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LincolnHall 380x216 Asbestos killed this man. Are you safe?

Adventurer Lincoln Hall died after early exposure to asbestos.

BY SENATOR LISA SINGH

The March death of Everest man, Lincoln Hall, is a stark reminder that asbestos kills.

Lincoln cheated death when he survived a night at 8600m near the summit of Mount Everest, without oxygen or proper equipment. But there was no escaping the disease caused by exposure to asbestos as a nine-year-old.

Australia has one of the highest rates of mesothelioma in the world, with around 700 people diagnosed each year. And as Lincoln’s death some 47 years after helping his father build two cubby houses with asbestos sheeting reminds us, the time between exposure and the onset of symptoms can be anywhere from 20 to 50 years.  For those who have already been exposed to this carcinogen, the reality is that it may be too late.

Thousands of Australians families still face the loss of a loved one, as experts predict the toll of asbestos-related disease will not reach its peak until 2020. An asbestos-related death is both swift and painful. Once symptoms show themselves it is usually a matter of months before death. Just five per cent of those diagnosed with mesothelioma survive five years or longer.

The dangers associated with asbestos have been known for decades. In the 1960s mesothelioma was first reported as a fatal cancer of the lining of the lungs after it was discovered among those exposed to asbestos in South Africa. However the effects of asbestos had troubled many in Australia and across the world since 1898, when British factory safety inspectors were said to have expressed concerns about the ‘evil effects’ of asbestos dust.

Australia has a history of mining and importing asbestos – then a ‘wonder material’  – which was used to manufacture a range of products like roofing and building materials, brake and clutch linings, vinyl floor tiles, water and sewerage piping and fireproof clothing. Asbestos mining ceased in 1983 and in December 2003 all forms of asbestos were banned from use in Australia.

Australia has experienced two waves of asbestos-related disease diagnoses, the first from the mining of asbestos and the manufacturing of asbestos-related products, and the second from the use of asbestos in the construction industry.

Last year, the University of Western Australia identified the beginning of a third wave associated with home renovations. As the sad death of Lincoln last week highlights, this wave has begun and it has the potential to span future decades.

Between the 1940s and 1980s the majority of Australian homes were built using some form of asbestos product. Today, these are the homes often marketed as a `Renovator’s Delight’ and thanks to the inspiration of reality DIY renovation TV shows, these renovations are increasingly being undertaken by laymen.

Each weekend across our wide country, budding renovators take sledgehammers to their walls, ripping up tiles in kitchens and bathrooms and pulling down crumbling sheds. It’s dirty, dusty work and as people seek to turn their houses into homes, many are dangerously oblivious to the fact they are inhaling a carcinogen.

And it’s not just those undertaking the renovations at risk. If renovators are unaware of the presence of asbestos, they are unlikely to take proper precautions for its removal or disposal. Family, neighbours and people passing by an asbestos filled wheelie bin or skip on the footpath are also in danger. Breathing in a single speck of asbestos dust is sometimes all it takes to begin a devastating process.

There is an obligation on reality DIY renovation TV shows to highlight the dangers associated with asbestos. Last year, a contestant of such a show said publicly that there had been an expectation participants would work in a dusty environment and remove their masks when they were required to speak to camera.

Such shows are designed to inspire people to renovate which is why, in a bid to promote their products, prominent hardware companies form partnerships with such shows. But failing to advise viewers of the dangers associated with asbestos, especially when it has been identified and safely removed `off camera’, is deplorable. In inspiring people to renovate, there is an obligation to ensure Australians are aware renovation is not always as simple as it may be made to look. There is a need to ensure this third wave of painful and unnecessary asbestos-related deaths does not continue in decades to come.

Since being lobbied, Channel Nine has announced it will include reference to having conducted an asbestos audit on its popular renovation program, The Block. The Executive Producer said viewers would also be advised to be aware of asbestos and seek advice on its presence and removal before undertaking renovations.

I recently received an email from a young woman who, together with her fiance, had ripped up their kitchen and hallway floors several years ago. A decent amount of dust was generated during this exercise. This couple had only recently been made aware the underlay was most likely asbestos. Now, at the age of 25, this woman wrote of her distress at the thought of not being able to watch her children grow up. She had never known that asbestos had been used as underlay, so she hadn’t given it a second thought. And why would she?

