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Faulty
Furnaces Set Scores of Fires, Weren't Recalled
Wednesday,
September 27, 2000
Home Edition/Section: Part A /Page: A-1
Safety: Thousands of homes
in the state have such units. After years of delay, agency
will issue a warning.
By: JENNIFER OLDHAM TIMES STAFF
WRITER
Defective attic furnaces
manufactured by a now-bankrupt firm have caused scores of
residential fires in California in the last decade, fire inspectors
and federal investigators said.
Hundreds of thousands of unsuspecting
homeowners may be at risk from these furnaces, made by Indiana-based
Consolidated Industries and sold under various brand names
in California from 1984 to 1992, these sources said.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission,
the independent federal agency responsible for warning citizens
about defective products, has known about the problem since
the mid-1990s. It said Tuesday it will issue a warning today
about the furnaces.
The commission's staff said it
didn't issue a warning earlier because federal law prohibits
it from doing so while it is in negotiations seeking a product
recall. The agency said it had hoped to issue a recall, but
was unable to do so when Consolidated--which would have been
required to finance this action--went out of business.
The lack of a recall or warning
to date had created a sense of foreboding among many fire-prevention
officials.
"Every time we have a cold snap
we have a furnace fire," said Michael Freige, a senior fire
inspector for the Torrance Fire Department, who said Consolidated
furnaces have caused seven residential fires there since 1994.
The issuance of a warning without
a recall means that homeowners probably will have to foot
the bill--averaging about $2,000--for inspecting and replacing
the furnaces. Some homeowners' insurance policies may absorb
the cost.
The case highlights problems
the CPSC runs into when it must deal with financially insolvent
companies. It also raises the question of whether laws that
limit the agency's ability to issue product warnings during
an investigation put consumers at unnecessary risk.
"The preference is for a recall,"
said Paul H. Rubin, a professor of economics and law at Emory
University and a former economist for the CPSC. "Warnings
are generally more generic, for example, 'Do not put things
in front of electric heaters.' "
Consumer advocates say the commission's
tight budget prevents it in many cases from pursuing companies
like Consolidated that are unable to finance a recall.
"The commission is always bound
by its limited budget," said Rachel Weintraub, a staff attorney
for the California Public Interest Research Group. "It's always
needing to balance what it can do to protect consumers and
what it can afford to do."
To date, no deaths or injuries
have been caused by the furnace fires. But residential damages
range from a 1990 blaze in North Tustin that destroyed a Ferrari
and evening gowns, to a $750,000 fire in Rancho Palos Verdes
in 1995 that consumed a home's roof and contents, to a $300,000
blaze in Porter Ranch last year that led to months of counseling
for a six-member family.
All three incidents sparked litigation.
Two cases were settled and the Porter Ranch case is pending
against the builder and Consolidated. Manufacturer Denies
Furnaces Hazardous
Consolidated said during discovery
proceedings that it sold about 140,000 attic furnaces in California,
said Rob MacDonald, an attorney at Richard G. White Inc. who
represents California homeowners. But the CPSC said the company
and its distributors sold at least 250,000. The units were
sold under 30 brand names, including Amana, Coleman, Kenmore,
Premier, Sears and Trane.
Trane Co. said it set out to
investigate some of the 7,000 Consolidated furnaces it distributed
in California as soon as it was informed of fires caused by
the units.
"As soon as Trane learned about
the problem with the furnaces it conducted an immediate investigation
and virtually all the units it was called in to inspect had
no problems," said Jeff Bleich, an attorney with Munger, Tolles
& Olson, a law firm representing Trane.
Reports by federal safety engineers
who tested the furnaces show that they cause fires because
of alterations Consolidated made to comply with California's
regional smog control rules. Metal rods installed on top of
the burner to absorb greater amounts of nitrogen oxide increase
the temperature inside the furnace, warp the burner and surrounding
parts and eventually allow the flame to escape.
Attorneys for the company dismiss
the furnace fires as statistically insignificant.
"Furnaces only last 15 to 20
years," said Daniel Freeland, Consolidated's bankruptcy trustee.
"If they were so defective, I think you would have thousands
and thousands of fires."
The commission staff said it
made the determination that the Consolidated attic furnaces
cause fires. The CPSC said its findings supported California
homeowners who filed a class-action lawsuit in 1994 against
Consolidated and four of its distributors: Addison Products,
Bard Manufacturing, American Standard/Trane Co. and Amana
Appliances. A Santa Clara Superior Court is scheduled to hear
a plaintiffs' motion to set a trial date next month.
"We agree with the plaintiffs
in the class-action suit," said Mike Gidding, a CPSC attorney.
"From the safety side of things, there's not much of a dispute."
But even with this determination,
the CPSC didn't warn consumers.
The agency's staff said attorneys
who filed the class-action lawsuit against Consolidated warned
furnace owners through a notice that they were required to
issue when the case was certified as a class action in 1997.
But this notice wasn't sent to
each individual member of the class, MacDonald said. Instead,
it was printed several times in regional newspapers, he said.
"We don't know where those households
are," MacDonald said. "Consolidated's records show the furnaces
going to distributors, who sent them to other distributors.
They went through 10 hands before they got to consumers."
The CPSC wanted to ultimately
issue a recall that would reimburse owners for the furnaces,
said Alan Schoem, director of the agency's Office of Compliance.
But a recall became much more
difficult when Consolidated filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
reorganization two years ago because of financial liabilities
stemming from lawsuits filed by fire victims and their insurers.
Attorneys representing California
homeowners dispute the CPSC's use of the firm's bankruptcy
filing as an excuse for its inaction.
