New York Attorney General Letitia James recently announced a settlement with a major New York City landlord. The agreement resolves an investigation conducted by the Office of the Attorney General’s (OAG) investigation that found that the company was not in compliance with apartment inspection, lead hazard remediation, and other key requirements of New York City’s Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Act.
What you need to know: As part of this settlement, the owner agreed to continue to bring its apartments into compliance with the Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Act, and to report its compliance to the OAG for the next three years. The owner will also pay $510,000 to the OAG for initiatives aimed at protecting children from lead poisoning. This is the first agreement resulting from investigations that the OAG is conducting into New York City apartment building owner and operators’ compliance with the Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Act.
And according to the OAG, there are other related ongoing investigations. The OAG has been pursuing legal actions across New York to hold owners accountable for lead paint-related hazards.
One level deeper: The OAG’s investigation into the owner's real estate holdings began in 2018 and the investigation determined that the owner violated several provisions of the Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Act related to notice requirements, annual inquiries, and turnover procedures. Specifically, the owner:
One takeaway: Recently, there’s been an increased investigative and regulatory focus on combatting lead poisoning. Over the past few years, New York City has made several important updates to the NYC Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Act (Local Law 1 of 2004), strengthening existing lead laws and expanding inspection requirements for landlords and building owners.
Most recently, Local Law 29 of 2020 went into effect earlier this year. It expanded the definition of buildings with “multiple dwellings” to includes one- and two-family house rentals except the units occupied by the owners’ family. Before Local Law 29 went into effect, most of Local Law 1, NYC’s lead poisoning prevention law, had applied to residential buildings with three or more units. And per Local Law 66 of 2019, the new threshold for defining lead-based paint will be lowered from 1.0 mg/cm2 to 0.5 mg/cm2 starting on Dec. 1, 2021.