The Gillard Labor Government commissioned an independent Asbestos Management Review in 2010 which is expected to hand down its recommendations by June 30 of this year. The review aims to address the enhancement of education and public awareness, the removal, handling, storage and disposal of asbestos, the mandatory reporting and disclosure of asbestos and the mandatory collection of data and reporting on asbestos-related health issues.

Yet for many, the death sentence caused by exposure to asbestos was written decades ago. All that can be done is to ensure they receive adequate compensation. Research must continue to be funded in the hope of either a cure or better treatment, and victims and their families must be provided with appropriate support.

There is no simple solution when it comes to asbestos, and the issue is further complicated by legislation falling across all three tiers of government. There is also the issue of cost. The removal and disposal of asbestos is expensive, which is one of the reasons people either fail to remove it, or do so themselves.

But what cost should we put on a human life?

The death of Lincoln Hall is a tragedy but it will not be in vain if it helps save lives in raising awareness of the very real risk associated with asbestos.

Every day, an Australian dies from an asbestos-related disease, people aged anywhere from their 20s up. If Australians continue to die from asbestos-related disease in the decades to come, we only have ourselves to blame.

Lisa Singh is a Labor Senator for Tasmania. Her interest in asbestos began when she was Workplace Relations Minister in the Tasmanian Government from 2008 – 2010. Senator Singh was the founding CEO of Asbestos Free Tasmania Foundation in 2010. She is currently the co-chair of the Parliamentary Group on Asbestos Related Disease.

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38 Comments so far

  1. Guest

    I was 3 years old when I lost my pop to asbestosis I didn’t understand what was happening to him at the time, all I could see was my pop unserious pain and fading before my eyes. Now my 60 year old uncle is dying of the same disease I understand it now and understand what it I doing to him and it is devastating. I now live with the fear of asbestos affecting my father after years of renovating and old house. This is a horrible and crippling disease and I find it disturbing that channel nine would expose people to it for a television show.

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  2. Anonymous

    It really upset me when James Hardie moved overseas a few years ago now, as it was obvious to me even then that they would not have enough funds for compensation in the future

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  3. Simone Collins

    My mother died 1984 – she was exposed to asbestos in an office in Sydney in 1960′s (in her 20′s) sitting at her desk breathing in the small dust each day on paperwork the phone etc – she was 47 – I was 13 – enough said my life has changed forever — I’m now in my 40′s — I’ve renovated couple of homes and it is a constant reminder if my family have been exposed to more asbestos – who knows – asbestos can appear anytime, any year and anyone !

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  4. Ruby

    My grandfather died last December from mesothelioma. He was given 6 months to live 3 years before he passed away and we are incredibly grateful for the extra time we had with him. The last few weeks were horrible as we watched him slowly fad away before our eyes in a hospital bed. We are a close family, I saw my Papa at least once a week and despite knowing what was coming, his death was still a horrible shock and incredibly traumatic. Mesothelioma is a terrible disease and asbestos is scary- I feel so much for any family that has to go through dealing with it.

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  5. colleen

    Mia,
    I have followed your career since, seriously, i can’t remember!!! You have always inspired me, regardless of what the issue is right now. I have followed your career and have the same deep feelings as you do, especially in regards to the way woman are portrayed in the media.

    I beg of you to give a new face to the Asbestos campaign, one which will bring home the terrifying facts.

    Age is no barrier.

    The scare campaign is real!!

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  6. Sally

    I want to preface this comment with my sympathies for the victims of asbestos. Mesothelioma is a horrible & scary disease and I am so sorry for anyone who has experienced it and their family left behind.
    However, I wanted to share with you my grandfather’s story. He is now over 80 and although he has been exposed to asbestos during his career as a mechanical engineer and you can see it in his lungs on xrays – he has not been affected by it. He has also never ever been a smoker.
    I am not trying to downplay the risks of asbestos exposure and I don’t want to suggest that only smokers develop mesothelioma. I simply want to share a story about someone in their 80s who has lived a long and healthy life despite the timebomb sitting his lungs. To highlight the fact that although the odds are probably not in our favour that it is possible to live a long and healthy life despite asbestos exposure.
    That being said, asbestos exposure scares the bejeezus out of me. When are James Hardy going to start paying for all the expensive removals of this material from our homes, schools & workplaces?

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    • colleen

      I am very happy that you’re father lived a long and productive life. Most of my
      family did as well, and waht’s more, most of them drank and smoked!!! God, so do i!! I really don’t expect judgement right now, the facts are in. He was diagnosed and within 12 months gone! He was a happy healthy 36 year old man?boy{ Ican say that, cause i’m his sister}.

