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Detroit family in hospital 30+ times after living in black mold for over a year

Detroit mom with 3 kids living in mold for over a year

DETROIT – A Detroit single mom and her three kids say they’ve been living among black mold for over a year. They don’t have the money to move, and her cries for help have been falling on deaf ears, until she called Local 4.

Inside Brieanna Powell-Hayes’s upstairs bathroom, black mold lines the base of the shower. She says it’s been 13 months since the city ordered the apartment to evaluate the issue and ensure it was fixed.

Powell-Hayes says the mold and additional growths at every corner sent her kids to the hospital time and time again this year for respiratory issues.

She showed Local 4 dozens of hospital papers.

“I’ll say roughly about 36 or 37 times,” Powell-Hayes said about the number of times she took her kids to the doctor.

She says her 18-year-old son needs surgery on his left nostril because of polyps that have grown due to the mold. Right now, he’s only breathing at 30%.

They moved into the unit off of Vermont and Alexandrine in Detroit in the summer of 2024.

She began to notice the mold soon after.

She tried to reach out to management for help and eventually asked the city for help.

The city came to the apartment, and an inspector told her that the garage here was the source of the mold in the bathroom and beyond. They issued a correction order for Phoenix Properties. The current manager of the apartment is Mutual Property Management.

“Contact mold specialist regarding fungus like material growing next to upstairs bathroom, bathtub, if it tests positive, properly abate and seal around bathtub,” Powell-Hayes said as she read from the correction order. “To be done by Nov. 24.”

The correction order was referring to Nov. 2024. It’s been 392 days since the deadline.

Local 4 spoke to a woman from Mutual Property Management’s leadership team. The woman said they would have someone to Powell-Hayes’s apartment on Monday.

Powell-Hayes says whatever happens now, it’s too late.

While waiting for help, Powell-Hayes got her own mold inspection.

“They told me that the numbers are too high,” she said. “Basically, they said that we do not need to be here, because they don’t like to see the numbers over seven. As you can see, the numbers are 2,000, 100, 500. All over the appropriate amount.”

As the mold moves in, taking over bedding, clothes, and shoes, she’s longing to be listened to.

“I’ve just been told that ‘you’re just angry, or you’re hostile,’ when all I am trying to do is just get them to come and fix what needs to be done,” she said.


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