Protect Military Families from Mold

Full Title:
MOLD Act

Summary#

This bill, called the Military Occupancy Living Defense Act (MOLD Act), sets new health and safety rules for military family housing, especially privatized housing. It requires standards for humidity, ventilation, inspections, mold testing, and mold cleanup. The bill aims to protect service members and their families from mold and other environmental hazards and to increase oversight of housing contractors.

Key changes:

  • Requires interim guidance within 180 days and final standards within one year for humidity, ventilation, dampness, and water intrusion (indoor humidity target: under 50%).
  • Mandates independent third-party mold and environmental inspections at tenant turnover, after complaints, and after remediation or repairs; inspection results must be recorded and shared with tenants and DoD offices.
  • Requires contractors for privatized military housing to pay for third-party inspections, maintenance, mold remediation, relocations, property loss, and refunds of housing allowance for units declared uninhabitable.
  • Sets certification rules for people who assess or remediate mold and adopts a national standard for mold cleanup.
  • Requires regular reporting: quarterly installation reports compiled by a Chief Housing Officer and annual public reporting on complaints, inspection results, remediation costs, and relocations.

What it means for you#

  • Members of the Armed Forces and their families

    • If you live in military family housing, you would have access to inspection records for your unit and faster, formal responses to humidity, water damage, and mold complaints.
    • If an inspection fails, tenants can be relocated or the unit remediated within 30 days if they choose relocation.
    • Providers would be responsible for costs of relocation, remediation, and certain property losses when units are uninhabitable.
  • Tenants moving into a unit

    • Units must receive independent inspections at turnover. Incoming tenants can request the unit’s inspection history.
  • Privatized housing providers and contractors

    • New contract terms must require them to pay for inspections, maintenance, remediation, relocations, property loss, and to refund basic housing allowance when appropriate.
    • Contractors must ensure workers and remediators have certifications from recognized bodies.
  • Department of Defense housing offices

    • Must implement interim and final environmental standards, run a 24/7 complaint hotline and website, respond to complaints within five business days, and track and report issues quarterly.
    • Must maintain records for at least five years and submit compiled reports to Congress and make some information public.
  • Independent inspectors and remediators

    • Must hold certifications from recognized nonprofit certifying bodies listed in the bill and follow the ANSI/IICRC S520 mold remediation standard.
  • Health care coverage

    • The bill does not change current TRICARE coverage; it asks DoD and HHS to evaluate health impacts of mold and consider medical responses, but it does not require expansion of coverage.

Expenses#

No publicly available information on overall federal cost estimates or a fiscal note is included with the bill text.

Known cost or financial effects noted in the bill:

  • Privatized housing providers would be contractually required to pay for third-party inspections, maintenance, mold remediation, tenant relocations, property loss, and refunds of basic allowance for housing when units are uninhabitable.
  • The Department of Defense will incur administrative costs to issue guidance and standards, operate and publish complaint and inspection data (including a 24/7 hotline and website), hire or certify independent inspectors, compile quarterly reports, retain data for five years, and provide briefings to Congress.
  • The bill authorizes suspending eligibility for housing-related bonuses for landlords who show systemic failure; implementation and enforcement may require audits and performance reviews that have costs.

Proponents' View#

The bill appears intended to address specific problems identified in the findings and text. Possible arguments in favor include:

  • The bill appears intended to set uniform, measurable health and safety standards for military family housing to reduce mold and moisture problems.
  • Independent third-party inspections and public reporting could improve transparency and contractor accountability.
  • Requiring providers to pay for inspections, remediation, relocations, and property loss shifts direct costs away from military families who have paid out-of-pocket.
  • Certification requirements and a recognized cleanup standard aim to raise the quality and consistency of mold assessment and remediation.
  • Regular reporting to DoD leadership and Congress could help detect trends and prompt corrective action to protect readiness and family health.

Opponents' View#

The bill text leaves some practical questions and trade-offs that could be raised as concerns:

  • The bill does not include a public fiscal estimate, so it is unclear how much DoD implementation (staffing, IT systems, oversight) will cost and where that funding will come from.
  • It is unclear how quickly DoD and housing providers can hire enough certified independent inspectors and remediators to meet the required timelines.
  • The phrase “to the extent practicable” for applying new contract terms to existing agreements leaves uncertain how and when current contracts will change.
  • Enforcement relies partly on administrative steps (audits, suspending bonuses); the bill does not detail dispute-resolution processes or how disagreements over inspection findings or remediation sufficiency would be handled.
  • The bill sets an indoor humidity target (<50%) and specific testing methods, but it does not discuss how temporary conditions or seasonal variations will be managed in practice.
  • The bill asks DoD and HHS to evaluate health impacts and “consider” coverage changes but does not require TRICARE or other medical coverage to pay for mold-related diagnosis or long-term treatment.