Own Lumber Liquidators Laminate Flooring?

If you own Lumber Liquidator’s laminate flooring, you might want to listen to the report by CBS’s 60 Minutes (above). Anderson Cooper tells consumers that the flooring they bought at Lumber liquidations, according to their tests across the country, are made with formaldehyde and are exceeding indoor air pollution levels designated by the EPA.  Some samples 20 times higher than what is considered safe and acceptable.

I find this story so interesting because in the last month, I was in the market for a new wood floor, and I went to Lumber Liquidators to look at their products, and my experience at their store really raised my eyebrows. I ended up not buying their product because I simply didn’t trust them. While I wasn’t looking at laminate flooring, I was looking at hardwood floor. And several of the products I was interested in (red oak) were not available. I waited three weeks and checked again, and still no stock. That was a bad sign considering the store was totally empty on my visit. I was the only customer.

I even called the retailer a couple of times to find out when they’d get more product in, and they told me they didn’t know. You don’t make money without a a product on the shelves to sell. And it certainly wasn’t flying off the shelves with no one in the store.

Of course they said they were happy to order me what I needed, but I saw a huge downfall in that offer. If I had a bad batch, I was going to stuck in a loop waiting for more orders, and what if the orders didn’t match, or had quality issues. I saw my project turning into many months of hassles without much effort. I saw a lose/lose scenario before I even started.

When I asked the store clerk if I could return boards that were defective, he told me no. They would only switch entire boxed bundles. Without inventory, it was a deal breaker. I also found that they had bad reviews online in the middle of doing my homework. Upon finding out, I called the store and identified that I saw that they had bad reviews. I asked them how they would stand by their product if different quality issues arose and they said that no one had returned a box of the product I wanted in over two years.

I didn’t buy it for one minute after reading dozens and dozens of bad reviews, and seeing a video of YouTube of the exact problems encountered.

Naturally, I decided to go elsewhere. They had a handful of red flags that told me not to buy their product before I saw the 60 Minutes report.

Now seeing Lumber Liquidators in the news and watching the owner talk, I am confident I made the right decision not to trust Lumber Liquidators. Seeing the the owner talk to Cooper, I do not trust him.

My Thoughts on Joan Rivers

When I heard the news that Joan Rivers was rushed from a clinic to Mount Sinai Hospital after surgery complications, I knew it wasn’t a good situation. With Joan being 81, complications and recovery are much more difficult.

I was really surprised on many levels that someone of Joan’s financial status would end up in a clinic for any procedure at her age, let alone a “surgery”.  At her advanced age, she was considered a high risk patient for complications on many fronts and to do an out-patient procedure away from full hospital support staff raised my eyebrows immediately.  I remember watching many experts over the years on TV caution people to get knocked out in a doctor’s office because the level of care could put you at risk.

Ironically, the American Society of Anesthesiologists wrote a paper on Safe Anesthesia in the Office-Based Surgical Setting on September 1, 2014…just days after Joan entered the hospital.  They write, “Despite the numerous advantages of performing procedures outside the hospital, the office environment can introduce significant concerns over patient safety and well-being.”

So why would Joan go there?   All of this made me wonder what was going on…

According to ABC news, Joan performed a comedy routine for an hour the night before she went into cardiac/respiratory arrest, and according to one attendee, there were “no signs that Rivers had any health issues whatsoever.”   She even joked about her demise that night.

Furthermore, we never got clear news as to exactly what Joan Rivers was going in to have done. Was it an endoscopy?  After all she was at an endoscopy clinic according to reports.  Some news agencies reported “throat surgery”–others reported “vocal cord surgery”.  What was Joan going in for when these complications arose?  It seems hard to find out, and if the family chose to keep it private, its certainly their right to do so.

So I am left to look at what has been reported.  Joan seemed in great health the night before her “surgery”.  She ended up at an endoscopy clinic, and endoscopic procedures are not typically considered “surgery”–so she had something else done.    There are endoscopic surgeries where they insert a small camera and its considered surgery.  Maybe she had that done?

