all of the airborne mold
spores 24 hours per day from the air you breathe in your moldy home,
apartment, or workplace by running one or more of electronic air cleaners
in different areas of your house, rented house/apartment, or place of
employment. Your second immediate action is to use a hand-pumped garden
type of sprayer to spray two coatings of a low-cost home-remedy
fungicide in all rooms, attic, basement, crawl space, garage, and the
heating/cooling equipment and ducts [through the return air duct while you
are spraying directly into the return air duct] of your home, condominium,
apartment, office, or other building. You can also place small to large
fans in key areas of rooms/areas being mold-sprayed to help the mold fog
to reach all areas of a room or area. Let each fungicidal spraying dry for
about one to two hours while the fungicide is killing the mold. Then fan
dry the area quickly to remove excess moisture from the spraying
procedures. Then fog with two layers of homemade
antimicrobial coating to help protect the areas against future mold
growth. After each spraying, let the fog set for about one to two hours,
then dry the area quickly with fans. The person doing the fungicidal
spraying or fogging application needs to wear proper personal protective
gear, as explained at point 13 below.
8.
Occupants moving out should not take any clothing, personal possessions,
furnishings, furniture, or equipment until after such items have been
effectively mold decontaminated outdoors [or in a clean room built from
plastic sheeting] to avoid mold cross contamination of the temporary
living or working quarters.
9. Do not paint
over mold problems. Mold loves to eat paint as a snack food. Don’t
expect to kill mold successfully by using paint containing a mildicide
[too mild to kill existing toxic mold infestation] or with a
paint primer sold to hide
water damage stains. Do not rely on
Kilz to kill mold or anything---it does not kill mold, and the
product is NOT an EPA-registered fungicide. Kilz is a good product to hide
or camouflage defects like water damage stains prior to painting over
problem areas.
10. Before
beginning to work in the mold-afflicted areas, contain the moldy work area
(and thus contain the toxic mold spores that will be released into the air
by opening up mold-contaminated areas) by using wall-to-wall,
floor-to-ceiling plastic sheeting as containment walls. How to make
effective mold containment walls, including a mold-secure entry way into
the mold containment area, is explained in detail in the ebook
Do-It-Best-Yourself Mold Prevention, Inspection, Testing, and Remediation.
Use 6 mill thick, clear plastic sheeting that you can buy at a hardware
store or home improvement center.
11. After the
installation of air tight mold containment walls, dry the work area
[especially if still wet from flooding or a now fixed water leak or roof
leak] with one or more large dehumidifiers or an industrial size
dehumidifier. Improper fan drying can spread mold spores to cross
contaminate an entire building and its heating/cooling system.
12. Inside the
mold containment area, use a large fan in the window to exhaust air
directly outside on a continuous basis to expel airborne mold spores and
remediation-caused dust---or better yet, use an industrial hepa filter
to filter out mold, with a flexible hose directly venting the exhaust air
flow to the outdoors. You need to exhaust more air to the outside than is
entering the containment area to create negative air pressure. (You know
you have negative air pressure when the plastic containment sheets are
being sucked inward toward the work area rather than bulging outward away
from the work area).
13. While working
inside the mold containment area, always wear effective protective gear
such as protective biohazard suit. [$10 at safety stores] or painter's
coveralls and booties or a long sleeve shirt and pants; gloves; and a one
piece, full face breathing respirator mask using an organic vapor
cartridge filtration, available from local safety, hardware, and home
improvement stores. You also need such personal protective gear when you
spray
Mold Home Remedy Recipes], followed up with the EPA-registered
fungicidal coating or with a low-cost, homemade
antimicrobial coating Here are more details on
advisable personal protective gear---
-
Tyvek protective
biohazard suit. [available at safety stores] or painter's coveralls
and booties, or long sleeve shirt and pants.
-
Gloves:
either disposable latex or good work gloves. "Long gloves that extend to
the middle of the forearm are recommended. When working with water and
a mild detergent, ordinary household rubber gloves may be used. If you
are using a disinfectant, a biocide such as chlorine bleach, or a strong
cleaning solution, you should select gloves made from natural rubber,
neoprene, nitrile, polyurethane, or PVC. Avoid touching mold or moldy
items with your bare hands," recommends the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency.
-
Avoid
breathing in mold or mold spores.
