radon risks in your home & daycare

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Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare PATRICK DANIELS IEMA RADON PROGRAM

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Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare. Patrick Daniels IEMA Radon Program. What is Radon?. Radon is an indoor air pollutant. Radon is a colorless, odorless radioactive gas that comes from naturally occurring uranium in the soil. The only way to tell how much radon a home has is to TEST. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

Radon Risks inYour Home & DaycarePATRICK DANIELSIEMA RADON PROGRAM

Page 2: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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What is Radon?

• Radon is an indoor air pollutant.

• Radon is a colorless, odorless radioactive gas that comes from naturally occurring uranium in the soil.

• The only way to tell how much radon a home has is to TEST.

Page 3: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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Indoor Radon Becamean Issue in 1984

• Mr. Watrus set off alarms at the Limmerick Nuclear Power Plant when entering.

• Stanley Watrus measured 2700 picocuries of radon per liter (pCi/L) of air in his Pennsylvania home.

• The Watrus case brought the indoor radon problem to the public attention and that of the USEPA.

Page 4: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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Surgeon General’s Warning

• “Indoor radon is the second-leading cause of lung cancer in the United States and breathing it over prolonged periods can present a significant health risk to families all over the country.”

Page 5: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

04/20/23 5

Radon Exposure• Radon and Radon Decay

Products (RDPs) are breathed in and the Radon is exhaled.

• RDPs remain in lung tissue and are trapped in the bronchial epithelium and emit alpha particles which strike individual lung cells and may cause physical and/or chemical damage to DNA.

Page 6: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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Alpha Particle Damage

Alpha Particles are strong enough to pit plastic.

Page 7: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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Radon Risk Estimates

• USEPA’s 2003 Assessment of Risks from Radon in Homes estimates radon causes about 21,000 lung cancer deaths per year.

• The Illinois Emergency Management Agency and the USEPA estimate that as many as 1,160 Illinois citizens are at risk of developing radon related lung cancer each year.

Page 8: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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Did you know?• More Americans die

each year from lung cancer than from breast, prostate, and colorectal cancers combined.

Page 9: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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Lung Cancer Mortality Rates

                                                                                                    

                                                

159,480

50,83039,620 29,720

0

20,000

40,000

60,000

80,000

100,000

120,000

140,000

160,000

180,000

Lung Colon/Rectal Breast Prostate

Estimated Mortality of Lung Cancer in 2009"2013 Facts & Figures" - American Cancer Society

Page 10: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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Sources of Radiation Exposureto US Public 2009

Radon - 37%Radon - 37%Medical X-Rays - 12%Medical X-Rays - 12%

Other - 1%Other - 1%

Internal - 5%Internal - 5%

Nuclear Medicine – Nuclear Medicine – 12%12%

Consumer Products - 2%Consumer Products - 2%

Terrestrial - 3%Terrestrial - 3%Cosmic - 5%Cosmic - 5%

• Average Exposure 620 mrem

• Assumes average indoor radon concentration of 1.3 pCi/L.

• Radon is by far the greatest single source of radiation exposure to the general public.

CAT Scans - 24%CAT Scans - 24%

Source: National Council on Radiation Protection (NCRP Report 160)

Page 11: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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Sources of Radiation Exposure in Illinois

• Average Exposure 1,170 mrem

• Assumes average Illinois indoor radon concentration of 4.9 pCi/L.

• Radon is by far the greatest single source of radiation exposure to the general public in Illinois.

Radon - 67%Radon - 67%

Medical X-Rays - Medical X-Rays - 6%6%

Other - < 1%Other - < 1%

Internal - 2%Internal - 2%

Nuclear Medicine – 6%Nuclear Medicine – 6%

Consumer Products - Consumer Products - 1%1%Terrestrial - 2%Terrestrial - 2%

Cosmic - 3%Cosmic - 3%

CAT Scans - CAT Scans - 24%24%

Page 12: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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Radon Risk in Perspective

• Comparative Risk Assessments by EPA and its Science Advisory Board have consistently ranked Radon among the top four Environmental risks to the Public.

• In 1998 Harvard Risk in Perspective, by John Graham, ranked Radon the #1 risk in the Home

Page 13: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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Did You Know?

• Top five causes of accidental home injury deaths:

• Falls• Poisoning• Fires• Choking• Drowning

• Deaths due to radon induced lung cancer is greater than all of these.

Page 14: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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8001,000

21,000

15,800

4,8003,300

0

5,000

10,000

15,000

20,000

25,000

Radon Falls Poisoning Fires Choking Drowning

Home Safety Council Risks

Page 15: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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• Average Indoor Radon Concentration by County

• The only way to tell how much radon a home has is to TEST.

