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Healthy Homes Initiative Jenae Bjelland Director, Healthy Homes Bob Scott Director, Energy Services 1 www.nascsp.org.

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Presentation on theme: "Healthy Homes Initiative Jenae Bjelland Director, Healthy Homes Bob Scott Director, Energy Services 1 www.nascsp.org."— Presentation transcript:

1 Healthy Homes Initiative Jenae Bjelland Director, Healthy Homes Bob Scott Director, Energy Services 1 www.nascsp.org

2 2 Background 2 www.nascsp.org Basic premise - Housing conditions can significantly affect the health of the residents. Many healthy homes issues are due to substandard housing, prevalent in low-income communities

3 3 www.nascsp.org Background 3 www.nascsp.org Most people spend the vast majority of their time indoors and the condition of their home affects their health particularly for children and seniors

4 www.nascsp.org 4 4 Identified health links to substandard housing Childhood lead poisoning Respiratory diseases such as asthma Fire and electrical safety issues Increased risk of falls, injuries, rodent bites, exposure to pesticides, indoor toxicants, tobacco smoke, and combustion gases Depression and quality of life issues

5 5 www.nascsp.org 7 Principles 5 www.nascsp.org Keep it dry Keep it pest free Keep it safe Keep it maintained Keep it clean Keep it ventilated Keep it contaminant free

6 6 www.nascsp.org Major Focus On 6 www.nascsp.org household chemicals moisture and mold tobacco smoke pests insects rodents CO drinking water waste water hazards conducive to falls and injuries Lead Asthma Radon Also

7 7 www.nascsp.org 7 Traditionally a more categorical approach has been prevalent  One issue focus, even in presence of multiple issues A more holistic approach is being promoted to address the broad range of housing deficiencies and hazards associated with unhealthy and unsafe homes.

8 www.nascsp.org 8 Major Players - Federal 8 www.nascsp.org CDC Healthy Homes Objectives 1.Increase public awareness by creating a national dialogue on healthy housing and promoting health literacy about housing 2.Take actions to ensure that all Americans have access to healthy, safe, and affordable housing 3.Promote people’s physical and mental health through evidence-based healthy housing interventions 4.Invest in research that increases our understanding of the long-term economic benefits of healthy housing

9 www.nascsp.org 9 Major Players - Federal 9 www.nascsp.org Office of the Surgeon General, HHS (OSG) Published a booklet in 2009: The Surgeon General’s Call to Action to Promote Healthy Homes U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Office of Healthy Homes and Lead Hazard Control, published 60 page Healthy Homes Strategic Plan in July 2009

10 10 www.nascsp.org Major Players - Federal 10 www.nascsp.org U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) - many good reports and information on HH issues, Lead RRP Rule, IAQ, asbestos, etc. Recent Report - Healthy Indoor Environment Protocols for Home Energy Upgrades coincides with VP Biden’s Recovery Through Retrofit and complements DOE’s Workforce Guidelines

11 11 www.nascsp.org Main Players – National Organizations 11 www.nascsp.org National Center for Healthy Housing (NCHH) NCHH conducts research to find scientifically valid and practical strategies for making homes safe and healthy. Contractor in Phase 1 of DOE HHI Project Green and Healthy Homes Initiative (GHHI) Also called Coalition to End Childhood Lead Poisoning Did a survey on H&S in app. 16 WAP agencies Recent report titled – “Identified Barriers and Opportunities to Make Housing Green and Healthy Through Weatherization”

12 www.nascsp.org 12 www.nascsp.org DOE HHI Projects 12 www.nascsp.org Program or Initiative Lead Agency & Partners OverviewTiming Healthy Homes Inter- Agency Working Group Joint effort: DOE, HUD, EPA, DOL, HHS/CDC Inter-agency collaboration to find and implement HH solutions Ongoing DOE “Healthy Weatherization” Project DOE (WAP)Interviewed State WAP Offices and local agencies to identify H&S issues they encountered but had limited ability to address to size up and inform decision-making Report being finalized Green and Healthy Homes Initiative (GHHI) HUD and Coalition to End Childhood Lead Poisoning Participating cities engage in pilots; additional cities in subsequent phases Ongoing Recovery Through Retrofit -- retrofit protocol development CEQ (DOE developing retrofit protocols w/health considerations) Developed voluntary national energy retrofit protocols with industry leaders and heavy WAP involvement, to be launched nationally Draft completed, comment period until 1-07-2011 EPA Retrofit Protocol Development EPA (with DOE, industry, and other agencies’ input) Developed Healthy Indoor Environment Protocols for Home Energy Upgrades Draft completed, comment period until 12-9-2010 Radon pilotsDOE and EPAParticipate in pilots that test radon levelsIn design phase

13 13 www.nascsp.org DOE/WAP and Healthy Homes 13 www.nascsp.org Isn’t the connection obvious? WAP goes into hundreds of low-income houses each year WAP already has a component for assessing health and safety problems WAP is partner of CSBG with basis and groundwork for mobilizing additional resources

14 14 www.nascsp.org DOE/WAP and Healthy Homes 14 www.nascsp.org When there are unresolved H&S issues The agency has to defer work until problems are resolved The agency does the best they can but household does not get full advantage of WAP Household does not get WAP services nor its H&S problems resolved

15 15 www.nascsp.org DOE/WAP and Healthy Homes 15 www.nascsp.org WAP H&S Measures are Often Effective With DOE and other WAP funds, WAP providers – o Usually can address health and safety issues related to heating systems o Work lead safe o Can address some moisture problems o Can address some electrical and plumbing issues o Can add/repair ventilation o Provide some educational materials o And a host of other measures as per WPN 11-6

16 16 www.nascsp.org DOE/WAP and Healthy Homes 16 www.nascsp.org But there are several instances that are beyond the scope of WAP Remediation of lead and mold Other IAQ problems Major electrical and plumbing issues Most structural and non-energy related H&S issues

17 www.nascsp.org 17 www.nascsp.org WAP and Healthy Homes 17 www.nascsp.org No WAP crew wants to leave conditions like these!

18 18 www.nascsp.org DOE/WAP and Healthy Homes 18 www.nascsp.org Questions the HH network asks in regards to WAP Poor roofs = substandard housing  Why WAP doesn’t do more for poor roofs Why doesn’t WAP replace windows that have lead paint? WAP auditors could learn and identify other HH issues, WAP could consider more measures, agencies could set up better referral networks

19 www.nascsp.org 19 www.nascsp.org How far can/should WAP go to broaden Health and Safety 19 www.nascsp.org Primary focus of DOE WAP is energy efficiency  H&S measures should either enable an EE measure to be performed or insure that an EE measure does not create a new or compound an existing H&S issue H&S measures cost money but provide no energy savings Key metrics of current national evaluation are energy savings and energy savings per dollar invested Limited funds should not be diverted away from WAP EE focus

20 www.nascsp.org 20 www.nascsp.org What are the Post-ARRA Opportunities? 20 www.nascsp.org Can / should the WAP and CSBG networks be proactive leaders in the national Healthy Homes movement?

21 www.nascsp.org 21 www.nascsp.org Contacts 21 www.nascsp.org Jenae Bjelland Director, Healthy Homes bjelland@nascsp.org 202-624-5850 Bob Scott Director, Energy Services rscott@nascsp.org 202-624-5867


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