Wear a 3M brand
one piece, full face breathing respirator
mask using an organic vapor cartridge filtration, available from your
local safety store, Home Depot, Lowe’s and other home centers and
hardware stores. Alternatively (but less comfortable in your ease of
breathing) you can use hole-free Chem-Splash eye goggles ($4) along with
a separate breathing mask with cartridge filters ($30) from the same
stores. Alternatively, "In order to limit your exposure to airborne
mold, you may want to wear an N-95 respirator, available at many
hardware stores and from companies that advertise on the Internet. (They
cost about $12 to $25.) Some N-95 respirators resemble a paper dust
mask with a nozzle on the front, others are made primarily of plastic or
rubber and have removable cartridges that trap most of the mold spores
from entering. In order to be effective, the respirator or mask must
fit properly, so carefully follow the instructions supplied with the
respirator. Please note that the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) requires that respirators fit properly (fit
testing) when used in an occupational setting; consult OSHA for more
information (800-321-OSHA or
osha.gov," advises
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
-
Wear
goggles. Wear eye goggles with no holes [such as Chem-Splish] if you
are not wearing the 3M brand one piece, full face breathing respirator.
"Goggles that do not have ventilation holes are recommended. Avoid
getting mold or mold spores in your eyes," advises the
U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency.
HOT TIP: You can order
a custom-fitted full face breathing mask by contacting your local 3M
branch. Custom-fitted full face masks do a better job of keeping mold
spores from entering inside the mask [and therefore into your body].
HOT
TIP: If you have a beard, shave it off prior to wearing a full face
mask breathing respirator to obtain a tighter fit to your face to help
keep mold stores from entering inside the mask and your body.
14. Kill surface
mold growth by with one or two wet sprayings or foggings of an
effective mold home remedy mold cleaner---read
Mold Home Remedy Recipes. While spraying a fungicide, no one
else should be inside until the spray or fog has dried. Use a hand-pumped
garden sprayer or a small electric sprayer. If doing mold fogging, fog
the Mold Home Remedy Recipe for at least one half hour in each room, and
one half hour to hour into the return air duct of the central
heating/cooling system while the heating/cooling system is running on fan
ventilation. If possible, remove all furniture from each room to be fogged
to fog the empty room [without furniture blocking access of the fungicide
to wall and floor areas]. Then repeat the process but on the second effort
with the furniture put back in the room to do mold killing on the
furniture itself.
IMPORTANT OZONE
WARNING: Do not use an Ozone Air Purifier/Ozone Generator to
kill mold. Ozone is ineffective in killing mold. Ozone can only kill what
it comes into contact with. Ozone cannot get at, and thus cannot kill,
mold growing INSIDE drywall, wall, carpeting, upholstered furniture, wall
cavities, ceiling cavities, and floor cavities. Besides being ineffective
at killing hidden mold [the worst type], a high ozone treatment can easily
damage all rubber and plastic parts it comes into contact with such as
rubber and plastic components of appliances, electronics of all types,
exposed electric lines and extension courts, and hvac controls. Ozone is
also unhealthy to humans according to the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, which specifically discourages the use of ozone for
mold remediation. For more information on the ineffectiveness of Ozone
and the Ozone Air Purifier to kill mold and other indoor air
contaminant, read the highly-informative U.S. Federal Appeals court
decision:
Federal Trade Commission and the Court of Appeals.
15. Do not use
chlorine bleach [sodium hypochlorite] to kill mold or disinfect moldy
areas. Bleach is not an effective or lasting killer of
toxic mold growth and mold spores on and inside porous, cellulose building
materials such as wood timbers, drywall, plasterboard,
particleboard,
plywood, plywood substitutes,
ceiling tiles,
and carpeting/padding. Learn more about why bleach doesn't work at
bleach and mold.
16. After the
killing of all visible surface mold, the next step is to remove and to
clean off as much surface mold growth, mold stains, and mold odors as
possible. "Dead
mold may still cause allergic reactions in some people, so it is not
enough to simply kill the mold, it must also be removed," recommends the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Persons cleaning mold should be
free of mold symptoms and allergies. Gloves should be worn during
cleaning. A good first step is to use a hepa vacuum cleaner to remove
loose [invisible to the eye] airborne mold spores and mold growths
deposited on all surfaces such as ceilings, walls, floors, and upholstered
furniture. Vacuum at least twice, going in a different movement direction
each time you do the vacuuming---e.g., horizontally the first time and
vertically the second time. Scrub and clean thoroughly and completely
all surfaces [including furniture and appliances] with Borax laundry
detergent, a natural mold cleaner, in warm water. The cleaned area
should then be thoroughly dried. Dispose of any sponges or rags used to
clean mold. If
you cannot clean off the mold growth and mold stains with a hard scrubbing
with Borax in water, then you probably need to replace the building
materials themselves with new ones---preventively-treated with the
EPA-registered fungicidal coating. "If
you are unsure about how to clean an item, or if the item is expensive or
of sentimental value, you may wish to consult a specialist. Specialists
in furniture repair, restoration, painting, art restoration and
conservation, carpet and rug cleaning, water damage, and fire or water
restoration are commonly listed in phone books. Be sure to ask for and
check references. Look for specialists who are affiliated with
professional organizations," recommends the
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency.