Most people are not aware that outpatient clinics are not required to meet the same standard of care of a hospital or ambulatory surgical center. According to the Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation (APSF):

[As of 2009]…only 23 U.S. states have some regulation for office-based surgery. In addition, a vast majority of offices lack accreditation by one of the major accrediting agencies (AAAHC, AAAASF, JCAHO). Whether such procedures are performed with or without an anesthesia care team provider, current issues include patient and procedure selection, perioperative management, complications, and recovery. Non-patient related issues include proceduralists performing outside their scope of practice, substandard facilities, and lack of qualified office personnel.

So I went to Yorkville Endoscopy to see what they say. They don’t mention the word “surgery” anywhere on their website services page.

Hmmm….

Furthermore, on the front page of their website, there is something interesting. It says, “Yorkville Endoscopy is an Ambulatory Surgical Center, approved by the Department of Health and accredited by……to perform ambulatory procedures to diagnose and evaluate conditions of the upper and lower digestive system.”

Who are they accredited by?  It seems to be missing.

MISSING.

See for yourself…

yorkville

That has me wondering:  Did Joan want something done that wasn’t recommended by quality care doctors and so she sought out a clinic that might be willing to do it?  We all know Joan had a love of cosmetic surgery…

If so, it could have cost her her life.  She could possibly still be with us today had she been at a high quality care facility that was able to properly act when things went south.  My heart aches for her surviving family.

So I share this with you in hopes of promoting information that could save you or a loved one’s life.  While you may want to go to a clinic down the street for a procedure and it might be cheaper, if you don’t do your homework, it could cost you precious time if things go wrong, and quite possibly it could cost you your life.  That’s not to say that you can’t go to a clinic for a procedure, but understand the risks, if you do.  Make an educated decision if they are worth it for you.

Maybe Joan did do that and still decided the risk was worth the benefit, though I am not sure she would still say that today, if she was with us.

I hope that is not the case with Joan Rivers…but things aren’t looking good from what we’ve seen so far.

I feel deep sympathy for Joan River’s family and I hope they find peace in all her lovely memories.

Thinking of buying a car? Watch out for sketchy loans!

Know this…sketchy loans, like the ones with the housing market that affected millions a few years ago, are now occurring in the car loan industry!  Take notice or you could fall victim like people in the housing market did.  This article gives good guidelines on how much you should allow yourself to spending when budgeting for a car loan.

Sadly, the sharks are at it again, but if you read an educate yourself, you don’t have to fall victim!

 

Trust your smoke detector? That could be a lethal mistake!

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

I saw this segment last night on 60 Minutes, and I was astounded that there hasn’t been a wide spread push to clarify the truth to consumers that a large portion of the smoke detectors sold today are not saving lives—that they are not doing what we are told they will do.  This is an epic failure!! Ninety percent of smoke detectors sold today will not protect you from all fires

Did you know that?

I was flabberghasted at the response by the Consumer Protect Safety Commission.

If anyone has some free time, this is a great cause to take up.  Please go to Change.org and start a campaign. We need to institute change. It will save hundreds, if not thousands of lives!!

You want to have a dual fire detector that has both photoelectric and ionization sensors.

We just checked ours tonight and while we had some dual systems, we didn’t have all dual, so I ordered replacements tonight. 

Please share this and pass it on to your family and friends. It will save lives and if anyone takes on this case, let me know and I will help share any petitions created on my blog as I get a lot of readers.

Be safe!!

I lost my childhood home to a fire, and feel extremely blessed that my family and pets all escaped and got out safely.  The fire chief told us had the fire occurred just 5 hours later, it likely would have been a recovery effort.

Scam Letter

You’ve got to laugh when this shows up in your inbox.  SCAM!!!!!! SCAM!!!! SCAM!!!

(Photo no longer available)

Hello Sir,

With due respect to you, I am Kenneth Charles; I had a client Mr. William Drakes who died in October 2005 alongside his immediate family and had no WILL.


The Finance House where he had an account valued at US$7.8M has issued me a notice to provide the next-of-kin or have the account confiscated within the next 14 official working days.


I will appreciate it, if you could help stand as the next of kin and have this money claimed for our common good.


Please, if you are interested do get back to me immediately with your pertinent details. Else, disregard this message and accept my sincere apology for any inconveniences caused.


With regards,
Kenneth Charles

So many hot spots!!!  Like you could act as a “next of kin” when this guy couldn’t.  How laughable!!  And if he can’t provide next of kin they will confiscate the millions!!  Too funny.  And to think people fall for this….how sad.