No question about it, Chinese drywall in a house depresses
the building's market value. In Florida, a state Senate bill
would require local tax assessors to take the bad drywall into
consideration when appraising the value of homes, reports the
Bradenton Herald
("
Fla. lawmakers OK tax break for homes with Chinese
drywall," by Duane Marsteller). Some town appraisers are
already doing so, the paper reports: "Charles Hackney, Manatee
County’s property appraiser, said his office has
reduced the value of 80 properties with Chinese drywall by 50
percent across the board. Those reductions have taken nearly $7
million off the tax roll." But the Florida Senate bill would
require assessors to go even further, setting the appraised
value of the home for tax purposes at zero in cases where "the
building cannot be used for its intended purpose without
remediation or repair.”
But according to a story in the Tampa Bay Tribune, some houses
with the tainted drywall have been able to sell for prices well
above zero — if well below the price of uncontaminated
houses
("
Tainted homes can find buyers," by Shannon Behnken). Home
buyer Andres Hernandez paid $280,000 for a 4,000-square-foot
home in South Tampa, and paid contractors $40,000 to strip and
replace the drywall. Now, Hernandez told the Tribune, he
figures his new home is worth about $400,000. "I would never
live in a home with the drywall," Hernandez told the paper,
"but the problem is totally fixable."
The scope of that required remediation is a matter of some
confusion, reports Southeast Construction magazine
("
Chinese Drywall Remediation Standard Already Evolving," by
Scott Judy and Pam Hunter). But official specs increasingly
require an extensive and thorough remediation process. An
"
Interim
Remediation Guidance" document published by the U.S.
Consumer Products Safety Commission, for example, calls for
removal and replacement of not just the drywall, but also all
house wiring, fire safety alarms, gas service piping, and fire
supression systems. And a
court order by Federal Judge Eldon Fallon goes even
further, requiring the removal of carpeting and some flooring,
as well as any cabinetry or other fixtures that hinder
contractors in accessing and removing the drywall or mechanical
systems. Fallon also ordered drywall makers to pay for
replacement of appliances such as refrigerators, microwave
ovens, and television sets.