17. Except
for wood support timbers and building materials to be saved, remove and
safely discard all other mold-contaminated building materials (such as
particle board, drywall, plaster, plasterboard, ceiling tiles,
paper-backed insulation, mold-laden insulation, plywood, plywood
substitutes, and carpeting/padding) in doubled up construction trash bags
(double bagging) with a 6 mil thickness. "Absorbent or porous materials,
such as ceiling tiles and carpet, may have to be thrown away if they
become moldy. Mold can grow on or fill in the empty spaces and crevices
of porous materials, so the mold may be difficult or impossible to remove
completely," advises the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
18.
Remove all
mold growth from the mold-infested wood surfaces. All wood beams, wall
timbers, roof trusses, floor joists, plywood surfaces, and other lumber to
be saved need to be totally cleaned of mold growth by using power tools
such as a planer, grinder with wire brush attachment, and sander---or
replace the moldy timbers.
Mold cannot eat
polystyrene insulating board such as Pinkboard or Blueboard, but mold can
grow on organic dust which lands on the insulating board. "The
only sure way to [kill mold] requires the physical elimination of mold
and moldy materials by thorough cleaning or removal of the affected
materials."---American Industrial Hygiene Association.
19. Re-spray twice
the cleaned out area with another wet spraying of an effective
mold home remedy to
kill any remaining, living toxic mold spores or mold growths.
20. Spray a
protective fungicidal coating on all remediated-surfaces prior to
rebuilding and closing in the mold-remediated area. The fungicidal coating
helps to protect the wood and other cellulose-based building materials
against future mold growth. After the second spraying of a
mold home remedy recipe has dried, spray one or two wet coatings of a
mold home remedy fungicidal coating designed to protect wood against
future wood infestation problems.
21. After the
final drying of the fungicidal coat spraying, it would be helpful to spray
all cleaned timbers and other wood surfaces with a clear, liquid,
plastic coating [available from a well-stocked local paint dealer,
hardware store, or home improvement center] to make a hard, impenetrable
water barrier [upon drying] to protect the wood from future high humidity
and water leaks.
22. After the
toxic mold remediation is completed, mold test (clearance testing) all of
the mold-remediated surfaces plus the air of each room, attic, basement,
crawl space, garage, and the outward air flow from each heating/cooling
duct register to find out if those areas are now mold safe prior to
rebuilding the cleaned out areas with new building materials. "Surface
sampling may be useful to determine if an area has been adequately cleaned
or remediated," advices the U.S.
Environmental Protection
Agency. There should be NO residual mold smell and no mold or
water stains anywhere.
23.
Remove
mold growth, mold stains, and mold odors
from all personal property, furnishings, furniture, and equipment
that have been exposed to mold infestation by washing and scrubbing
the items thoroughly and completely outdoors [or in a plastic-sheet-built
clean room] with Borax laundry detergent, a natural mold cleaner,
in warm water. Learn the recommended mold decontamination procedures for
each type of clothing, furniture, electronics equipment, and other
personal property in the ebook
Do-It-Best-Yourself Mold Prevention, Inspection, Testing, and Remediation.
24. Close
in the mold-remediated area with mold-free, new building materials that
been have carefully inspected to be mold-growth-free,
and which have been pre-treated by spraying with one to two wet coatings
of both a
mold home remedy recipe and an EPA-registered fungicidal coating.
25.
On-going cleaning, building maintenance, mold maintenance, and all-around
building inspection on a regular basis (including air conditioning/heating
equipment and ducts, plumbing, roof, siding, windows, and water
supply/sewer lines) are required to help prevent the re-occurrence of
toxic mold infestation problems. A mold-safe building is not a
one-time effort.
[
View
Other Sources ] |