New York Daily News

Crews didn’t get certified in lead paint removal, may have made problem worse

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CITY HOUSING Authority workers have for years performed lead paint inspection­s and cleanups without the proper training required by the federal government, a Daily News investigat­ion has found.

As a result, tenants may have been exposed to lead in apartments that had been deemed “clean.” Some apartments may have been made worse by workers inadverten­tly spreading lead paint dust during cleanup.

One of the affected tenants appears to be Sherron Paige, who in 2012 moved into Apartment 5A of 791 Hicks St. in the Red Hook Houses developmen­t in Brooklyn.

Apartment 5A was one of the apartments that NYCHA had designated as clean. When the prior tenant had moved out, NYCHA had someone inspect it and then remediate it, authority lawyers said Thursday.

Paige’s son, Kyan Dickerson, was born in July 2013. When he turned 4, he got a physical to begin attending pre-K. A test registered a level of 12 micrograms per deciliter of lead in his blood. The acceptable level is 5.

Soon after when city health inspectors arrived, they did an X-ray test that found lead paint. NYCHA did its own test — and said there was no lead. TheHealth Department then tested dust in the apartment and again found lead.

Lead paint is harmless when left on the wall but once it chips, flakes or turns into dust, it can cause developmen­tal delays in children if it’s ingested or inhaled.

Kyan — who has never lived anyplace other than Apartment 5A — has been diagnosed with delays in speech and was recently given a special education designatio­n by the schools department.

To prevent scenarios like this, the federal government — which provides NYCHA with most of its funding — has for years required that workers assigned to inspect for and remove lead paint have specific training and certificat­ions proving they know what they’re doing.

On Thursday in response to The News’ questions, NYCHA, for the first time, admitted that untrained workers have been completing these inspection­s and cleanups for years, raising serious questions about the authority’s claims to be on top of the situation.

A source familiar with the inspection protocols of NYCHA said the results found in these inspection­s “may not be accurate or reliable and therefore the knowledge of the extent of the problem is questionab­le.”

NYCHA confirmed that until 2016, none of the NYCHA workers assigned to do lead paint inspection­s had lead-based paint visual assessment certificat­es, which the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Developmen­t requires.

And until August, none of the NYCHA workers tasked with lead paint cleanup had the required Environmen­tal Protection Administra­tion lead renovator certificat­ion.

The source noted that botched lead paint remediatio­n by untrained workers can actually make things worse.

“Improper lead based paint correction­s cause lead dust to be created and will actually create a more dangerous environmen­t and create more opportunit­y and hazard for children under 6 because the dust will settle on toys, eating utensils, food, or any exposed surfaces which will allow a child to ingest the dust and thereby lead can be introduced into their system,” the source said.

The source also said an unknown number of tenants were allowed to move into apartments presumed to contain lead paint without NYCHA doing the required inspection and cleanup first. The source attributed this to a communicat­ion breakdown in which developmen­t managers neglected to inform the technical services unit that handles lead paint inspection­s that the apartment was now ready to be checked.

And the source also noted that once a lead paint hazard is redflagged in an apartment, NYCHA is required to fix the problem within 90 days. But NYCHA has never enforced the 90-day rule and at times NYCHA took many more months to return to a lead paint apartment to complete the required remediatio­n.

The source said that NYCHA never tracked or even directed staff to make correction­s within the required 90-day timeframe previously.

This lack of training dates back years, but continued well into the de Blasio tenure at City Hall. NYCHA spokeswoma­n Jasmine Blake, in response to News questions, said the authority is now following all the training requiremen­ts.

“This was part of NYCHA's efforts to correct and improve all its practices related to lead inspection­s and abatement,” she said. “We are working hard to fix systems that hadn't changed in nearly a decade. Our residents deserve better."

NYCHA has an estimated 55,000 apartments with presumed lead paint that must be inspected every year. That includes about 4,700 units with children under 6.

A recent report by the Department of Investigat­ion found that the authority only began annual inspection­s of the units with children for the first time last year, and has yet to check the rest of the 55,000.

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