U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
New England Regional Office
August 28, 2012
New England Regional Office
August 28, 2012
Contact: David Deegan, (617)
918-1017
Painting Company Fined for Failure to Notify
Customers about Lead Hazards in New England
(Boston, Mass. – Aug. 28, 2012) – A national
house painting company with offices in Woburn, Mass., has agreed to pay a $7,200
penalty and to spend $65,000 on an environmental project at a school in
Cambridge to settle claims by the US Environmental Protection Agency that it
failed to provide required lead hazard information to home owners in four New
England states on 41 occasions.
According to a settlement filed recently,
College Pro Painters failed to provide EPA’s lead hazard information pamphlet to
at least 41 owners and adult occupants of pre-1978 housing before beginning
painting projects at units in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, and New
Hampshire. This was in violation of the federal Pre-Renovation Rule, and the
Toxic Substances Control Act.
In addition to paying the penalty, College Pro
will spend $65,000 to replace or restore 79 windows that likely contain lead
paint at Congregation Eitz Chayim (Harvard Hillel Children’s School) on Magazine
Street in Cambridge, Mass.
College Pro, an interior and exterior house
painting company based in Maryland, had more than 300 franchisees operating in
27 states as of 2009. All of the work at issue in this case was performed by
College Pro employees or contractors, not by franchisees.
The Pre-Renovation Rule aims to educate owners
or occupants on how to minimize their exposure to hazardous lead dust that is
often generated during painting projects conducted in older homes. The Rule
requires that companies notify owners or occupants before starting work in homes
built before 1978 that disturbs more than six square feet of interior or 20
square feet of exterior painted surface and that they provide them with an
EPA-approved pamphlet with information about lead paint hazards and necessary
precautions. Exposure to lead is particularly harmful to children under six
years old and to pregnant women.
In June 2006, EPA’s New England office sent
letters explaining the Pre-Renovation Rule to more than 600 painting companies,
contractors, and remodeling firms in New England, including College Pro. In
2007, EPA began inspecting several of those entities who had received these
letters.
This case stems from an Oct. 2009 inspection of
College Pro’s New England offices in Woburn. EPA’s inspection and follow up
information gathering showed that College Pro failed to provide the EPA lead
information pamphlet to the owners or occupants (or mail the pamphlet to the
owners during the time limits required) on at least 41 occasions - 28 in 2008
and 13 in 2009.
The lead abatement project in Cambridge must be
completed within 150 days of the agreement.
More information: Pre-Renovation Lead
Information Rule (http://www.epa.gov/lead/pubs/leadrenf.htm)
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