(a) notification of the assessment or presumption. If an assessment is made and it is determined that there are hazards related to lead-containing paints or paints, or if lead-containing paints or lead-containing paint hazards are considered to exist in accordance with the options described in § 35.120, the Designated Party must inform residents within 15 calendar days of the date on which the Designated Party receives the report or suspects that: notify. A visual assessment alone shall not be considered an assessment within the meaning of this Part. If only a visual assessment is required in that Part and no assessment is carried out, notification of the assessment or presumption is not required. 6. Each re-evaluation includes reviewing available information, conducting selected visual assessments, recommending responses to omissions or failures in risk mitigation, conducting selected assessments of paints, soils and dusts, and recommending the response to newly identified hazards for lead-containing paints. (ii) Notwithstanding subsection (d) (1) (i) of this section, it has been conducted and accepted by a housing authority in accordance with the lead-based colour reduction requirement of the public housing programme or by an Indian housing authority (as previously defined in the United States Housing Act of 1937) in accordance with the lead-based colour requirement of the Indian Housing Programme, formerly funded under the U.S. Housing Act of 1937. (3) Lead hazards shall be performed in accordance with the methods and standards established either by a state or strain program authorized by the EPA or by the EPA under 40 CFR 745.227(c) and paragraphs (b) (1) and (b)(2) of this section. Where the examination of lead-related hazards indicates that a subsequent risk assessment is necessary (e.B.
where the measurements of lead dust exceed the values set for lead hazard controls in paragraph b(2)(i) of this Section), a risk assessment shall be carried out in accordance with paragraph b, paragraphs 1 and (b) 2 of this Section. Dust, soil and paint samples taken for the lead sieve may be used in the risk assessment. If the lead hazard review does not indicate the need for a subsequent risk assessment, no further risk assessment is required. (b) authorisation as a result of activities other than reduction. Remote tests carried out after intermediate checks, colour stabilisation, standardised treatments, continuous maintenance of lead paint or remediation shall be carried out in accordance with the requirements of this paragraph (b) and paragraphs (c) to (g) of this Section. A free space is not necessary if the work to be cleared does not disturb the painted surfaces of a total area that goes beyond the area specified in § 35.1350 (d). (i) At the time of the inspection, the lead-based paint inspector was authorized by a State or Native American tribe to conduct inspections of lead-containing paint. It is not necessary for the state or tribal approval program to have received EPA approval at the time of the inspection. (iii) the results of the visual assessment of the presence of deteriorated paint and visible dust, deposits, residues or paint chips; a) If a child under the age of 6 living in federally subsidized housing has high levels of blood lead, the landlord must immediately conduct an environmental review.
Intermediate hazard checks identified for lead-containing paints shall be carried out in accordance with § 35.1330. (a) the prohibition of new uses. The use of paint with a dry weight of more than 0.06% lead on an interior or exterior surface in federal apartments or apartments that receive federal subsidies is prohibited. Where applicable, each federal agency must include the prohibition in contracts, grants, cooperation agreements, insurance agreements, surety agreements, trust agreements or other similar documents. (b) Where an inspection of lead-containing paints has revealed the presence of lead-containing paints or no inspection of lead-containing paints has been conducted, the PHA shall conduct a risk assessment in accordance with the following schedule, unless a risk assessment has already been conducted that meets the conditions of section 35.165(b): (1) This subsection applies only to housing units that are or are to be inhabited by families or households; one or more children under 6 years of age, the common areas serving these housing units and the exterior painted surfaces connected to these housing units or common areas. Common areas that serve a living unit include areas through which residents walk to access the unit and other areas frequented by resident children under the age of 6, including playgrounds and on-site daycares. From 15. As of September 2000, the requirements of this Division apply to multi-family dwellings that receive on average an annual average of up to $5,000 per assisted living unit in support per project, and to a single-family home that receives project-based support under the Moderate Rehabilitation Program under section 8, the Project-Based Certificate Program. or another HUD program that provides project-based support.
(i) HUD, between the date on which the child`s blood was last collected and the date on which HUD received the notification of high levels of lead in blood, has carried out a risk assessment both in the other residential units referred to in point (f)(1) of this Section and in the common areas serving those units and has carried out intermediate checks on the hazards identified for lead paints in accordance with § 35.820; or (a) A lead-containing paint inspection must be conducted in all social housing, unless a lead-containing paint inspection that meets the requirements of § 35.165(a) has already been conducted. If an inspection of lead paint has been conducted by an uncertified inspector for lead-containing paints, the ASP will verify the quality of the inspection in accordance with the quality control procedures established by HUD to determine whether the lead-containing paint test was performed correctly and whether the results are reliable. Inspections of lead-containing paint of all enclosures to which this subdivision applies shall be completed by 15 September 2000. Revisions or additions to previous inspections deemed inadequate shall be completed by 17 September 2001. (c) reduce the risks associated with lead-based paints. Within 30 calendar days of receipt of the environmental assessment report conducted in accordance with paragraph (a) of this section or the assessment by the Department of Health, the Owner must complete the reduction of the hazards identified for lead-containing paints in accordance with § 35.1325 or 35.1330. The hazard reduction of lead-containing paints is considered complete when the release in accordance with § 35.1340 has been carried out and the distance report indicates that all hazards for lead-containing paints identified in the environmental survey have been treated with intermediate controls or reductions or the health authority certifies that the hazard reduction by lead-containing paints has been completed. The requirements of this paragraph shall not apply if, between the date on which the child`s blood was last collected and the date on which the owner received the notification of high levels of blood lead, the owner has already conducted an environmental review of the unit and the public areas where the unit is maintained and has completed the reduction of identified lead-containing paint hazards.
If, during that period, the owner has conducted a risk assessment of the unit and the common elements serving the unit, the owner is not required to conduct another risk assessment there, but shall carry out the elements of an environmental assessment that have not already been carried out during the risk assessment. (2) Residents shall be temporarily relocated before and during hazard mitigation activities to suitable, decent, safe and accessible housing in the same manner that does not pose a risk of lead-containing paint, unless: (d) paint testing […].