Reconsideration of the Dust-Lead Hazard Standards and Dust-Lead Post-Abatement Clearance Levels, 50444-50483 [2023-15073]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 745
[EPA–HQ–OPPT–2023–0231; FRL–8524–01–
OCSPP]
RIN 2070–AK91
Reconsideration of the Dust-Lead
Hazard Standards and Dust-Lead PostAbatement Clearance Levels
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
Addressing childhood lead
exposure is a priority for the
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA). This rule addresses health
concerns for all affected communities,
including children living in
communities with environmental justice
concerns, who have significantly higher
blood lead levels (BLLs) than other
children. As part of EPA’s efforts to
reduce childhood lead exposure, and in
accordance with a U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit 2021 opinion, EPA
is proposing to lower the dust-lead
hazard standards (DLHS) from 10
micrograms per square foot (mg/ft2) and
100 mg/ft2 for floors and window sills to
any reportable level as analyzed by a
laboratory recognized by EPA’s National
Lead Laboratory Accreditation Program.
This is a non-numeric value that the
Agency refers to as greater than zero mg/
ft2 and may vary based on laboratory or
test. While EPA’s DLHS do not compel
property owners or occupants to
evaluate their property for lead-based
paint (LBP) hazards nor take control
actions, if an LBP activity such as an
abatement is performed, then EPA’s
regulations set requirements for doing
so. EPA is also proposing to change the
dust-lead clearance levels (DLCL),
which are the values used to determine
when abatement work can be
considered complete, from 10 mg/ft2,
100 mg/ft2 and 400 mg/ft2 for floors,
window sills, and window troughs to 3
mg/ft2, 20 mg/ft2, and 25 mg/ft2,
respectively. Under this proposal, the
DLHS for floors and window sills would
not be the same as the DLCL for floors
and window sills (i.e., the DLHS and
DLCL would be decoupled).
Accordingly, dust-lead hazards could
remain after an abatement due to the
different statutory direction that
Congress provided EPA with respect to
the DLCL. Additionally, EPA is
proposing to change the definition of
abatement so that the recommendation
for action applies when dust-lead
loadings are at or above the DLCL, as
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SUMMARY:
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well as several other amendments,
including revising the definition of
target housing to conform with the
statute.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before October 2, 2023. Under the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA),
comments on the information collection
provisions are best assured of
consideration if the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
receives a copy of your comments on or
before August 31, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by docket identification (ID)
number EPA–HQ–OPPT–2023–0231,
through the Federal eRulemaking Portal
at https://www.regulations.gov. Follow
the online instructions for submitting
comments. Do not submit electronically
any information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Additional
instructions on commenting and visiting
the docket, along with more information
about dockets generally, is available at
https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
For technical information contact:
Claire Brisse, Existing Chemicals Risk
Management Division, Office of
Pollution Prevention and Toxics,
Environmental Protection Agency, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC
20460–0001; telephone number: (202)
564–9004; email address: brisse.claire@
epa.gov. Hearing- or speech-impaired
persons may reach the telephone
numbers for the contacts through TTY
by calling the toll-free Federal
Communications Commission’s
Telecommunications Relay Service at
711.
For general information contact: The
TSCA Hotline, ABVI-Goodwill, 422
South Clinton Ave., Rochester, NY
14620; telephone number: (202) 554–
1404; email address: TSCA-Hotline@
epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Executive Summary
A. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by
this action if you conduct lead-based
paint (LBP) activities in accordance
with 40 CFR 745.227; if you operate a
training program required to be
accredited under 40 CFR 745.225; if you
are a firm or individual who must be
certified to conduct LBP activities or
renovations in accordance with 40 CFR
745.226; or if you own, manage, and/or
conduct abatement, rehabilitations or
maintenance activities in most pre-1978
housing that is covered by a Federal
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housing assistance program in
accordance with 24 CFR part 35. You
may also be affected by this action if
you operate a laboratory that is
recognized by EPA’s National Lead
Laboratory Accreditation Program
(NLLAP) in accordance with 40 CFR
745.90, 745.223, 745.227, and 745.327.
You may also be affected by this action,
in accordance with 40 CFR 745.107 and
24 CFR 35.88, as the seller or lessor of
target housing, which is most pre-1978
housing. See 40 CFR 745.103 and 24
CFR 35.86. You may also be affected by
this action if you are a resident of target
housing, even if you would not be
subject to the proposed requirements of
this action. Due to the change in the
definition of ‘‘target housing,’’ you may
also be affected if you are a firm or
individual who must be certified to
perform renovations in target housing or
child-occupied facilities (COFs) in
accordance with 40 CFR part 745,
subpart E.