      Please do not disrespect me, it was not smoking or, he never did drugs, if that is what you are implying.

      What i am talking about is the Dust and disease bd, and the gvrntmt.

      Life is a lottery, i absolutely agree.

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  7. colleen

    Such a hard topic for me. I lost my brother, he was 36 years of age age. One minute he was fine, the next he was a shell of who he was. What made it worse is he did not want me to see him the way he was. That would almost
    be acceptable if it wasn’t for what the court put him through!!!. He was so sick. so quickly, they actually set up a court in our house and went through his life like he was not human, and judged the mistakes he had made. And that is how they judged what he was worth!!!!!
    The whole system needs to be changed. He was treated like a criminal, for f… sake, he was 36!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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  8. KylieC

    My darling dad died from this dreadful disease back in 2003…he went from being a healthy, fit 62 year old who got a cough that wouldn’t go away…within weeks his lung collapsed and on his birthday he was diagnosed with mesothelioma. Nine months later he died, a shell of the man he was after it spread from his lungs to his brain. He remembered using this particularly asbestos sheeting that causes mesothelioma once in his building career back in 1968….my children never got to know their Opa and our family has never been the same since he died. Asbestos is seriously deadly stuff and everyone needs to be aware of that, I do believe that in the next 20 years that everyone will know someone who has died from having had some contact with Asbestos…it just waits like a patient bomb inside you ready to go off…articles like this are so painful for me but also necessary for everyone to understand how deadly this stuff is.

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  9. Son

    My father died from mesothelioma from working with asbestos in the building industry for many years. It scares me to hear of stories where waste companies have not disposed of asbestos properly due to the cost – or people don’t use the correct methods of disposal because they want to save money. The message that this stuff kills really needs to be heeded.

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  10. overitall

    “If Australians continue to die from asbestos-related disease in the decades to come, we only have ourselves to blame.”

    Huh? How does that work, Ms Singh?

    Ordinary Australians are NOT to blame for this mess Ms Singh, any more than we are to blame for the depleted uranium which has been carried from war zones to our soils and water supply, or the radioactivity from Fukushima which is not being talked about in the media either.

    It makes the anti-smoking lobby look pretty foolish, which it most certainly is, given the gravity of the above three threats to human lungs. As a diversion tactic it’s working very well, as the majority of people have been brainwashed into believing that cigarette smoke is the major contributor to lung disease. How many people are remotely aware of the presence of depleted uranium? Very few I would think, because you have to go looking and dig deep for accurate information, likewise radioactive fallout and asbestos.

    The fact is, we’re all living on borrowed time and most of what we’ve been told is disinformation and outright lies. Perhaps that is our fault, because we don’t demand honesty and integrity from politicians and the scientific community. We’re all so busy being politically correct and non-judgmental. Anyone who dares to point out the truth is labelled ‘negative’ and summarily dismissed. Mustn’t rock the illusory boat with the facts.

    I’m not sure how atheists handle it, but for me the mantra is May God Help Us.

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    • Chandrika

      Yes, but what does this have to do with the topic at hand?

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      • overitall

        Chandrika, the topic is death by ignorance. Sometimes ignorance is a choice, but not always. With asbestos, the people who knew about the dangers long ago deliberately did not inform the public. Ditto the wall of silence around the other two killers.

        Was your comment designed to provoke a particular response?

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  11. David Thompson

    After a life of achievement, my great uncle succumbed to asbestosis last year. He was exposed to it through his work as a researcher developing processes for refining blue asbestos. He would have had massive exposure on a prolonged basis trying to make it into saleable products in the 1940s and 50s.
    http://manly-daily.whereilive.com.au/news/story/awake-for-farewell/

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  12. Kate!

    After cyclone Tracey in Darwin, when hundreds of asbestos-containing houses were blown to bits, the decision was made to bury the waste in various holes around the city, including, incredibly, on at least one of the main beaches. Naturally, in a tidal zone, the building refuse didnt stay buried forever and bits of asbestos have worked their way up and now litter the beach. Not small amounts either – one one short walk last year, before I knew what the stuff was, I collected both pockets full to bulging with little pieces of it. This is a beach where loads of families recreate all year round.

