District 6 State Sen. Julie Quinn (R-Metairie) is feeling positive
after her trip to the nation’s capital last week on behalf of
homeowners affected by toxic Chinese drywall.
“The trip was amazing,” said Quinn. “It was encouraging to learn
that our federal legislators are intimately knowledgeable about the
details of this problem.”
Quinn has called for immediate
temporary housing assistance to the tune of $25 million, and said
Gulf Coast Recovery coordinator Janet Woodka is “very receptive” to
the idea. She has also asked Congress to pass legislation that will
hold foreign companies liable for dangerous products.
To that end Quinn met with U.S.
Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) and Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) who
have proposed legislation that will require foreign manufacturers to
provide a domestic agent in an effort to hold them accountable.
“There is a big foreign trade
issue here in that there are very few standards for foreign goods,
other than food and drugs,” Quinn said. “In 2006, the year after the
storm, sheetrock shipments from China quadrupled, so they clearly
took advantage of a vulnerable population.”
Quinn also met with experts
from the Federal Trade Commission and attended briefings of the
Consumer Product Safety Commission. There the news was not as
positive, in that it was learned that the sulfurous gases emitted by
the drywall are leading to cross-contamination, therefore air
quality testing alone will not be sufficient.
The CPSC is expected to issue a
preliminary report by the end of October, and Quinn said she is
hoping for a more comprehensive report that includes the findings of
private-sector firms that have also conducted testing.
The most important thing for
homeowners right now, Quinn said, is to register a complaint with
the agency.
“President Obama is aware of
the issue, and he will get involved once we see significant numbers,
at least 10,000” said Quinn. “There are currently only about 1,500
complaints filed, so people need to register.”
Quinn and state Sen. A.G. Crowe
hosted a town hall meeting in Mandeville last month that was
standing room only, and a second meeting is set for Oct. 21 at the
Northshore Harbor Center in Slidell at 6 p.m. Additional dates for
St. Bernard, Plaquemines and New Orleans East will be announced in
the near future.
To file a complaint with CPSC,
go to
www.cpsc.gov/info/drywall/index.html
. To file a complaint with Louisiana
Attorney General, go to
www.ag.state.la.us/ and click on “Consumer Complaints,” or call
1-800-351-4889. For updates on the Chinese
drywall multi-district litigation (MDL #2047), go to
www.laed.uscourts.gov., and click on “Drywall MDL.”