Lorillard
Topic Sheets Policy Forum on Indoor Air 870929, 870930
Fields
- Alias
- 87311467/87311472
- Area
- ROTH,JOY/VERTICAL FILE NEAR OFFICE
- Type
- REPT, OTHER REPORT
- LIST, LIST
- Request
- R1-004
- R1-132
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- Named Organization
- Ashrae
- Cpsc
- Epa, Environmental Protection Agency
- Niosh, Natl Inst for Occupational Safety & Health
- Cpsc
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Site
- G78
- Master ID
- 87311461/1472
Related Documents: - UCSF Legacy ID
- eel11e00
Document Images
TOPIC SHEETS
POLICY FORUM ON INDOOR AIR
September 29,30, 1987

SESSION 1: Design, Operation, Diagnosis and Remedial Services for
Sick $uildings
(Subject covers institutional buildings such as offices
and schools, but does not cover single family residences)
Background: Few firms provide diagnostic services and the quality of the
services is unknown.
No diagnostic protocols have been established, and private
sector processes for developing protocols is slow.
Architects, builders, and building managers are not aware of the
impact their actions have on indoor air quality and there are
no guidelines to establish acceptable practices for these groups.
No one is sure who is liable, and building trade groups may
be reluctant to assu;ne responsibility for indoor air quality.
Diagnostic services may be too expensive for some (e.g. small
school districts).
MAJOR ISSUES REIATED ISSUES
#1 What actions, if any, should the
Federal goverrLment take to stimulate
the development of diagnostic and
remedial services for sick
buildings?
#2 Gfiat are the appropriate roles of
state and local governments and
private sector organizations in
monitoring diagnostic and remedial
services for sick buildings?
#3 What actions, if any, should the
Federal government take to ensure
that buildings are designed and
maintained in ways that prevent
indoor air quality problems from
occuring?
Should the Federal government assune
responsibility for developing
diagnostic protocols?
Should 'the Federal government develop
a program for advising users on
how to judge the quality of services.
What kind of program?
Should the States be encouraged to
provide diagnostic and remedial services
or is that solely a private sector
function?
Should the Federal government expand the
diagnostic service now provided by NIOSH?
If so, what are the situations in which
that service should be available?
Would building owners take corrective
actions if the Federal government
limited its role to research and
guidelines development?
Are local building codes the botton
line toward getting corrective action
in the long term? How long would it
take to get building codes changed?
Should the federal government develop
model codes?

SESSION 2: Information and Services on Indoor Air Pollution for Homeowners
an onsumers
Background: It is not clear how effective public information can be
in actually changing behavior, or what kinds of information
strategies work best.
Most persons that have serious indoor air problens in their homes
can not afford to pay for currently available diagnostic services.
States and local governments are ill equipped to help homeowners
diagnose and solve most indoor air pollution problems.
Except for some specific pollutants, mechanisms have for helping
homeowners and consumers solve indoor air quality problems have
not been developed.
MAJOR ISSUES
#1 G]hat are the best ways of packaging
and delivering information about
indoor air quality problems and
solutions to homeowners and consumers
so that the information is used and
risks are minimized?
#2 What can and should the Federal
government do to ensure that residents
can obtain diagnostic and renedial
assistanceat affordable costs when
-they encounter a potentially serious--
indoor air quality problem?
#3 How can the Federal government
cooperate with state and local
govermnent and with private sector
groups to provide information and
services to homeowners and consumers?
RELATED ISSUES
Are public information documents from
the Federal government as effective
as those from the States or public health
or consumer groups?
Would it be appropriate for the Federal
government to research effective information
marketing strategies and devices so that
the information is more likely to be used?
Are there public information programs which
could be effective models for indoor air?
Can the Federal government develop manuals
for self diagnosis and could these replace
the need for home diagnostic services?
Should the Federal government stimulate
development of monitoring devices that
consumers and homeowners can use? How?
Uhat private sector groups might the
Federal government cooperate with to
provide diagnostic services to homeowners
and residents at reasonable cost?