The following list of North American
Industrial Classification System
(NAICS) codes is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather provides a guide
to help readers determine whether this
document applies to them. Potentially
affected entities may include:
• Building construction (NAICS code
236), e.g., single-family housing
construction, multi-family housing
construction, residential remodelers.
• Specialty trade contractors (NAICS
code 238), e.g., plumbing, heating, and
air-conditioning contractors, painting,
and wall covering contractors, electrical
contractors, finish carpentry contractors,
drywall and insulation contractors,
siding contractors, tile and terrazzo
contractors, glass, and glazing
contractors.
• Real estate (NAICS code 531), e.g.,
lessors of residential buildings and
dwellings, residential property
managers, and property owners, as well
as those property owners that receive
assistance through Federal housing
programs.
• Child day care services (NAICS
code 624410).
• Elementary and secondary schools
(NAICS code 611110), e.g., elementary
schools with kindergarten classrooms.
• Other technical and trade schools
(NAICS code 611519), e.g., training
providers.
• Engineering services (NAICS code
541330) and building inspection
services (NAICS code 541350), e.g., dust
sampling technicians.
• Lead abatement professionals
(NAICS code 562910), e.g., firms and
supervisors engaged in LBP activities.
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• Testing laboratories (NAICS code
541380) that analyze dust wipe samples
for lead.
• Federal agencies that own
residential property (NAICS code 92511,
92811).
B. What is the Agency’s authority for
taking this action?
EPA is proposing this rule under the
authority of sections 401, 402, 403, 404,
and 406 of the Toxic Substances Control
Act (TSCA), 15 U.S.C. 2601 et seq., as
amended by Title X of the Housing and
Community Development Act of 1992
(also known as the Residential LeadBased Paint Hazard Reduction Act of
1992 or ‘‘Title X’’) (Pub. L. 102–550)
(Ref. 1) and section 237(c) of Title II of
Division K of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2017 (Pub. L. 115–
31, 131 Stat. 789), as well as sections
1004 and 1018 of Title X (42 U.S.C.
4851b, 4852d), as amended by section
237(b) of Title II of Division K of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017.
Regarding the dust-lead hazard
standards (DLHS), TSCA section 403 (15
U.S.C. 2683) mandates EPA to identify
LBP hazards for purposes of
administering Title X and TSCA Title
IV. Under TSCA section 401, LBP
hazards are defined as conditions of
LBP and lead-contaminated dust and
soil that ‘‘would result in adverse
human health effects,’’ (15 U.S.C.
2681(10)) and lead-contaminated dust is
defined as ‘‘surface dust in residential
dwellings’’ that contains lead in excess
of levels determined ‘‘to pose a threat of
adverse health effects . . .’’ (15 U.S.C.
2681(11)).
As relevant to the dust-lead clearance
levels (DLCL), TSCA section 402 (15
U.S.C. 2682) directs EPA to regulate LBP
activities, which include risk
assessments, inspections, and
abatements. TSCA section 401 (15
U.S.C. 2681) defines abatements as
‘‘measures designed to permanently
eliminate lead-based paint hazards’’ and
the term includes ‘‘all . . . cleanup . . .
and post[-]abatement clearance testing
activities’’ (15 U.S.C. 2681(1)). EPA’s
statutory authority for setting the DLCL
was laid out differently in Title X and
TSCA Title IV than those for the DLHS.
As a result, distinct from the DLHS, EPA
is further directed, in promulgating the
DLCL regulations, to ‘‘tak[e] into
account reliability, effectiveness, and
safety’’ (15 U.S.C. 2682(a)(1)).
Pertaining to the other amendments
presented in Unit IV.F. of this preamble,
TSCA section 406 (15 U.S.C. 2686)
requires EPA, in consultation with the
Secretary of the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
and with the Secretary of the U.S.
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Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) to ‘‘publish, and from
time to time revise, a lead hazard
information pamphlet to be used in
connection with this subchapter and
section 4852d of title 42.’’ TSCA section
406 (15 U.S.C. 2686) also requires EPA’s
regulations to require any person
performing for compensation a
renovation of target housing to provide
the pamphlet to the owner and occupant
prior to commencing the renovation.
Additionally, section 1018 of Title X (42
U.S.C. 4852d) mandates that the Lead
Warning Statement to be provided in
contracts for the purchase or sale of
target housing include, among other
language, the following text: ‘‘. . . The
seller of any interest in residential real
property is required to provide the
buyer with any information on leadbased paint hazards from risk
assessments or inspections in the
seller’s possession and notify the buyer
of any known lead-based paint hazards’’
(emphasis added). TSCA section 401 (15
U.S.C. 2681(17)) and section 1004 of
Title X (42 U.S.C. 4851b), as amended
by section 237(b) and (c) of Title II of
Division K of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2017 (Pub. L. 115–
31, 131 Stat. 789), define target housing
as ‘‘any housing constructed prior to
1978, except housing for the elderly or
persons with disabilities or any 0bedroom dwelling (unless any child
who is less than 6 years of age resides
or is expected to reside in such housing)
. . . .’’ In this context, ‘‘elderly’’ refers
to 62 years of age or more (40 CFR
745.103).
