16 Tex. Admin. Code § 78.100 - Minimum Work Practices and Procedures for Mold Assessment
(a) Scope. These general work practices are
minimum requirements and do not constitute complete or sufficient
specifications for mold assessment. More detailed requirements developed by an
assessment consultant for a mold assessment or for a particular mold
remediation project shall take precedence over the provisions of this section.
(b) Purpose. The purpose of a mold
assessment is to determine the source(s), location(s), and extent of mold
growth in a building, to determine the condition(s) that caused the mold
growth, and to enable the assessment consultant to prepare a mold remediation
protocol.
(c) Personal protective
equipment for assessors. If an assessment consultant or company determines that
personal protective equipment (PPE) should be used during a mold assessment
project, the assessment consultant or company shall ensure that all individuals
who engage in assessment activities and who will be, or are anticipated to be,
exposed to mold are provided with, fit tested for, and trained on the
appropriate use and care of the specified PPE. The assessment consultant or
company must document successful completion of the training before the
individuals perform regulated activities.
(d) Sampling and data collection. If samples
for laboratory analysis are collected during the assessment:
(1) sampling must be performed according to
nationally accepted methods;
(2)
preservation methods shall be implemented for all samples where necessary;
(3) proper sample documentation,
including the sampling method, the sample identification code, each location
and material sampled, the date collected, the name of the person who collected
the samples, and the project name or number must be recorded for each sample;
(4) proper chain of custody
procedures must be used; and
(5)
samples must be analyzed by a laboratory licensed under §78.62.
(e) Mold remediation protocol. An
assessment consultant shall prepare a mold remediation protocol that is
specific to each remediation project and provide the protocol to the client at
least one calendar day before remediation activities begin. The mold
remediation protocol must specify:
(1) the
rooms or areas where the work will be performed;
(2) the estimated quantities of materials to
be cleaned or removed;
(3) the
methods to be used for each type of remediation in each type of area;
(4) the PPE to be used by
remediators. A minimum of an N-95 respirator is recommended during mold-related
activities when mold growth could or would be disturbed. Using professional
judgment, a consultant may specify additional or more protective PPE if he or
she determines that it is warranted;
(5) the proposed types of containment, as
that term is defined in §78.10(9) and as described in subsection (g), to
be used during the project in each type of area; and
(6) the proposed clearance procedures and
criteria, as described in subsection (i), for each type of remediation in each
type of area.
(f)
Building occupants. A mold assessment consultant shall consider whether to
recommend to a client that, before remediation begins, the client should inform
building occupants of mold-related activities that will disturb or will have
the potential to disturb areas of mold contamination.
(g) Containment requirements. Containment
must be specified in a mold remediation protocol when the mold contamination
affects a total surface area of 25 contiguous square feet or more for the
project.
(1) Containment is not required if
only persons who are licensed or registered under this chapter occupy the
building in which the remediation takes place at any time between the
start-date and stop-date for the project as specified on the notification
required under §78.110.
(2)
The containment specified in the remediation protocol must prevent the spread
of mold to areas of the building outside the containment under normal
conditions of use.
(3) If walk-in
containment is used, supply and return air vents must be blocked, and air
pressure within the walk-in containment must be lower than the pressure in
building areas adjacent to the containment.
(A) Operation of equipment to recirculate air
inside of containment without maintaining negative air pressure may be
conducted when the specific conditions, phases, and time periods during which
it may or must occur are specified in the mold remediation protocol before
commencing this use of equipment.
(B) Operation of equipment to recirculate air
inside of containment without maintaining negative air pressure is prohibited
during periods of active mold remediation activity.
(h) Disinfectants, biocides and
antimicrobial coatings. An assessment consultant who indicates in a remediation
protocol that a disinfectant, biocide, or antimicrobial coating will be used on
a mold remediation project shall indicate a specific product or brand only if
it is registered by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for
the intended use and if the use is consistent with the manufacturer's labeling
instructions. A decision by an assessment consultant to use such products must
take into account the potential for occupant sensitivities and possible adverse
reactions to chemicals that have the potential to be off-gassed from surfaces
coated with such products.
(i)
Clearance procedures and criteria. In the remediation protocol for the project,
the assessment consultant shall specify:
(1)
at least one nationally recognized analytical method for use within each
remediated area in order to determine whether the mold contamination identified
for the project has been remediated as outlined in the remediation protocol;
(2) the criteria to be used for
evaluating analytical results to determine whether the remediation project
passes clearance;
(3) that
post-remediation assessment shall be conducted while walk-in containment is in
place, if walk-in containment is specified for the project; and
(4) the procedures to be used in determining
whether the underlying cause of the mold identified for the project has been
remediated so that it is reasonably certain that the mold will not return from
that same cause.
Notes
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