"There's always an exception
in bankruptcy law for government enforcement activity," said
Dan Mogin, a San Diego attorney who this summer filed a class-action
lawsuit against Sears.
The CPSC said it had hoped the
company would emerge from bankruptcy.
Schoem likened the case to one
involving Cadet Manufacturing, an Oregon furnace maker that
filed for bankruptcy as soon as the CPSC filed a claim against
it alleging its in-wall electric heaters can overheat and
catch fire.
The agency was able to work with
the firm and its creditors to tailor a recall for about 2
million heaters that allowed the company to stay in business
and provide heater owners with a 50% discount on new units,
Schoem said.
But in the Consolidated case,
the company switched this summer to Chapter 7 bankruptcy,
liquidating its assets and wiping out CPSC's hopes of a similar
agreement.
The agency has been conducting
recall negotiations with Consolidated distributors but has
yet to reach an agreement with any of them, Schoem said. He
said these companies sold only about 20% of the furnaces installed
in California. Agency Criticized on Warning Delays
Product safety experts say this
isn't the first time that the CPSC has been criticized for
taking too long to release information about a faulty product.
Mary Ellen Fise, general counsel
for the Consumer Federation of America, a Washington-based
consumer advocacy group, likened the case to one in the late
1980s in which the CPSC was negotiating a recall of infant
pillows made by several manufacturers that were linked to
the suffocation deaths of 19 babies. The agency reached a
recall agreement with some of the manufacturers, but not others,
so it waited to go public, Fise said.
Several builders have responded
to the safety questions involving Consolidated attic furnaces
on their own. Southern California's fourth-largest builder,
Shea Homes, started investigating this spring and said the
furnaces could be in more than 100 of its communities.
Homeowners who have had fires
caused by faulty furnaces faced not only extensive smoke and
fire damage, but also the trauma of dislocation and rebuilding.
"Little did I know the nightmare
was about to begin," said Joy Sweeney, whose Porter Ranch
family needed counseling after their home was damaged last
year.
Experts agree that it's only
a matter of time--typically after eight to 10 years of steady
use--before the units become a hazard. The majority of the
Consolidated units have reached, or are about to reach, this
critical phase.
"Based on testing in the field,
these furnaces are guaranteed to fail," said Gerald Zamiski,
an engineer at Long Beach-based Vollmer-Gray Engineering Laboratories
who has tested hundreds of Consolidated's furnaces for a report
commissioned by the CPSC. Zamiski also acted as an expert
witness in cases filed by insurance companies against Consolidated.
Attorneys and fire investigators
say fire isn't the only danger presented by Consolidated furnaces.
The class-action lawsuit filed this summer by San Diego attorney
Mogin against Sears, a Consolidated distributor, was initiated
by a Bird Rock, Calif., family who contractors said could
have died when carbon monoxide leaked from a malfunctioning
furnace.
"The issue here is not whether
Consolidated manufactured a defective furnace," Sears attorneys
wrote in response to the plaintiffs' motion for class certification.
"It is whether Sears engaged in false advertising and/or breached
supposed express warranties."
The attorneys wrote that documents
provided with 212 Consolidated furnaces that Sears distributed
in California specify that they are Consolidated furnaces
with a one-year installation warranty.
The furnace fiasco began in the
mid-1980s. Consolidated wanted to cash in on California's
record-breaking building boom.
But the furnaces did not meet
regional air quality district standards. So Consolidated altered
the furnace, engineer Zamiski said, and never fully tested
the change.
Consolidated provided emissions-test
results to air-quality officials in the Bay Area Air Quality
Management District and the South Coast Air Quality Management
District. The South Coast district said it does not test furnaces
or specify how manufacturers should meet emissions standards.
"Manufacturers have to certify
that their equipment meets the emissions limits by having
it tested by an independent lab," district spokesman Bill
Kelly said. "We examine those lab reports for conformance
with our regulations and then we certify them if they comply."
Many of the attic furnaces were
purchased by home builders and some were sold as replacement
units. In 1984, contractors started installing them in subdivisions.
Investigators Cited Furnaces in Fires
The first fires caused by attic
furnaces occurred in 1990. No one has documented the number
of fires caused by the units, but many fire departments contacted
for this story cited at least one incident.
Throughout the 1990s, fire investigators
reported Consolidated furnaces caused blazes in many communities,
including Redondo, Manhattan and Newport beaches, North Tustin,
Rancho Palos Verdes, Irvine, Victorville, Yorba Linda, Porter
Ranch, Torrance, San Pedro, Venice, Murrietta, San Diego,
Compton and Ventura.
Because attics aren't equipped
with smoke detectors, many people who had fires were unaware
of the fire until it was well underway.
Joy Sweeney smelled smoke in
her Porter Ranch home early one morning in February 1999.
Then she saw smoke seeping out of a light fixture in the upstairs
hall and raced to evacuate her four children.
"As I picked my 4-year-old up
out of her bed and was walking out of the room, I glanced
up and flames were shooting out of her heating duct," Sweeney
said. The furnace was mounted in the attic above the little
girl's bed.
How to Check Your Furnace
Check the unit's make and model
number.
Call a licensed heating and air
conditioning contractor to inspect the furnace. (A contractor
must take the furnace apart and look closely at the burner
and heat exchanger for damage. Experts warn that most Consolidated
units are not repairable.)
If you check the unit yourself,
turn off the gas and power first.
Note: Whether your homeowners
insurance will cover a new furnace depends on your coverage.
Check with your insurance carrier.
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