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Press Release_ Radon Testing Events_010523

Press Releases

FORIMMEDIATE RELEASE

January 5, 2023

 

Contact:Black Hawk County Health Department

Phone:319-291-2413

publichealth@blackhawkcounty.iowa.gov

 

 

Black Hawk County Public Health Schedules Radon Testing Events

 

January is Radon Action Month. Radon is the number one cause of non-smokers’ lung cancer, and number two cause of lung cancer overall. Five out of seven homes in Iowa have dangerously elevated levels of radon, yet many Iowans remain unfamiliar with radon, its health risks, and how to fix elevated indoor levels.

 

This month, Black Hawk County Public Health will provide radon education and sell short-term radon test kits for $10 at the following locations:
           

LOCATION                                                              DATE                     TIME

·       Hy-Vee Logan Plaza, Waterloo          January 10         4 pm - 6 pm

·       Cedar Falls Library                             January 13        10 am - 12 pm

·       Habitat Re-Store Waterloo                 January 17         9:30 am – 11:30 am

·       Waterloo Library                                 January 24        9 am - 11 am

·       Cedar Valley SportsPlex                    January26         4 pm - 6 pm

 

Radon kits are also available during regular business hours at Black Hawk County Public Health, 1407 Independence Avenue, 5th Floor, Waterloo.

 

Radon is a colorless, odorless, tasteless, radioactive gas produced from the decay of naturally occurring uranium in the soil. Radon enters homes and buildings through foundation cracks, construction joints, sump pits, and other openings. Indoor radon levels can be very high. When radon is breathed in, it can damage the lungs and cause lung cancer.

 

The only way to know if a home has high levels of radon, is to test the home. If radon levels are found to be dangerously elevated, it can be fixed through mitigation. The Environmental Protection Agency’s radon action level is 4 picoCuries/Liter(pCi/L). The average indoor radon level in Iowa is more than six times the national average. An estimated 400 lives are lost in Iowa each year due to radon-induced lung cancer. That is approximately the same number of lives lost in traffic accidents in Iowa each year.

 

For more information about radon or to purchase a radon test kit, stop by one of the awareness events in January or visit the Black Hawk County Public Health website: bhcpublichealth.org.