SESSION 3: Ventilation Efficiency
Bac round: Energy conservation measures which reduce ventilation rates can
elevate pollution concentrations.
Residential ventilation needs are most freqently met by infiltration
which varies with environmental parameters and housing construction.
Ventilation systems which are not well maintained can generate
contaminants or fail to deliver or distribute air to occupants.
Ventilation supply and exhaust registers are often located in ways
which introduce contaminants or short circuit the delivery of
outside air. Renovations often alter interior layout and destroy the
effectiveness of ventilation.
Ventilation systems which are well designed and maintained can
reduce indoor air pollution concentrations.
Ventilation standards which establish minimum ventilation rates
indirectly control indoor p<);.lat-il1t concentrations.
Voluntary industry standards do not carry the force of law. Current
State and local codes often do not even require that ventilation
systems be operated, and enforcement is a problem.
MAJOR ISSUES
#1 Should the Federal government
establish or otherwise intervene
in current processes for_establishing
ventilation standards for indoor
air quality?
#2 What actions, if any, should the
Federal government take to ensure
that ventilation design standards
are actually maintained or enforced
in existing buildings?
#3 What actions if any should the
Federal government take to improve
design and installation practices
during new construction and renovation
stages?
I
RELATED ISSUES
Can ventilation standards be used to ensure
"acceptable" indoor air quality? Can they
be practically enforced?
Can infiltration be used to ensure adequate
ventilation in residences?
Can the voluntary industry concensus
process be used to establish ventilation.
standards? If so, what is the proper
federal role? oD
Will architects, engineers, owners
managers follow ASHRAE ventilation
standards? Will that protect them
from legal liability?
b
_J
W
N
O
Are building codes the bottom line to
which owners respond? Will the
States need to develop ventilation codes
and begin enforcing them?
Should the federal government develop
model state ventilation codes?

SESSION 4: (',armercial/Consumer Products
Background: lhmdreds of products and pollutants have been identified as possible
contributors to indoor air quality problems in homes, schools, office
space and other indoor environments.
Major health consequence may result from the cumulative and possible
synergistic effect of exposure from a large number of pollutants and
product sources in an indoor space.
Existing legislation can be used to regulate individual products when
warranted, but regulatory processes are ctanbersome.
There is some institutional experience with voluntary emission
reductions by manufacturers in the absense of formal regulations.
M470R ISSUES
#1 What strategy should be used to
identify and act on products and
chemicals producing significant
indoor contamination and risks?
Should current practices be modified?
#2 Is current legislation adequate to
provide the federal government with
the tools to reduce risks through
product emission controls? What
are the most significant provisions?
What are the deficiencies? ---- - -----
#3 What is the appropriate role for
State and local governments and
private sector organizations in
setting and meeting standards on
coaanercial and consuner products?
REIATED ISSUES
Given the nutnber of products and
pollutants affecting indoor air,
how much attention should be given
to regulating them one at a time?
What, if anything, should EPA and CPSC
do differently in using TSCA, FIFRA, CPSA,
and other legislation legislation to
protect indoor air from high risk products
and chemicals?
What-products or chemicals have states
regulated and has the experience been
effective?
Is it cost effective for States to
regulate emissions from products
in the absence of Federal regulations?
Can emission reductions be negotiated
with manufacturers avoiding formal
regulations, and under what conditions
will such negotiations be effective?
Would manufacturers respond to market
demands for lower emissions stimulated
by procurement requests from private
sector buyers and governments?

SESSION 5: Indoor Air Quality Standards: The Federal Role
Background: Standards for individual pollutants may not solve the sick
building problem. This problem may be associated with
the cumulative exposure to large numbers of pollutants at
levels well below current health-based limits.
Data is sufficient to develop standards only for a few pollutants.
Standards development could require a huge research budget over many
years.
It may be important to define baseline levels of adequate
indoor air quality, and standards can be useful in establishing
goals and objectives.
Standards can be developed as regulations having the force of
law, or as guidelines.
MAJOR ISSUES
#1 Should the federal government set
indoor air quality standards for
specific pollutants and require
States to develop plans to meet
those standards through building
codes and.ordinances?
RELATED ISSUES
Are individual pollutant standards
needed to act as definitions of
what is acceptable indoor air quality?
Are individual pollutant standards
redundant to ventilation standards,
or do we need both?
#2 Should the federal government
limit its role to developing
and disseminating information
on pollutants,-sources, health
effects, and mitigation strategies
and allow the private sector and
states full lattitude in designing
control programs?
#3 Is there a middle ground (such as
indoor air quality guidelines) or
other combination of approaches
that would best define the
appropriate federal role?
Are standards in the form of regulations
preferable to guidelines?
Could indoor air quality guidelines take
the form of health advisories wfiich simply
describes the health consequences at
various concentrations?
With limited funds, Would the Federal
government be better off focusing -
on proTnoting diagnostics and mitigation,
rather than on developing specific
standards for individual pollutants?
