Boston--July 2004, Harvard School of Public Health-- Environmental health researchers at Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) have identified caulking and sealing materials as an unrecognized and possibly widespread source of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) contamination in schools and buildings constructed in the 1960s and 1970s. They conclude that a survey of masonry buildings from that era is necessary to determine where in the
The study is published in the July 2004 issue of Environmental Health Perspectives, http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2004/6912/abstract.html
PCBs are a set of persistent organic chemicals that are known carcinogens and that have significant toxic effects on the immune system, reproductive system, nervous system and endocrine system. Production of PCBs was halted in the
HSPH researchers led by Robert Herrick, Senior Lecturer on Industrial Hygiene in the Department of Environmental Health, carried out an investigation of 24 buildings in the Greater Boston Area. The investigation revealed that one-third of the buildings contained caulking materials with PCB content exceeding U.S. Environmental Protection Agency standards of 50 parts per million, in some cases containing nearly 1,000 times the standard. The buildings where elevated PCB levels in caulking were found included schools, university buildings and other public buildings.
The investigation was prompted by studies done in
Studies in
“At the time of construction of these buildings in the 60s and 70s, this material was commonly used,” said Herrick. “It is the rubbery, flexible material you see around windows in masonry buildings. The EPA banned PCBs in 1977 but has not required that caulking be tested to determine PCB content, so the extent to which this material is still in buildings is unknown. After 30 years these materials are deteriorating, and just touching it may cause exposure.”
The researchers said that their limited investigation into two dozen buildings in
While expressing concern for the hazard to construction workers exposed during renovations, the authors wrote of the threat to growing children: “The presence of PCBs in schools is of particular concern given evidence suggesting that PCBs are developmental toxins.”
“We have made progress in reducing PCB uptake by advising people to reduce their consumption of contaminated fish and other foods,” said Herrick, “but the contribution to the PCB body burden from living and working in PCB contaminated buildings is largely unrecognized. The situation is very similar to lead in paint, where a material used in building construction leads to contamination of the building interior and the soil around the buildings. This is of special concern as the studies in
This study was supported in part by the Center to Protect Workers’ Rights, AFL-CIO Building Trades Department, and the International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craft Workers, Local 3,