Radon
Testing in New Jersey:
The Dos and
Don’ts
by
Judy Morgan,
NJDEP
Radon Program
Outreach
Coordinator
Real
estate professionals
play a key role in New
Jersey’s efforts to
reduce radon exposure
among residents. Since
1986, when radon was
first discovered to be
a health hazard in
homes, radon testing
has been integrated
within most real estate
transactions in New
Jersey. In fact, 75-80
percent of the
approximately 60,000
radon tests now done in
New Jersey each year
are done as part of
real estate sales,
according to the
database of testing
information maintained
by the New Jersey
Department of
Environmental
Protection (NJDEP)
Radon Program. Although
most real estate
professionals are well
informed about radon,
questions occasionally
arise about the proper
conduct of tests.
Following are the
essential dos and
don’ts.
DOs
1.
Know about radon in
general, so that
information you provide
to clients is accurate.
Most important, be
aware that only
state-certified
companies can test for
and mitigate radon. The
only relevant exemption
to this legal
requirement is where
homeowners perform
tests or mitigations of
their own homes.
2.
Refer clients to
experts rather than
attempt to answer
questions when you’re
unsure of the answers.
Clients can be referred
to the NJDEP Radon
Program
(1-800-648-0394, or
www.njradon.org), or to
certified
radon companies.
3.
Be aware of a
seller’s obligation
to reveal to a
prospective buyer the
results of all radon
testing and any
mitigation to work.
Under the law, the
seller must provide the
buyer, at the time the
contract of sale is
entered into, with a
copy of the results of
the radon test and
evidence of any
mitigation or
treatment.
DON’Ts
1.
Don’t become involved
in any aspect of the
testing process.
Even sealing and
mailing back the test
kit would interfere
with the process. The
certified tester will
inspect the test site
when they pick up the
test to ensure that
there has been no
tampering, that proper
testing conditions were
observed and that the
environment of the home
has not changed (such
as water in the
basement following a
rainstorm.) For either
the realtor®
or the homeowner to
send back the test kit
would render the test
invalid (with the
exception that
homeowners can legally
perform this task if
they are paying for the
test).
2.
Don’t suggest that
clients could open
windows to vent radon.
Radon tests require
“closed house”
conditions, meaning
that all
windows and doors that
could let outside air
enter the home should
be kept closed during
the test, except for
normal exit and entry.
If the test is less
than four days in
length, closed house
conditions should be
maintained an
additional 12 hours
prior to the start of
the test. If closed
house conditions are
not maintained—and it
is possible that the
tester or home buyer
will drive by to
check—the test will
be invalid, and the realtor®
could be legally liable
for his/her advice.
(In
addition, it is a
little-known fact that
opening windows in some
cases actually
increases radon levels,
rather than decreases
them.) Radon is
the most serious
environmental health
risk faced by the
average person. The
latest national review
of radon risk data,
sponsored by the
National Academy of
Sciences, not only
supported earlier
assessments of risk,
but actually raised
risk estimates. The
study examined lung
cancer and radon
exposure among 68,000
miners of whom 2,700
have died from lung
cancer. It reviewed
laboratory evidence on
the impact of radon on
individual cells and on
laboratory animals.
New
Jersey Radon Map NJ New Jersey radon NJ
slides
The
review, published in
1998, concluded that
between 15,000 and
22,000 Americans die
each year as a result
of lung cancer caused
by radon. To put this
risk in perspective,
45,000 deaths occur in
the U.S. due to motor
vehicle accidents,
4,000 deaths due to
fires and 4,000 deaths
due to drowning in a
typical year, according
to the National Center
for Health Statistics.
The
risk of radon for
smokers is much greater
than for non-smokers.
For a non-smoker who
has an average radon
exposure of 4.0 pCi/L
over his/her entire
lifetime, the risk is 1
in 500 of developing
lung cancer due to
radon. The risk for a
smoker in the same
situation is 1 in 35
(in addition to the
risk of lung cancer
from the smoking
itself).
A
common misconception
about radon is that it
is only a concern in a
few areas of New
Jersey. While radon
concentrations do vary
from region to region,
there are high-and
moderate-radon areas
scattered throughout
most of the state. Even
in low-radon
communities there may
be homes with
significantly elevated
radon levels. For
example, homes in one
municipality in Ocean
County have tested as
high as 23.7 pCi/L,
even though the average
test result for that
community is very low
at 0.98 pCi/L.
In
addition, within each
municipality radon
levels vary greatly
from home to home.
Indoor radon
concentrations depend
on highly variable
factors:
1.
the distribution
of uranium-rich rocks
and soils near the
home, and the
porousness of the soil;
2.
the number and
size of entryways
into the home,
such as tiny cracks in
the slab, French
drains, and sump pits;
and
3.
the air pressure
in the lowest level of
the home, which is
affected by heating,
cooling, and exhaust
systems, as well as by
the weather (the lower
the air pressure in the
home, compared to
outside air pressure,
the more quickly radon
will enter the home).
As a result, it is not
uncommon to have a home
with very high levels
next to a home with
extremely low levels.
For these reasons, the
NJDEP recommends that
all homes, throughout
the state, be tested
for radon as a
precaution.
The good news is that
concentrations can be
brought down to
relatively low levels,
through the
installation of radon
removal systems.
According to test data
collected since 1991 by
the NJDEP Radon
Program, radon levels
have been reduced to
less than 1.0 pCi/L in
about half the homes in
which radon remediation
systems were
installed—even when
the pre-remediation
levels were very high.
Although even low
levels of radon still
have risk associated
and even in the
outdoors environment
there is a low level of
radon, averaging 0.4
pCi/L—most
remediations succeed in
reducing indoor radon
levels very
significantly so that
cumulative exposure for
residents is sharply
reduced. Approximately
2,400 homes are being
remediated each year in
New Jersey, according
to the NJDEP. Since
remediations typically
result in more than a
90 percent drop in
radon exposure for the
residents of the home,
this represents a
dramatic risk reduction
for about 20,000 New
Jersey families during
the past decade. The
NJDEP Radon Program
appreciates the efforts
of real estate
professionals to ensure
that radon testing is
done properly during
home sales. If real
estate groups are
interested in learning
more, the Program can
provide a speaker with
a slideshow
presentation, or a 10
minute videotape about
radon testing. To
arrange a speaker,
order the videotape or
other materials, or
obtain other specific
information about
radon, contact the
NJDEP Radon Program
Helpline,
1-800-648-0394,
or the Program’s Web
site, www.njradon.org.
Reprinted with permission
of the New Jersey
Association of REALTORS®
from the August, 2001
issue.