C. What action is the Agency taking?
In 2019, EPA promulgated a final rule
to lower the DLHS to 10 mg/ft2 for floors
and 100 mg/ft2 for window sills (the
2019 DLHS Rule) (Ref. 2). In 2021, EPA
promulgated a final rule to lower the
DLCL to 10 mg/ft2 for floors and 100 mg/
ft2 for window sills (the 2021 DLCL
Rule) (Ref. 3). The 2019 DLHS Rule and
the 2021 DLCL Rule continued a longstanding practice of setting the same
levels for the DLHS and the DLCL and
basing those levels in part on
consideration of factors such as
laboratory capacity and capabilities.
In keeping with an opinion issued by
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit in 2021 (described in Unit I.D.)
that instructed EPA to consider only
health factors when setting the DLHS,
EPA is now proposing to change the
DLHS from 10 mg/ft2 for floors and 100
mg/ft2 for window sills, as established in
the 2019 DLHS Rule, to any reportable
level of dust-lead analyzed by a NLLAPrecognized laboratory. The Agency
refers to this level as greater than zero
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50445
(GTZ). It is not a specific numeric level
set by EPA but rather the numerically
reportable level as analyzed by a
NLLAP-recognized laboratory, which is
sometimes referred to as a ‘‘nonnumeric’’ value. However, that term, as
used in this document, refers only to the
GTZ level and should not be confused
with non-numeric standards such as
work practice standards. EPA believes
GTZ and the standard of ‘‘any reportable
level’’ is an appropriate DLHS based on
health effects, given there is no
identified level of lead in blood that
does not cause adverse cognitive
impacts in children, and this more
protective approach is consistent with
the statutory language in TSCA Section
401 that defines what a ‘‘LBP hazard’’ is
(i.e., as conditions of LBP and leadcontaminated dust and soil that ‘‘would
result in adverse human health effects’’),
and with the results from the Technical
Support Document (TSD). There is no
evidence of a threshold below which
there are not harmful effects from lead
exposure, including neurobehavioral
and cognitive effects on children (Refs.
4 and 5). The proposed GTZ approach
represents a shift in the LBP activities
program to a more inclusive DLHS,
identifying dust-lead hazards in the
context of TSCA Title IV as any
condition that causes exposure to lead
from lead-contaminated dust in target
housing and child-occupied facilities. If
finalized as proposed, the GTZ
approach will be inclusive of any
reportable level of dust-lead and will
not distinguish between severe, less
severe, or negligible risks. Additional
discussion on GTZ can be found in Unit
IV.A.1.
Additionally, EPA is proposing to
revise the DLCL, set by the 2021 DLCL
Rule, from 10 mg/ft2 to 3 mg/ft2 for dustlead for floors, from 100 mg/ft2 to 20 mg/
ft2 dust-lead for window sills and from
400 mg/ft2 to 25 mg/ft2 dust-lead for
window troughs, following a
consideration of reliability,
effectiveness, and safety, including nonhealth factors such as laboratory
capabilities/capacity and achievability
after an abatement. EPA is also
requesting comment on an alternative
DLCL option of 5 mg/ft2 dust-lead for
floors, 40 mg/ft2 dust-lead for window
sills, and 100 mg/ft2 for window troughs.
If finalized as proposed, the DLHS for
floors and window sills would not be
the same as the DLCL for floors and
window sills (i.e., the DLHS and DLCL
would be decoupled), acknowledging
the different statutory direction that
Congress provided EPA with respect to
the DLCL. Although EPA has in the past
promulgated rules setting the DLHS and
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DLCL to be the same values, an opinion
by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit in May 2021 instructed
EPA to consider only health factors
when setting the DLHS and affirmed
that EPA could consider non-health
factors (e.g., laboratory capabilities/
capacity, and achievability after an
abatement) when setting the DLCL.
The proposed DLCL would not
impose retroactive requirements on
regulated entities that have previously
performed post-abatement dust wipe
testing using the current DLCL of 10 mg/
ft2 for floors, 100 mg/ft2 for window sills,
and 400 mg/ft2 for troughs, or the
previous DLCL of 40 mg/ft2 for floors,
250 mg/ft2 for window sills, and 400 mg/
ft2 for troughs (Ref. 6). They would
apply to post-abatement clearance
sampling and analysis conducted after
the compliance date for that portion of
the regulations (i.e., one year after
publication of the final rule).
