Bill: Ban hazardous Chinese drywall
Bill could put pressure on Chinese government to help victims
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Bill could put pressure on Chinese government to help victims
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A Florida congressman is proposing a bill that would ban Chinese drywall from being imported into the United States.
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VIRGINIA BEACH — The "rotten eggs" smell emanating from Joe and Elizabeth Matulenas' Chinese drywall-riddled home on Saturday was so strong that people touring the home — including four members of Congress — wore respirators or gas masks.
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For over three years the Chinese Drywall Complaint Center has been attempting to get a meaningful federal response for desperate homeowners stuck in a home, or condominium in Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Southeast Texas, that contains toxic Chinese drywall. Toxic Chinese drywall is in tens, and tens of thousands of Florida, or US Southeast [...]
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The Construction Defect Center is becoming increasingly concerned about Chinese made construction building products, that began flooding the US, since 2004, or earlier. The group's new worry is Chinese made copper plumbing pipes, may not meet acceptable plumbing standards in the United States. The Construction Defect Center is openly saying, "We have some of this [...]
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The Chinese Drywall Complaint Center says, "We believe the costs associated with the toxic Chinese drywall disaster in Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Southeast Texas are actually going up, because the Obama Administration and various federal agencies are no shows. …
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Three years after reports of tainted Chinese drywall first surfaced, Parkland’s two main gated communities are slowly recovering.
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In just days every wall in Bill Palsgraf's home will be torn down.
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A Chinese drywall manufacturer would pay hundreds of millions of dollars to resolve court claims by thousands of Gulf Coast property owners who say the product wrecked their homes, under a deal that has been given preliminary approval by a federal judge.
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NEW ORLEANS – A Chinese drywall manufacturer would pay hundreds of millions of dollars to resolve court claims by thousands of Gulf Coast property owners who say the product wrecked their homes, under a deal that has been given preliminary approval by a federal judge.
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