New York Post

OVEREXPOSE­D

NYCHA kept lead-poisoned kids in toxic apts.

- By NOLAN HICKS Additional reporting by Bruce Golding

City inspectors uncovered conclusive evidence of lead paint in 34 public-housing apartments where lead-poisoned children were living — but the city failed to force repairs or move the kids out, The Post has learned.

Instead, the Health Department allowed the New York City Housing Authority to appeal the findings, leaving dozens of kids in the tainted apartments and potentiall­y exposing them to further harm for years, official records reveal.

The 34 apartments were the most contaminat­ed of 91 where lead was initially found between 2010 and 2017 after pediatrici­ans reported that one or more children living there tested positive for elevated levels of lead in their blood.

But NYCHA was able to appeal 88 of the cases due to the testing method that was used, and Health Department officials sided with NYCHA in 83 of those cases, overruling their own inspectors.

As a result, likely lead paint was left in all but five of the apartments, the records show.

“It seems especially heinous that the agency that is supposed to be protecting children finds out that children are lead-paint poisoned, finds the apartment has lead and then allows the landlord — a public landlord — to get away with not abating the lead,” said Legal Aid lawyer Judith Goldiner, who has repeatedly filed suits over NYCHA’s substandar­d living conditions.

“This means a kid that has already been poisoned could get worse and that other children that come to that apartment could be poisoned.”

Details of the lead-paint testing were contained in nearly 4,500 pages of internal Health Department inspection reports obtained by The Post through the Freedom of Informatio­n Law.

They were made public amid a spiraling scandal over lead paint that began in late 2017 when the Department of Investigat­ion revealed that NYCHA covered up years of failure to comply with federally required lead checks.

The fallout forced the resignatio­n of Mayor de Blasio’s NYCHA chair, Shola Olatoye, and led the authority to spend $88 million on lead testing that is underway in 135,000 of its 174,000 apartments.

“The Health Department is only going in after these kids have been poisoned,” said lawyer Matthew Chachere of the nonprofit Northern Manhattan Improvemen­t Corp., who helped write the city’s lead laws.

“It’s their job to make sure these kids are no longer at risk, and these findings raise serious questions about if they’ve abdicated that responsibi­lity.”

Lead exposure, primarily caused by peeling paint, can cause brain damage and other health problems. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns that any amount can be dangerous to young children.

When blood tests show a child is poisoned, the Health Department sends an inspector to their apartment to check for lead.

In 88 of the 97 inspection­s at the 91 apartments, the inspectors used X-ray guns — known as XRF devices — to check peeling paint and other surfaces for lead.

Under city rules, any measuremen­t of 1 milligram of lead or more per square centimeter of paint mandates removal and replacemen­t or repair of the paint.

Results that fall within the XRF’s 0.3 milligram margin of error must be double-checked through lab analysis, but any reading of 1.3 milligrams or above is considered conclusive proof.

The records obtained by The Post show inspectors found at least one reading above the 1.3 milligram threshold in 34 of those apartments, or two out of every five apartments where lead was found.

NYCHA contested every one of the readings and persuaded the Health Department to partially or completely retract its lead-paintremov­al orders in 33 cases.

The sole removal order occurred in 2010 because NYCHA failed to file any paperwork to support its appeal.

Dr. Morri Markowitz, who heads the lead program at the Children’s Hospital at Montefiore Medical Center, said he couldn’t understand why the Health Department didn’t trust its own findings.

“Your inspectors found potential lead hazards contributi­ng to elevated blood lead level in a kid living in that apartment,” he said.

“NYCHA contested your result. Why did you believe the NYCHA result over your own?”

The Post’s examinatio­n also revealed that the Health Department sided with NYCHA in nine of the 34 cases despite the housing agency’s own tests showing substantia­l evidence of lead.

In 2017, NYCHA filed a report with one appeal that disclosed its own paint chips tested positive for lead amounts just shy of the legal threshold — including readings of 0.85, 0.91 and 0.99 milligrams of lead.

The Health Department did not require repairs.

“It’s another example of how the city fails to enforce its own laws,” said Reuven Frankel, an attorney with a history of filing lead-related suits against NYCHA.

“If a child ingests that paintchip sample, there’s no competent physician who would say that that would not be a health hazard. On the contrary, it should confirm the need to commence remediatio­n.”

Neither the Health Department nor City Hall disputed any of The Post’s findings.

“We’ve significan­tly reduced lead exposure for kids in public housing, and now we’re taking action to eliminate it altogether,” said mayoral spokeswoma­n Marcy Miranda.

“NYCHA now immediatel­y abates any apartment the Health Department identifies.”

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 ??  ?? SUING: Sherron Paige holds her son Kyan, who has lead poisoning, in their home at the Red Hook East houses. Lead was detected in the apartment, but the city resisted cleaning it out.
SUING: Sherron Paige holds her son Kyan, who has lead poisoning, in their home at the Red Hook East houses. Lead was detected in the apartment, but the city resisted cleaning it out.

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