ABOUT SporaQ
Get to Know Us
Company History

SporaQ, is a statewide indoor air quality testing and consultation service provider. With over 10 years of mold and moisture mapping, our roots started in a Coronado family business in Fort Myers, Florida.

After gaining experience in disaster restoration, SporaQ added accreditation in mold and moisture assessment.

We identified a need for licensed and professional mold assessment throughout Florida and now Texas. This lead to a growth in company expertise and added goals of providing reliable, licensed mold assessments for our customers throughout the state of Florida as well as Texas.

The growth of our company resulted in establishing field offices and adding staff to cover both states.

Indoor Environmental Professionals

A remediator’s relationship with an IEP (Indoor Environmental Professional) can sometimes be quite complex. This depends on why, when and by whom the IEP was hired. If there are complexities, complications or conflicts, a remediator may need to request additional input or guidance from an IEP. You can find more information on the relationship between IEP’s and companies like SporaQ.

Independence

It is preferable that the IEP be an unbiased resource. An IEP engaged to perform pre-remediation assessment or post-remediation verification should be independent of the remediator. In some jurisdictions, the law may require that the inspection and assessment function be performed by an individual or entity independent of the remediator.

A company owes a duty to its client, which can include confidentiality. Where an IEP is retained by someone other than the remediator, there may be a limit to the information that the IEP can provide to the remediator. Ideally, an IEP will be authorized by the client to share all information with all parties. The EPA’s Mold Remediation in Schools and Commercial Buildings, for example, encourages communication with occupants to help alleviate concerns and suspicions. However, in cases involving litigation, it may be difficult to share or obtain information.

Confidentiality
Reliance

Mold remediators often rely on an IEP to determine the scope of work and other essential tasks. However, reliance on the training, experience, reputation and credentials of an IEP might not absolve the remediator of legal risk or other responsibilities.

Overlap

There may be circumstances when a remediator’s normal activities overlap or conflict with those of an IEP. In those cases, a remediator can reach the point where a decision is necessary to continue an inspection or to transfer the responsibility for further inspection and preliminary determination to an IEP. Factors that influence the decision of whether and when to involve an IEP are addressed in Chapter 8, Inspection and Preliminary Determination, the Preface, and Sections 9 and 15 of this Standard.

Please refer to the table linked below that helps clarify which tasks may be performed by remediators and which ones may be performed by an IEP or others.