New York Post

NYCHA'S LATEST LEAD FLUB By YOAV GONEN City Hall Bureau Chief

Failure to inspect common areas

- yoav.gonen@nypost.com

Oops, they did it again.

Officials of the New York City Housing Authority on Thursday copped to yet another violation of lead-paint laws, acknowledg­ing they that had not been inspecting common areas of developmen­ts as required by law.

The admission came in a notice to residents and a note to media organizati­ons saying the inspection­s would begin this month.

“These inspection­s have not been systematic­ally conducted since Local Law 1 was passed in 2003,” said the notice to residents.

That law requires building owners to conduct annual inspection­s for lead-paint hazards in common areas as well as apartments.

NYCHA officials couldn’t say when the last time annual inspection­s of common areas were conducted.

They said that there was no systemwide protocol for doing them but that individual developmen­ts had sometimes done the required checks.

The goof is only the latest for the reeling agency, which failed to conduct annual inspection­s of roughly 55,000 apartments for leadpaint hazards between late 2012 and early 2016 — but falsely certified to the federal government that it had.

Public Advocate Letitia James, who has called for NYCHA Chair Shola Olatoye (pictured) to resign, said the agency’s latest revelation is just more evidence that major changes are needed.

“Another day, another NYCHA failure to protect children,” James said.

“It is clear that we need real accountabi­lity, leadership and reform at NYCHA.”

Even after Olatoye learned in April 2016 about the agency’s lapse in apartment inspection­s — including failing to check more than 4,200 units with children under age 6 — NYCHA didn’t come clean to residents or the public for more than a year.

Inspection­s at apartments housing children under 6 resumed in May 2016, but residents weren’t advised to have their kids tested for elevated levels of lead until recently.

Those same inspection­s in 2017 have found potential leadpaint hazards in 81 percent of the nearly 8,900 apartments reviewed.

The balance of the 55,000 apartments won’t be inspected for the first time until 2018.

At least six children in NYCHA apartments recorded elevated lead levels between 2014 and 2016 stemming from a lead-paint hazard, according to city officials.

They have refused to make public any cases of elevated lead levels from 2017.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States