Various Articles About Siding
Problems.
Masonite:
Godzilla of class actions
A must read article from the Mobile Register. Mobile Alabama is where
the trial took place.
Plaintiffs See Payouts Shrink
In Siding Suit
"The L-P siding, a concoction of wood scraps and resins, was installed
on about 800,000 homes around the country from 1985 to 1995. It warped
prematurely, rotted in wet weather and sprouted mushrooms and other fungus.
Lawsuits sprouted as well, although L-P contended the problems stemmed
mostly from faulty installation." Richard B. Schmitt, Wall Street Journal
"Weyerhaeuser
plan OK'd; settlement puts no limits on liability" by Drew DeSilver
Seattle Times business reporter A California judge yesterday gave preliminary
approval to an agreement settling a class-action lawsuit against Weyerhaeuser
over defective house siding. (HomeOwners for Better Building will review
the proposed settlement.)
"Weyerhaeuser
poised to settle massive suit over bad siding" by Drew DeSilver Seattle
Times business reporter Hundreds of thousands of people throughout the
West could be compensated by Weyerhaeuser for defective hardboard siding
under a nationwide settlement proposal announced yesterday. The proposal
would settle a class-action lawsuit filed two years ago in California,
but Seattle attorney Christopher Brain said it also would apply
to claims against Weyerhaeuser in other states. (FYI: Christopher Brain
was the attorney involved in the LP siding suit. See the Wall
Strteet Journal Article)
HomeOwners for Better Building objects to the proposed national ABTCO
siding settlement. "A
Review of the ABTCO Hardboard Siding Settlement by John R. Cobarruvias"
Siding problems?
by Caroline E. Mayer The Washington Post Wayne Thevenot calls
himself a "victim of bad judgment," all because he and his wife,
Laura, decided to use Masonite hardboard siding on the exterior of their
new addition when they remodeled seven years ago.
Faulty
Siding Complaints Require Surveys
Wisconsinites Try To Get Their Fair Share Of Lawsuits --State consume
officials have taken the next step in investigating
faulty home siding sold to thousands of Wisconsin residents, reports News3's
Katy Sai. What originally began as a consumer warning and evolved into
the subpoenaing of local manufacturers has now gone public -- in the form
of homeowner surveys.
IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
No. 97-0884 In re Masonite Corp., Abitibi-Price Corp., and MG Building
Materials, Inc., Relators consolidated for oral argument with No. 97-0885
In re Masonite Corp., Abitibi-Price Corp., and MG Building Materials, Inc.,
Relators On Petitions for Writs of Mandamus Argued on October
20, 1998
Siding
Is State's Biggest Housing Problem.
Damage Totals $300 Million Across Nation MADISON, Posted 9:40 a.m.
September 14, 1998 State consumer protection officials call it
one of the biggest housing problems they've ever seen.
Home
Siding Suits Spark Action
Wisconsin Residents Rush To Claim Settlement Cash MADISON, Posted 3:45
p.m. August 2, 1998
The Wisconsin
Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection has been swamped
with a record number of phone calls since News 3 aired a story a
few weeks ago about faulty hardboard house siding.
Reimbursement
for Defective Siding on Homes
(Madison) The Wisconsin
Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection The clock
keeps ticking for owners of homes constructed with certain types of exterior
hardboard siding who have experienced siding damages or replacement costs.
State
Issues Subpoenas To Home Siding Manufacturers
The Wisconsin
Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection is issuing
subpoena and civil investigative demands this week to six manufacturers
of reconstituted wood building materials used in home siding, roofing
and sheathing.
Health
Fact Sheet For Homeowners With Rotting Wood Composite Siding:
Mold and Health
Factsheet Fungi detected in the indoor air of two Waukesha County homes
with rotting wood composite siding may pose a slight risk to people with
asthma or allergies, according to the Wisconsin Division of Health.
The levels found in the indoor air would not affect healthy individuals.
When Dream Products Turn
Into Nightmares Is Your House a "Composite"? Will the Stuff Fall Apart?
What to Do if It Does?
By June Fletcher , The Wall Street Journal, July 24, 1998 Millions
of U.S. homeowners across the country who bought homes since the mid-1980s
building boom have discovered that some commonly used synthetic or composite
building materials, though touted as dream products, can become nightmares.
Worse, some of these products may be found in the sheathing and subflooring
-- the musculature of a house --where damage may not be apparent until
it is already far gone.
Inspectors
to target siding problems Group says it will also advise on pursuing
damage claims
By Michele Derus of the Journal Sentinel staff November 1, 1998
The Wisconsin Association of Home Inspectors has pledged its help in identifying
dwellings with problem-plagued wood composite housing siding and advising
inhabitants of how to pursue damage claims.
Damage
mounts as siding rots off homes Already a costly mess elsewhere, boards
become 'monster problem' here
By Michele Derus of the Journal Sentinel staff September 13,
1998
Sue and Jim Knoernschild's white Waukesha house is tinged with black,
the result of rot and mildew from a wood composite siding that has
racked up more than $300 million in damage claims nationwide but whose
impact is just surfacing in Wisconsin. |