Page 16: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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Statewide Results from IEMAProfessional Licensee Measurements

118,447 Homes Tested

48,978 of the homes tested were > 4.0 pCi/L

41% of the homes tests were > 4.0 pCi/L

Average Radon Concentration 4.9 pCi/L

Page 17: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

• Radon enters through any opening between the building and the soil.

Radon Entry

uranium

radium

radon

Page 18: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

Pressure Differentialsand Radon Entry

Air pressure differentials between the building and outside air causes radon from the soil to be drawn into the house resulting in elevated indoor radon levels.

Page 19: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

Mitigation SystemsReduce Radon by:

• Collecting radon prior to its entry into the building and discharging it above the highest eave.

• Modifying building pressure differentials.

Page 20: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

Common Entry Points

• Foundation Wall Joint

• Crawlspace

• Sump Pits

• Cracks in Floors

• Utility Penetrations

Page 21: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

Active Soil Depressurization

• Active Soil Depressurization uses a fan to draw radon from beneath the house.

• All radon mitigation systems shall be designed to reduce a radon concentration in each area within the footprint of the building as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA).

• Crawl spaces must be included in a radon reduction plan.

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All Homes Should Be Tested

• All homes should be tested for radon, even those built with radon resistant features.

• Radon resistant homes do not guarantee radon reduction below the action level, only reduce cost and assist with aesthetics.

Page 23: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

Illinois Child Care Act 225 ILCS 10/5.8

Provides that every daycare be tested for radon at least once every 3 years.

Effective January 1, 2014, daycares must submit proof of measurements in order to renew license.

Page 24: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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Rooms to Test

• Measurements shall be made in rooms that can be regularly occupied by individuals, such as family rooms, living rooms, dens, playrooms and bedrooms.

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Do Not Place Tests

• Measurements made in closets, cupboards, sumps, crawlspaces or nooks within the foundation shall not be used as a representative measurement and shall not be the basis for a decision to, or not to, mitigate the radon level within a building.

• Activated Charcoal (AC) devices should not be placed in Kitchens, Laundry Rooms or Bathrooms. These rooms may have high humidity that may effect some detectors.

• Near potential Radon entry points such as, in crawl spaces, on floor or wall cracks, or adjacent to the sump pit.

Page 26: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

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Closed House Conditions

• Short-term measurements shall be made under closed-building conditions

• Before Testing

• Closed building conditions shall begin at least 12 hours prior to the beginning of the measurement period for measurements lasting less than 4 days.

Page 27: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

• Home Daycare – Measurement / Mitigation Professional / Technician can provide services.

• Daycare Centers – Only Professional Licensees licensed to perform schools and commercial buildings can provide services.

Commercial Building Licensing

Page 28: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

• School and commercial building measurements and mitigations are not a simple extension of residential services.

• The Agency requires specific Quality Assurance Projects Plans to be developed for measurements in Schools and Commercial Buildings.

Commercial Building Measurements

Page 29: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

• Because of increased air movement from the building's HVAC system(s), varying occupancy times, unusual radon entry mechanisms, inappropriate energy conservation applications and unusual structural features, a school (daycare center) or a commercial building may be difficult to characterize the radon concentrations.

Commercial BuildingMeasurments

Page 30: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

• The on-site presence of the Licensed Radon Measurement Professional providing supervision is required for all radon measurement activities at schools and commercial buildings.

Regulations for Measurements

422.120 Requirements

Page 31: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

• Initial measurements shall be short-term measurements of at least 48 hours to 90 days, depending on the device used, and shall be made in all frequently occupied rooms in contact with the soil, whether the contact is slab-on-grade, a basement, berm, a room above a crawlspace or any combination.

Initial Measurements

Page 32: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

• Schools and commercial buildings shall only be tested for radon during periods when the HVAC system is operating as it does normally when the buildings are occupied, even if the testing occurs when school is not in session or during long holidays.

Initial MeasurementsMost Common Errors

Page 33: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

• IEMA recommends in both home environment and schools or commercial buildings that a decision to mitigate not be based on initial measurement results.

Measurements Results

Page 34: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

• The Agency will approve variances for not measuring an entire building when a daycare measurement is required and the daycare only occupies a portion of the building.

Daycares and Variances

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Page 36: Radon Risks in Your Home & Daycare

Contact Information

Patrick Daniels

IEMA Radon Program

(217) 782-1325

[email protected]