RESPONSE TO THE EPA PROPOSED RULES ON LEAD
Submitted by the National Association of the Remodeling Industry (NARI)
May 22, 2006
About National Association of the Remodeling Industry (NARI)
NARI is a non-profit trade association with national headquarters based in Des
Plaines, IL (northwest Chicago) and with 58 Chapters in most major metro areas
nationwide. NARI is comprised of almost 7,000 member companies ? remodeling
contracting companies, local suppliers and national suppliers. NARI?s Core
Purpose is to advance and promote the remodeling industry?s professionalism,
product and vital public purpose. NARI members voluntarily subscribe to a strict
Code of Ethics and Standards of Practice. NARI provides rigorous programs of
study with hands-on training through its chapter structure. With passage of
examinations demonstrating competence, certifications holding national
recognition are awarded (e.g., Certified Remodeler, Certified Lead Carpenter,
Certified Kitchen and Bath Remodeler, etc.). These programs are a NARI hallmark
and exemplify NARI?s commitment to its Core Purpose.
NARI?s Role in Lead-Safe Work Practice:
Contractor Training
NARI demonstrates a ten-year history of strong support for government initiatives
on lead-safe work practices. Since lead came to the forefront as an environmental
and health hazard, NARI has taken a proactive position training both remodeling
contractors and informing consumers. Between 1996 and 1998, NARI worked with
both EPA and HUD and conducted two-day training seminars throughout the
country on Lead-Safe Remodeling. The outreach was broad and offered to all
remodeling contractors, not just NARI members. NARI continues to work to
ensure that its members employ lead-safe work practices. NARI certification
programs and skill training are consistently updated to reflect most current lead-
safe work practices.
Consumer Education
NARI strives to ensure that the public remains informed about the hazards of lead
and about hiring contractors trained in lead-safe work practices. NARI provides a
brochure entitled ?Protect Your Family From Lead in Your Home.? The brochure is
available in both Spanish and English. NARI contractors are aware that they are
to provide, as required by law, this brochure to homeowners prior to commencing a
remodeling project in homes of pre-1978 construction.
NARI?s Position -- Opposed
NARI is in strong opposition to the EPA new proposed rules governing lead as
announced on December 29, 2005. NARI requests EPA?s review and serious
consideration of the following points:
1. The stated purpose of the EPA proposal is to reduce exposure to lead
hazards created by renovation, repair, and painting activities that disturb lead with
a stated goal of eliminating childhood lead poisoning. NARI members encourage
lead safe practices, and they are very concerned about the incidence and effects
of lead in young children. NARI members have significant legal and financial
incentives to protect their clients and consumers. NARI is very concerned that the
proposed rules will not decrease the potential for lead exposure and continues a
policy of imposing action in a very limited set of circumstances. Moreover,
because the proposed rules do NOT work in a cost-effective manner to achieve the
stated goal of eliminating childhood lead poisoning, the proposed rules, rather than
eliminate the potential for lead exposure in residential dwellings, may actually
INCREASE the risk of lead exposure to children. .
2. The new requirements do little to achieve the goal of ?eliminating
childhood lead poisoning by 2010.? There other real and potential sources of lead
exposure which may be present outside of professional remodeling. The current
rules and the proposed rules continue to take a rather passive
purported ?educational? direction. Yet the clear facts are that only 24% of the
housing stock is impacted at this time. The proposed rules do little to identify
which homes are part of that stock and which homes, having potential lead
dangers, have children present. Nonetheless the rules add significant costs to
remodelers which will be passed along to consumers, whether their own homes
are impacted or not.
3. The current rules and the proposed rules continue to require that
homeowners be given a lead pamphlet at certain times, including at the time of
their purchase or by a professional remodeler if their home is built prior to 1978.
