By Matthew Stolle
The Post-Bulletin
It reportedly causes more death
than drunken driving, drowning and home fires, yet radon has never received the respect as a threat to public health that
health experts believe it deserves.
Part of the reason, experts note, is the nature of the gas itself. Though radioactive,
it is naturally occurring, not man-made. Being tasteless and invisible, it also is not easy to detect.
Even the studies
that have established a statistical link between radon and lung cancer have produced conclusions that critics have found easy
to mock.
The best known of those surveys is the Iowa Radon Lung Cancer study. That study showed that prolonged exposure
to radon -- defined as 76 years, 18 hours a day at a level of 4 picocuries per liter -- increased one's risk of lung cancer
at about 2 percent, on an individual basis.
That may seem small, said Dan Delano, a registered environmental health
specialist for Olmsted County, but from a public health standpoint, the number is huge.
"When you start talking
about 2 percent of the U.S. population, that's a lot of people," Delano said.
A new law authored by Rep. Kim Norton
and signed by Gov. Tim Pawlenty this month mandates that a radon mitigation system be installed in homes at the time of construction.
The requirement is expected to add an extra $500 to the price tag of a house, home builders say.
Making such modifications
after a house is already built is more expensive, from $1,200 to $2,000.
Though the Home Builders Association
of Minnesota came out in support of the legislation, some area home builders remain ambivalent about the new requirement.
Mike Paradise, president of Bigelow Homes in Rochester, worries that the new mandate and other changes to the building
code are driving the price of new houses to unaffordable levels.
"Collectively, all these little things that get
added on do prohibit some people from being able to afford housing," Paradise said.
Yet Paradise doesn't dispute
that Rochester has some areas of town with high radon levels.
Part of the problem is the way homes are built and sealed
so tightly these days. That air-tight quality, combined with all the fans, clothes dryers and other exhaust systems inside
a home, creates a negative pressure that sucks in gases like radon.
New homeowner gets a surprise
Rick
Rein was a new homeowner in Rochester when Olmsted County officials sent him a letter inviting him to test his home for radon.
Rein knew little about radon, having come from the Chicago area, where radon is not as big an issue. The test showed radon
levels slightly above recommended Environmental Protection Agency amounts in his home.
Rein did a little more digging
and found out that area builders, though aware of the radon issue, weren't required to incorporate radon mitigation systems
into the homes they build.
He also wondered why such systems weren't mandated at the time of construction, since their
installation after construction is considerably more expensive.
"I just felt like we've got so many laws in this
country aimed at protecting citizens and consumers, why was this one kind of missed and neglected?" Rein said.
He
eventually passed on his concerns to Norton, who was running for office at the time. Norton lost her bid for office that year.
During that time, Norton had her own house tested for radon and was distressed to discover radon levels twice the accepted
level.
When she won election in 2006, she took her concerns about radon to the House of Representatives.
Her
bill, signed by Pawlenty this month, requires that home builders install a system for keeping radon out of homes at the time
of construction. That system typically involves PVC piping that runs from the foundation to the roof and vents radon into
the air.
Radon suspected
It's impossible to say with certainty whether radon is responsible
for any individual case of lung cancer, but Dan Hylland of Rochester suspects it played a role in his dad's cancer.
His
dad, Gerhard, was considered a nonsmoker. But because he grew up in Iowa and lived in Rochester, both of which have high levels
of radon, Mayo Clinic doctors suspected the radioactive gas as the culprit. His home in Rochester also tested high for radon.
Surgeons removed the cancer from his lung, and Gerhard was clean for about a year until doctors found a couple of tumors
in his brain. Both have since been removed.
"He may be in the clear, but we really don't know," Hylland said.
Hylland said he decided to research radon after his dad's bout with cancer. He learned that radon is the second-leading
cause of cancer, and that Olmsted County has some of the highest levels of radon in the state.
Hylland also discovered
that there were few places for homeowners to turn to mitigate radon levels. So he decided to start a company that provides
radon testing and installs mitigation systems, called Athelon Enterprises LLC.
Hylland said he encountered different
arguments from those opposed to mandated controls imposed on home builders. Some say the connection between radon and lung
cancer hasn't been proven. Others say the chances of getting cancer from radon are negligible.
"Even if it is
2 percent, is your father or mother worth the $300 that it would cost" to install the system, he said.