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  13. Jrn

    I work with people newly diagnosed. It is an awful disease. I have seen women get ill from doing their husband’s washing. It is frightening. One man I recently saw was a chef. He haf exposure either via oven mits or the lining of the big industrial ovens. He also had built his kby in the 80s. It is devastating indeed. I have had the abestos removed in my house, cost a bit but worth it.

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    • Kylie

      My mum has Sarcoidosis which she picked up from washing my dad’s work clothes (truck driver who worked with various dusts, concrete waste, landfill, tar, coal etc) – she can’t even go after the company because so far she is the only one to have come up with it…very similar to asbestosis…

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  14. crystalanne83

    My daughters primary school has been closed due to some structual damage – which could risk asbestos being released… While it is an extreme measure, I am glad they are doing it!

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  15. Kate

    I was pleased while watching Better Homes and Gardens last night to see how they pushed the danger of asbestos and the importance of getting in the experts in the middle of a really lighthearted kitchen spruce up story. I was struck by it at the time and now reading this about the block, I am particularly impressed.

    There are some real horrer stories out there about how brief contact can kill. It’s scary stuff.

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  16. Worried

    I moved into a new place a couple of months ago and have just realised that the fence (which is full of cracks and falling apart) is asbestos. The way the duplex is designed, I have to park next to the fence (the passengers in my car have to open their door onto it) AND my front door faces the fence.

    I’m terrified now! How am I meant to know if it’s safe or not? Is there someone I can contact to check these things out?

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    • Kate O

      If it is cracked and breaking it could be friable asbestos (not bonded which id when it is intact and generally not harmful) which means particles are coming off and I believe not only is it illegal but incredible dangerous.

      http://www.workcover.nsw.gov.au/formspublications/publications/Documents/choosing_an_asbestos_consultant_4547.pdf

      I would get onto your body corporate stat.

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      • Anonymous

        We have a similar situation. Have just built a new home in the inner west of Sydney. Our neighbours house is basically the boundary and looks into our garden. We discovered his house has been boarded up with asbestos which is mouldy and broken off in one corner. We have two babies under 2 so we approached the owner about having it removed but he is being difficult, probably because it covers up something. We were even happy to pay for removal! But now we are going to go through council and check our rights. Its really stressing me out. I just want it gone!!

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        • Kate O

          How horrible! I was talking to the BF last night and he said it is definately illegal to have friable asbestos products on or around your home, you have drawn the mans attention to it and the council, if neither of them do anything I’d be calling NSW health or call an asbestos remover for an evaluation yourself. At the end of the day it is illegal and it is harmful. Fingers crossed you get a good result!

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  17. Mug

    We had an asbestos fence/retaining wall that was starting to lean after all the rain in 2010 in Brissy so we had it removed. $17,000 and a completely ripped up backyard later it was gone. It was money that we didn’t have and will be paying off for years to come. I’m glad we did it because we’ve had a baby since then and obviously we want her to grow up in asbestos free environment. It would have been nice though if there was some kind of rebate to encourage people to rip it out responsibly – too many people are careless with it. My partner has had contact with asbestos many times in his life (he’s an electrician) and I worry that he’ll be sick in years to come.

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    • Mug

      And our house was built in 1991, so it’s important to remember it’s not just the post-war fibro cottages that are affected!

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  18. Kate O

    My partner is a project manager for a demolition company and it worries me sick everytime they do asbestos jobs. Of course he is super pedantic about wearing masks, suits, no facial hair and immediately showering afterwards etc. all the asbestos needs to be glued, covered and taken to the tip immediately. It terrifies me that one day he could suffer from asbestosis or mesothelioma from just one incidental exposure.

    On another note my boyfriend was saying that when he was doing his refresher they were talking about safe asbestos levels and apparently in sydney it is more than the ‘safe limit’ so if you’re really worried about it I’d be looking into that. I’ll ask my boyfriend for the link to the study when he gets home tonight.

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  19. Laws for Clouds

    Please remember that asbestos was used much later than what most people expect. My house was built in 1988 and until 1989 it was still used as the backing on some tiles. It was used as a filler in concrete driveways, look for fibres on worn parts.

    My friend just moved into a house where the shed next door had burnt down prior to his arrival. His whole yard was covered in asbestos dust, and he would have had no idea if his FiL hadn’t been a fireman.

    There is no safe level of exposure.

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  20. Tracey from Central Coast Seachange

    My dad died in Jan 2011 from asbestosis which he contracted after working in an asbestos factory when he was 18. He had five years of difficulty in breathing and in his final months he was on an oxygen machine 24 hours a day. I urge everyone to be extremely careful removing fibro etc when renovating.