What the current system fails to do is to provide to consumers a basis to
understand what the potential cost impacts are so that they can truly make an
informed decision. Studies have demonstrated that homeowners are likely to
engage in a remodeling project within two years of new home purchase. Lower-
income families struggling to acquire a home or rental property may receive a
disclosure at the time of their purchase that their home may or may not have lead
paint, without an assessment of the cost of remediation. The current system,
although stating that it encourages owners, buyers and renters to check for lead,
does NOT require a check prior to exposing a child to the situation. Because the
discovery of lead could impose a significant increase in costs for the seller or
others, the economic incentive for sellers and landlords is to intentionally remain in
the dark about the possible lead presence. In simple words, sellers, landlords and
others hope to pass off the issues to an unsuspecting member of the public and
the current rules encourage that economic reality. When the unsuspecting family
undertakes the remodeling project, given the high cost of remediation, the most
likely course of action will be to perform the work without professional
remediation. The result will be a greater likelihood of childhood lead poisoning.
4. One potential solution is to require that at the time of sales transaction
of a pre-1978 home that there be a mandatory test of the home for lead by a
professional and that the impacted housing stock be identified. Homes that are
tested lead free may then be certified and the information maintained in an EPA
database. Purchasers who are buying lead impacted homes may then be given
not only lead disclosure information but they may then know with assurance that
their children may be at risk. As homes are discovered impacted, when they are
remediated, they may be certified by a lead testing professional as ?clean.? This
would be a more cost-effective method of identifying impacted stock and protecting
children.
5. Many of these projects may not require the use of a professional
remodeling contractor for assistance. The current rules and the proposed rules do
not ensure that the homeowner, handyman or installer can and will observe lead-
safe practice in a non-professional remodeling project. NARI strongly urges that if
the EPA considers offering a further modification of a testing program by offering a
tax credit for the cost of testing and identification of lead impacted homes to low-
income families.
6. The proposed rules do not address the responsibilities of homeowners,
homebuilders, and real estate professionals; the only responsibility and
consequent significant liability rests with remodeling contractors.
7. The proposed rules are entirely focused on contractor behavior with the
creation of more regulation added to existing regulations. Further restrictions on
training, licensing and insurance will only raise the cost of remodeling. These
costs cannot be absorbed in the cost of projects born by the contractor and will be
passed on to homeowners. This, in turn, may well encourage homeowners to do
the work themselves, without any appropriate safeguards.
8. Utilizing Exactimate (a bidding system widely used in the insurance
industry), the original scope of work on a small job was assessed at $6,063; with
consideration of lead-safe work practices, this same job was assessed at $7,080,
which represents an increase of 15%. It is further estimated that employment of
lead-safe work practices coupled with proper insurance coverage will increase
contractor costs on overall average by 28%. Many competent ethical contractors
will exclude this type of work or will raise prices across the board. Higher
remodeling costs will mean that consumers, not aware of the real risks to health,
will be more likely to use unlicensed and unethical contractors who may not use
lead-safe practices or undertake the work on their own without lead-safe
practices. These rules could have the unintended impact of raising the risk of
exposure to children.
9. In a competitive environment, without strong education and
enforcement, the 28% cost burden for compliant contracting procedures will
encourage non-compliance and will foster unlicensed, unethical behavior among
less reputable contractors whose appeal will be in lower cost and shorter
deadlines as well as improper disposal. The financial impact will distort the market
place and will encourage the avoidance of building permits and the inspection
process that are designed to protect families and consumers. It also will
encourage more lead remediation scams perpetrated on unsuspecting families.
Professional remodeling contractors who consistently observe competent, diligent
work practices and ethics will be subject to unfair competition and thus
economically harmed. Thus, NARI urges the EPA to consider strong enforcement
regulations, significant penalties for violations, including non-contractor parties
such as homeowners, real estate professionals, installers and others. Again, the
required testing for impacted homes and non-certified homes at time of sale will
strongly encourage compliance and discourage unsafe behavior.
10. In today?s legal environment, there is significant risk to a remodeler that
if unsafe lead levels are discovered in a home, claims will be asserted against the
remodeler without regard to the true cause. These claims can arise many years
after a remodeling project and determining responsibility may be nearly
impossible. Moreover, because of the potential risk, many reputable remodelers
will avoid projects in pre-1978 homes. The result, again, is a less-competitive
environment in which professional remodeling costs rise and homeowners will be
less likely to utilize professional remodelers utilizing lead-safe practices. Again,
the incidence of lead exposure to children may actually increase. Without clear
rules allowing for a clear process for compliant contractors to obtain an end to
liability exposure, the uncertainty will result in growing insurance coverage crisis
for remodelers and will have an unintended impact of leaving consumers at risk
from uninsured or underinsured contractors. The EPA has the responsibility to
address this point clearly to enable proper risk assessment by contractors and
insurers.
