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Why Test for Radon?
After you have made you offer to purchase a home, you will arrange for a home
inspection. You may also want to consider having a radon test.
Usually, you will purchase the test from your home inspector and leave
it at the time of the inspection. The house should remain as closed-up
as possible 12 hours before
and during the entire test period: windows and doors shut, no usage
of fireplaces, etc. Obviously, normal entry and exit is allowed.
A passive radon test must stay in place for at least 48 hours. Generally,
either you
or your broker will return to pick it up at a prearranged time. If
the test is a 48 hour one, do not leave the canister in place over
50 hours
or the results may be invalid.
For a radon test, it is common to place two canisters at the site.
After the canisters are retrieved, they must generally be
sent to a laboratory for analysis; results may take several days to become
available. If the results of your radon test will not be ready in time,
include details in your purchase and sale agreement to deal with
any radon problems
that might come up.
Radon test results are subject to interpretation and can vary with
weather, season, time of day, occupant activities and mechanical
system usage, among
others. Generally, if the test results are above the EPA guideline retesting
is suggested. You may wish to call in an EPA-licensed contractor,
called a radon mitigator, to provide you with
an estimate for eliminating the problem.
Generally speaking, the presence of radon in a house above the EPA guideline,
becomes a negotiable
issue in real estate transactions. Radon mitigators have complained that
few of the estimates that they do actually result in installation of mitigation
systems, probably because home buyers are only using the elevated results
to lower their purchase price.
So, what is this stuff that people are testing for but ignoring as a problem?
Radon is a gaseous, inert element produced by the natural, radioactive
break-up of uranium in soil and rock. For many years, health physicists
knew that even if highly diluted in air, radon -itself radioactive- was
a threat to the health of miners. In studies all over the world, it was
found
that long-term exposure to high concentrations of radon in mines, particularly
among smokers, caused increased incidence of lung cancer. This is one reason
why mines are ventilated and monitored for radon concentrations.
It was not until 1984, when very high concentrations of radon were found
in a home, did anyone realize that radon could be a problem in buildings.
Since that time, many buildings have been tested and many populations observed
for the occurrence of elevated lung cancer. Not all studies have been conclusive,
but the EPA believes that 5000 to 15,000 cases of lung cancer annually
may be attributed to radon exposure in buildings.
Since radon is tasteless, odorless and undetectable by our senses, people
have not taken the threat very seriously. Unfortunately about one in every
hundred
homes has a severe radon problem and it is the purpose of the EPA home
testing program to locate these homes.
Although not the most appropriate time, buyers should choose to do radon
testing prior to purchase. If you buy a home with a radon problem, when
you become
the seller, you may be forced to fix the problem by your buyer. I also
suggest that you retest for radon after you own, since you will be able
to control house conditions while living there. In parts of New Jersey,
where levels of radon are high, some people feel that up to 1/3 of the
tests have been defeated by sellers who undertook various strategies to
dilute the radon in the house during buyer testing.
A typical radon mitigation system consists of 4-inch plastic piping that
is sealed into the basement concrete floor and passes through the house,
into the attic and through the roof. A fan is installed in the pipe to
pull air containing radon from under the concrete floor and blow it out
above the roof. The systems are very effective, so a radon problem at a
house need not be considered unsolvable or a reason for not buying a house.
From "JUST PROPERTY"
By J. May
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