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Helping Neighbors In Need
A new nonprofit agency to help families that have been effected by mold
Introducing
MOLD RELIEF
We're here to provide disaster assistance to families affected by MOLD . . .
and YOU can help, too!
Mold Relief, Inc. was founded by a mold survivor due to a lack of understanding and help from local and state communities about the very real problem of mold exposure. Many families are ill-equipped to deal with the financial and emotional aftermath that follows a problem with mold. They have nowhere to go while their homes are being rid of the infestation or, worst of all, made homeless when they are forced to forever abandon their toxic homes. All too often these families flee with only the clothes on their backs.
Mold Relief is dedicated to providing furniture, household items, clothing, nonperishable food, and many other goods and services to frightened families when they are forced to start over due to mold. Mold Relief can also help with the deposit and first months rent to relocate families.
However, we can't do it alone. We need you to help a neighbor in need.
How You Can Help
There are many ways you can help a family. Even a gift of $5 can mean the difference between a family making their security deposit on an apartment or going homeless. Mold Relief is a nonprofit organization, so your donations are tax deductible. Monetary donations may be sent to us at 800 Lexington St. #182, Norman, OK, 73069.
We also gratefully accept donated goods and services, including:
Housing assistance
Environmental testing
Counseling
Legal assistance
Furniture, baby items, and other household goods
Nonperishable food and clothing
Gift certificates to buy books about allergy, asthma, or mold
Phone calling cards
Your expertise: If you are an IAQ professional, please call us to discuss how you can help.
Your Neighbors Will Thank You . . .
Sandra Fay was evicted from her Hendersonville, Tennessee apartment after she complained of mold. Mold Relief helped her with the security deposits for her new apartment. Fay, who is disabled, was diagnosed with lupus, an auto-immune disorder in 2000.
It's a blessing to have a group like this," Fay says. "I don't know what I would have done without it."
And WE Thank You.
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