11. The EPA acknowledges that current testing is not reliable in that
existing test kits, in general, when used by a trained professional, can reliably
determine that regulated lead-based paint is not present by virtue of a negative
result but that are unable to clearly distinguish if a presence of lead rises to a
regulated level. These proposals would coordinate with the improvement of EPA
certified test kits and encourage the use of trained professionals in utilizing and
interpreting the results from such kits.
Recommendation
NARI strongly recommends and encourages EPA to reconsider its current system
and the proposed rules and to make several changes to the current regulations to
achieve the 2010 goal:
1. The EPA should undertake an ongoing study in conjunction with
industry representatives, including industry-related associations such as NARI to
identify a set of ?best practices? for lead safe remodeling of the housing stock.
2. The EPA should undertake a certification program to identify the
housing stock impacted by lead and to allow exclusion of housing stock not
impacted or certified by lead testing professionals as clean. If mandatory testing
is implemented at the time of sale or rental of a non-certified home or dwelling, the
result will be (a) a certification (and thus a removal of concern as to that home and
the confidence of protecting the safety of any children residing in that home), (b) a
remediation followed by a certification or (c) a truly informed purchaser who
understands that there will be costs to remediate and obtain a certification.
Ultimately, these positive steps will assure the cleaning of the housing stock.
3. The EPA should further adopt a ?safe-harbor? rule which provides that
contractors working on a pre-1978 home which has been tested by a certified lead
test professional and has been certified as clean would be excluded from liability.
This liability exclusion would be available for contractors when (a) a pre-1978 home
is certified as clean in the EPA database, (b) a pre-1978 home that is not already
certified but is tested by a professional and the results are submitted to the EPA
for certification as clean or (c) a pre-1978 home is discovered to have unsafe lead
levels and after lead-safe remediation, is tested by a professional and the results
are submitted to the EPA for certification as clean.
4. The contemplated certification program will encompass homeowners
and others who undertake remodeling projects on their own. If they follow lead-
safe remediation practices, then they will be able to obtain a post-remediation test
for certification. IF they fail to utilize lead safe practices, when they attempt to sell
or rent the home, the mandatory testing requirement will expose the failure and
PROTECT the unsuspecting purchaser or renter.
Conclusion
NARI members remain significantly concerned about protecting children and
others from lead exposure. NARI and its chapters remain committed to working
with EPA and other private or government entities in implementing cost-effective
construction practices and solutions which are calculated to lower the incidence of
lead exposure and danger for families and young children. NARI remains
concerned that the proposed rules will not accomplish the stated goals and
believes that the NARI suggested recommendations will have a more positive and
cost-effective impact to accomplish the goals. NARI urges the EPA to consider
these recommendations. NARI is willing to work with the EPA to more fully
develop proposed rules which will implement these recommendations.
For More Information
Mary Busey Harris, Executive Vice President, NARI
mharris@nari.org or 847 298 9200
Attachments:
Comment attachment submitted by Mary Busey Harris,Executive Vice President, National Association of the Remodeling Industry (NARI)
Title: Comment attachment submitted by Mary Busey Harris,Executive Vice President, National Association of the Remodeling Industry (NARI)
Comment submitted by Mary Busey Harris,Executive Vice President, National Association of the Remodeling Industry (NARI)
This is comment on Proposed Rule
Lead; Renovation, Repair, and Painting Program; Extension of Comment Period
View Comment
Attachments:
Comment attachment submitted by Mary Busey Harris,Executive Vice President, National Association of the Remodeling Industry (NARI)
Title:
Comment attachment submitted by Mary Busey Harris,Executive Vice President, National Association of the Remodeling Industry (NARI)
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