The federal government banned lead paint for homes back in 1978, based largely on the risk it poses to young children. But the lead hazard, which is a particular threat to the developing brains of kids under age six, still lingers.
That was underscored Tuesday by a $75,000 settlement announced by the Environmental Protection Agency. The agreement requires a major property management company in Central California’s San Joaquin Valley, J.D. Home Rentals, to replace windows with lead paint at 12 rental properties in the Fresno and Clovis areas.
Federal authorities said the company violated the law by failing to tell tenants about the lead hazards. That’s a requirement for landlords of rental housing built before 1978 but, as KFSN-TV in Fresno reports, it commonly is ignored in low-income areas.
The EPA found 31 violations at the 12 properties, which housed mainly low-income Latino and Hmong families. The agency said more than half of the units had been home to children.
“Nearly one million children in America today have dangerous levels of lead in their blood, and old household paint is the primary source,” Jared Blumenfeld, the EPA’s Southwest regional administrator, said in a news release. “It is crucial for landlords to provide information about lead hazards so that tenants can protect their families from lead poisoning.”
KFSN said it could not immediately reach the company’s lawyer for comment.
STUART SILVERSTEIN
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