10 banned home renovations
If you’re thinking of renovating, beware of these materials and regulations before you build. All of the following have been banned in certain regions of the country, so check your local codes.
If you’re thinking of renovating, beware of these materials and regulations before you build. All of the following have been banned in certain regions of the country, so check your local codes.
In an age of instant Internet access to almost any subject and the bombardment of public-service announcements, magazine and newspaper articles, many still do not heed the warnings concerning the improper care of lead-based paint in our homes. If your house or apartment was built or renovated before 1978, then you have lead-based paint.
Lead was also used as a drying agent in varnishes on floors, doors and woodwork. What I’m constantly hearing is that several layers of oil-based or latex paint had been applied over the years, covering the lead-based paint.
The hazard with lead-based paint is that when the layers begin to peel or chip or there is renovation work inside the home, the original paint is now exposed. Lead-based paint not only affects children but overexposure can also cause serious health problems in adults. You can be exposed to the hazards of lead-based paint whether you are sanding, scraping or using a heat gun or chemical products to strip the paint.
When working with lead-based paint, it is best to hire a professional to identify the problem areas and to direct you on the proper care and maintenance of the home to protect you from potential poisoning. If the renovation is to be done by a contractor, a new law requires the contractor to have a lead-based-paint-certified technician direct the work (www.epa.gov/lead/).
Lead-sampling kits (although not always accurate) are readily available and inexpensive at most major home and hardware stores or online at www.prolabinc.com/products.asp?kit=leadinpaint.
Dwight Barnett is a certified master inspector with the American Society of Home Inspectors. Write to him with home-improvement questions at d.Barnett@insightbb.com.
Source: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/homegarden/2013707440_homefix18.html
Jaroslaw Pianka, 40, of Charlton was indicted by a Worcester County grand jury Friday on charges of child endangerment, larceny by false pretenses and two counts of uttering.
Mr. Pianka, owner of two properties on Dale Court in Leicester, failed to comply with lead laws by submitting fraudulent certificates of lead compliance and representing that his properties were fully de-leaded, the AG’s office said.
The AG’s office said a family with two children under age 6 rented one of his Dale Court properties under “verbal assertion that the property had been de-leaded in Feb. 2007.”
The family subsequently performed a home lead test, which revealed lead in the property, the AG’s office said.
They contacted the town’s board of health to request a lead determination in March 2009. Further inspection revealed several areas that tested positive for lead, and Mr. Pianka was ordered to correct the lead issue.
In April 2009, Mr. Pianka gave the family a copy of a letter of full de-leading compliance.
The AG’s office said he also gave the family a copy of the Massachusetts Tenant Lead Law Notification and Certification Form, which is required by law to be provided by landlords to tenants before renting them properties built before 1978, and he gave a letter of full de-leading compliance to the Board of Health.
The Massachusetts Department of Public Health’s Child Lead Poisoning Prevention Program determined the documentation to be fraudulent, the AG’s office said.
Mr. Pianka was also cited in connection with a second property on Dale Court after the health board learned of additional alleged violations.
In March 2009, the board ordered Mr. Pianka to correct lead in the second property.
In response to the order, Mr. Pianka submitted a letter of full de-leading compliance.
Further investigation of the letter with the Licensed Lead Inspector Database of the Massachusetts Department of Health and Human Services determined that neither the name of the inspector nor the license number of the inspector listed on the letter existed, the AG’s office said.
Mr. Pianka will be arraigned in Worcester Superior Court.
Read more: http://www.telegram.com/article/20101221/NEWS/12210405/1003/NEWS03#ixzz18xMN2FZF
A Baltimore landlord has been jailed for failing to comply with repeated orders to fix lead-paint risks in all his rental units. Cephus Murrell was ordered Wednesday by Baltimore City Circuit Court Judge W. Michel Pierson to be held in the detention center until he had either remediated three rental units with lead-based paint in them or relocated the tenants to safer housing.
Murrell, who according to court records lives in Catonsville, has been the subject of repeated enforcement actions over the past several years by the Maryland Department of the Environment accusing him of not taking required actions to reduce the risks of tenant children being poisoned by ingesting dust from lead paint in their rental units.
The state fined him $20,000 in 2007 and signed a consent decree requiring him to fix 52 properties owned by him or C. Murrell Business Consultant Inc. Pierson found Murrell in contempt of court in June for not complying with an amended consent decree, with eight units still not repaired. In October, the judge ordered Murrell to jail, but stayed his incarceration to either clean up the remaining untreated units or move the tenants elsewhere. But state officials said this week that Murrell had yet to present the required certification that he’d dealt with three remaining occupied units.
Under a 1994 state law, landlords with rental units built before 1950, when lead paint was widely used, must register their properties with the state and take steps to reduce the chances of youngsters being poisoned. Ingesting even tiny amounts of lead dust or paint chips can damage young children’s developing brains and nervous systems, causing lasting learning and behavioral problems. Ruth Ann Norton, executive director of the Coalition to End Childhood Lead Poisoning, welcomed the judge’s action, saying Murrell had a long history of noncompliance.
“He has continually thumbed his nose at Maryland’s law to keep kids safe,” Norton said. She also said tough enforcement was needed against repeat violators because while most landlords in the state “do the right thing,” there is a “core of owners that just will not follow the law and do not get into compliance.” Murrell could not be reached for comment, nor could his lawyer. But a woman who identified herself as a tenant or former tenant emailed today that had helped “many, many children and adults” and said that he had “allowed lots of people to move in with out paying security deposits.”
Source: http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/features/green/2010/12/baltimore_landlord_jailed_for.html