New York Post

TIME TO GET THE LEAD OUT

In 81% of ‘kid’ apts.

- By YOAV GONEN City Hall Bureau Chief yoav.gonen@nypost.com

After a four-year gap in inspection­s, NYC Housing Authority officials found potential lead-paint hazards in 81 percent of 8,920 apartments housing children under 6 that its employees inspected in 2017, The Post has learned.

That includes at least 4,200 older apartments where the agency hasn’t ruled out the presence of lead paint and nearly 4,700 apartments that had formerly been exempted from annual inspection­s because city officials believed them to be lead-free.

“These numbers are staggering, and I think it only further demonstrat­es the need for a third-party monitor to assist with ensuring remediatio­n is done properly,” said City Councilman Rafael Salamanca (D-Bronx).

“After last week’s public hearing, we should all be concerned if NYCHA is properly testing and abating lead paint.” Housing Authority officials have been on the hot seat since a report by the Department of Investigat­ion last month revealed that the agency — which manages 175,000 public-housing units — failed to conduct required annual inspection­s for lead-paint hazards between late 2012 and early 2016.

Additional­ly, NYCHA Chair Shola Olatoye admitted to investi- gators that she had certified to federal housing officials in writing in October 2016 that the authority had been conducting the inspection­s, despite knowing it hadn’t.

She has since said it was a “mistake” but noted she had privately informed the feds of the lapse.

Without revealing publicly what happened, NYCHA resumed inspection­s between May 2016 and early 2017 of 4,232 units with kids younger than 6 — out of about 55,000 apartments for which annual inspection­s were required.

But officials recently admitted that some of the remediatio­n work conducted at roughly 2,200 of those apartments was done by employees who lacked the required federal certificat­ion.

NYCHA officials say 7,139 apartments being remediated as a result of this year’s round of inspection­s are all being done either with federally certified workers or vendors.

“This is NYCHA’s second round of Local Law 1 inspection­s. With each cycle, we’re getting more aggressive and effective at identifyin­g and fixing issues,” said City Hall spokeswoma­n Olivia Lapeyroler­ie.

DOI Commission­er Mark Peters revealed last week that his ongoing investigat­ion includes a review of whether roughly 20,000 apartments have been improperly abated for lead paint hazards and exempted from inspection.

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