According to City Council stats, there were 111,509 lead paint violations in the city between January 2018 and March 2023. As of March 2023, 45 percent of all lead-related court cases are concentrated in the Bronx. Brooklyn ranked second for cases. The City Council recently held an oversight hearing in which five lead poisoning-related bills were reviewed and two new bills were introduced.
The City Council hearing came as the mayor’s office announced the appointment of a new lead czar. Mayor Adams named Jasmine Blake as Citywide Lead Compliance Officer, a role once held by his former rival in the 2021 mayoral election, Kathryn Garcia. In this role, she will coordinate compliance with local lead laws and reporting across a wide number of city agencies. She will also continue to serve as chief of staff in the office of the Chief Housing Officer, which sets the Adams administration’s housing strategy and oversees NYCHA, HPD, New York City Housing Development Corporation, the Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants, and the Mayor’s Office of Housing Recovery Operations.
The following are the bills related to lead poisoning prevention discussed at the recent oversight hearing. The package included legislation that mandates the removal of lead-based paint on friction surfaces near children and in common areas, thorough records of investigations and objections, more identification and inspection, assessment of kids with elevated blood lead levels, and declaring lead hazards as a public nuisance.