Rome News-Tribune

UGA Radon program urges Georgians to test for radon this January

- Keith Mickler is the County Coordinato­r and agricultur­e agent for The University of Georgia/Floyd County Cooperativ­e Extension located at 12 East 4th Ave, Rome, Ga. 30161. 706-295-6210. Office hours are Monday-Friday 8 a.m. — 5 p.m.

What’s Deadly, Invisible, and Present All Over?

As it is every year, January is national radon action month. This year feels different. Many of us are spending more time at home to keep each other safe and focus on our health. This makes it even more important that we test our homes for radon, a colorless, odorless gas that is the second leading cause of lung cancer.

In Floyd county, about 10.4% of homes tested (483) have elevated levels of radon. Over the course of many years, exposure to this gas can cause lung cancer, even in nonsmokers. In fact, radon is the leading cause of lung cancer among nonsmokers.

Radon is a naturally occurring gas that comes from the breakdown of uranium in soil and rock. Often granite rock naturally has high levels of uranium, which is part of why radon is such a persistent problem in Georgia. The gas seeps out of the soil and rise up through crawlspace­s, foundation­s, and basements into a home. About 800 Georgians die annually from radon induced lung cancer.

Fortunatel­y, testing for radon gas is simple and inexpensiv­e. A short-term radon test is hung in the lowest level of the home for three to seven days before being mailed to the laboratory. The laboratory will then send the homeowner results after it processes the test kit. Test can be obtained from the UGA Radon Program website (radon.uga.edu) or a hardware or big box store. During the month of January, Georgians can receive $5 off their online radon test kit order at (radon. uga.edu) by using the code NRAM2021 at checkout.

If the radon level in your home is high, you can install a radon reduction system. A radon reduction (or radon mitigation) system reduces high levels of indoor radon to acceptable levels. The system most frequently used is a vent pipe system and fan that pulls radon from beneath the house and vents it to the outside.

Radon exposure from drinking water is primarily a concern in private wells. In Georgia, wells drilled into granitic crystallin­e rock aquifers, usually in the northern part of the state, are at risk of naturally occurring radon contaminat­ion. This is where the uranium that decays to radon can be found at higher levels. If you don’t know whether there is radon in your well water, have the water tested. The UGA Agricultur­al and Environmen­tal Services Laboratori­es in Athens test water samples for the presence of radon. To get a water testing kit, contact your local UGA Extension office or call 1-800-ASK-UGA1.

 ??  ?? Keith Mickler
Keith Mickler

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