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  21. Natasha

    I nursed Lincoln when he was first diagnosed and couldn’t help thinking that he’d cheated death up there on everest only to have his life taken by asbestos.. Not fair is it?

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  22. Jessiegirl

    I haven’t been commenting of late but this story is too close to home not to…

    My Dad died of mesothelioma in January 2010. He had worked with asbestos when he was 17. Since then he was conscripted (and survived) being a front line soilder in Vietnam and returned to be a heavy duty mechanic – later a manager in that field. He was the dad to us three kids (I’m the baby).

    He never realised he even had asbestosis but after some pain in his chest he was diagnosed with mesothelioma, told there was no treatment and given 18 months to live. He lived 19 months. He was 61 when he died.

    The disease was horrible in the end and it took my dad (as I remember him) from me in those last few weeks – truely horrific. Now, I can look back and remember him as he was throughout his life and not just in death. Love you dad. x

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  23. lplates

    My upstairs neighbour started a landscaping business. His equipment took over our lovely shared front yard where my children loved to play. One day my children were playing on and around his trailer. Later friends joined them. I would check periodically through the window to see that they were ok. It was a windy day. Then I went outside and noticed fibro sheeting in the trailer. I quickly covered it over and told my children and their friends to move away. When I confronted my neighbour about the asbestos risk to my children, he snapped at me ‘well the dump wouldnt take it cos of asbestos so what was I supposed to do!’ I rang around government departments and spoke to a specialised scientist who dealt with asbestos who told me that it required a large exposure to asbestos to have any kind of health risk. This is what studies had shown according to him. My fears were somewhat aligned but you have raised my fears once again.

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    • Faybian

      Hmm, your neighbour sounds like a “charmer”.

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  24. ellenannran

    The death of Lincoln Hall is a tragedy and makes me very apprehensive. My sister and I played amongst asbestos sheeting offcuts when our father built our 50s house, and later when he extended a granny flat which was also asbestos-clad. A couple of years ago, I was contacted by a lawyer acting on behalf of a former neighbour who was dying of an asbestos-related disease and had played with us a child at our house. Not sure of the outcome for my former childhood friend – a bad one I suspect – but starting to worry that there’s a ticking bomb inside of me and my sister….

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  25. Jude

    My cousin died from Mesothelioma a few years ago. They traced it back to an old office he worked in 20 years earlier. You just never know where you may come into contact with asbestos.

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  26. trixie melodian

    Ugh, what a hideous and incredibly scary story! Many of us dismiss so many cancer risks, “I only smoke a pack a week”, “I just like to get a bit of colour on my skin – I never let myself burn” etc – and it’s so frightening to realise that even a tiny exposure as a child can have such a devastating effect.

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    • masd270248

      Trixie, actually, the sun scare is just that, check the facts, we actually are at risk if we dont get SOME sun each day!!
      On asbestos risks – my husband died of a variation of asbestosis, but in WA, the “eminent” authority on asbestos, doesn’t agree that asbestos causes fibrosing alveolitis, and he had 5 parts per million, per square millimetre too few particles of asbestos in his lungs, and despite the rest of the medical profession thinking it does, and despite his co worker dying of mesothilioma, he didn’t qualify for compensation. Five years of painful life, then dying, and basically, stuff you!!
      They were forced to spray with asbestos as a fire retardant on buildings, and that is where he was affected.

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  27. Em

    We had asbestos in the house we are currently renovating and removing it was actually way cheaper than I expected (I was expecting $5000 and it was only $1200 – for a bathroom and laundry). Its just not worth the risk in doing it any other way in my opinion.

    My husband works in an industrial area and sadly they get asbestos dumped in their skip over weekends sometimes. This puts so many extra people at risk that dont have to be. (the staff, truck drivers, tip workers…)

    I actually worry about the people who now remove asbestos professionally. How are we sure the current precautions they are taking are 100% safe?

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  28. Kylie L

    At 60, our vibrant, fit, active neighbour hiked across Patagonia and then travelled the Kimberley. At 61 he died of mesothelioma. He was a builder in his youth before becoming an architect later, and was almost certainly exposed to asbestos in those earlier years of his career. He woke up with shoulder pain one day and five weeks later he was dead- that’s how quickly it can happen. Builders and renovators, PLEASE be careful! He was a lovely man with so much to live for.

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