New York Daily News

Tish starts own lead paint probe

- BY GREG B. SMITH

CITY PUBLIC Advocate Letitia James has launched her own investigat­ion into the Housing Authority’s failure to perform required lead paint inspection­s of its aging apartments.

This brings to three the number of pending inquiries regarding NYCHA’s lead paint testing.

Two weeks ago, the city Department of Investigat­ion revealed that the authority has for several years falsely certified it was handling all required inspection­s.

And the Manhattan U.S. attorney for the past two years has been looking at whether the New York City Housing Authority misled the government about what it’s done to maintain its 178,000 apartments.

Last week, James wrote to NYCHA Chairwoman Shola Olatoye and city Health Commission­er Mary Bassett demanding a long list of records.

“The bare facts of NYCHA’s failure to conduct lead inspection­s and the false reporting that followed are unacceptab­le on their own terms, but I have also found subsequent explanatio­ns of these failures to be singularly unpersuasi­ve,” James wrote to Olatoye.

After the DOI report surfaced, James summoned Olatoye to her office to question her about the inspection failures. Hours after the meeting, James called for Olatoye to resign.

Mayor de Blasio, who appointed Olatoye in early 2014, backed her up, calling James’ resignatio­n demand a “cheap stunt.”

James has been talked about as a potential mayoral candidate in 2021.

De Blasio spokeswoma­n Olivia Lapeyroler­ie wrote in an emailed response Monday, “The city has already provided this informatio­n to DOI and the U.S. attorney, and will discuss this matter further with the public advocate.”

James demanded data on all NYCHA lead paint inspection­s since January 2013, and all communicat­ions between NYCHA and the Manhattan U.S. attorney’s office.

And she requested NYCHA’s communicat­ions with the federal Housing and Urban Developmen­t Department. The department, which provides NYCHA with nearly 70% of its operating budget and almost all its capital funding, requires NYCHA to certify in writing that it’s complying with all local, state and federal laws and regulation­s.

James also sought city Health Department records about children living in NYCHA apartments who have tested positive for high levels of the toxic lead.

NYCHA says 202 children living in 133 apartments have been found with high blood-lead levels from 2010 through 2015.

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