Additionally, while EPA’s DLHS do not
compel property owners or occupants to
evaluate their property for LBP hazards
or take control actions (40 CFR
745.61(c)), if an LBP activity such as an
abatement is performed, then EPA’s
regulations set requirements for doing
so (40 CFR 745.220(d)). This rule, if
finalized, would change the LBP
activities regulations’ definition of
abatement to be any measure or set of
measures designed to eliminate LBP
hazards, in the case of dust-lead
hazards, to a level below the new
proposed DLCL, and would require an
additional statement in the final
abatement reports that states that LBP
hazards (particularly dust-lead hazards)
remain after an abatement if clearance
testing has found that they do remain.
EPA is also proposing several other
amendments, including: conforming
changes to the definition of ‘‘target
housing;’’ conforming the age
requirements throughout the LBP
regulations to under six years old;
requiring that application payments,
applications, and notices be submitted
electronically; updating the Disclosure
Rule warning statement (Ref. 7); as well
as correcting an incorrect reference to
the lead-hazard control pamphlet; and
deleting obsolete regulatory text where
language is out of date or no longer
applicable. EPA is also considering
adding incorporations by reference of
two voluntary consensus standards
already included in a relevant
definition.
EPA is requesting comment on the
changes described in this proposal, in
particular the reliability, effectiveness,
and safety of the primary and alternative
DLCL options, and all other
amendments discussed in Unit IV.
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D. Why is the Agency taking this action?
Lead exposure has the potential to
impact individuals of all ages, but it is
especially harmful to young children
because the developing brain can be
particularly sensitive to environmental
contaminants (Refs. 4 and 8). Because of
this, reducing childhood lead exposure
is a priority for both EPA and the
Federal Government. In December 2018,
the President’s Task Force on
Environmental Health Risks and Safety
Risks to Children released the Federal
Action Plan to Reduce Childhood Lead
Exposures and Associated Health
Impacts (Federal Lead Action Plan) (Ref.
9) to enhance the Federal Government’s
efforts to identify and reduce lead
exposure while ensuring children
impacted by such exposure are getting
the support and care they need to
prevent or mitigate any associated
health effects. The Federal Lead Action
Plan is helping Federal agencies to work
strategically and collaboratively to
reduce exposure to lead and improve
children’s health. On October 27, 2022,
EPA released the Strategy to Reduce
Lead Exposures and Disparities in U.S.
Communities (Lead Strategy). The Lead
Strategy lays out Agency and
government-wide approaches to
strengthen public health protections,
address legacy lead contamination for
communities with the greatest
exposures and promote environmental
justice. It describes how the Agency will
utilize the full suite of EPA authorities,
expertise, and resources to continue to
reduce lead exposure. This proposed
rule, which revises the DLHS and the
DLCL (among other proposed regulatory
changes), is an action that EPA
committed to undertake in the Lead
Strategy (Ref. 10).
In 2019, EPA re-evaluated the DLHS
(Ref. 2). Based on that evaluation, the
final rule revised the DLHS from 40 mg/
ft2 and 250 mg/ft2 to 10 mg/ft2 and 100
mg/ft2 for floors and window sills,
respectively. However, public health
advocates filed a lawsuit in the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
(the Court) seeking judicial review of
the 2019 DLHS Rule as insufficiently
protective. On May 14, 2021, the Court
issued its opinion on the 2019 DLHS
Rule. The Court held that ‘‘the 2019
Rule lowers the lead hazard level but
not to a level sufficient to protect health
as Congress has directed, because the
EPA has looked to factors in addition to
health.’’ A Cmty. Voice v. U.S. Env’t
Prot. Agency, 997 F.3d 983, 992 (9th Cir.
2021). The remedy the Court granted
was a remand without vacatur (of the
lowered DLHS), and the Court
instructed EPA to consider only health
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factors when setting the DLHS (Ref. 11).
This proposed rule is being issued to
reconsider the DLHS and DLCL in light
of the 2021 Court Opinion, which
directed EPA to ‘‘reconsider the DLHS
. . . [and] the dust-lead clearance levels
. . . in the same proceeding’’ and
affirmed that EPA could consider nonhealth factors when setting the DLCL. A
Cmty. Voice, 997 F.3d at 995. This 2021
Court Opinion led EPA to undertake a
major shift from its approach in the
2019 and 2021 final rules to the
residential LBP hazard control and the
LBP activities program because the
Opinion found that EPA did not have
the authority, when setting the DLHS, to
consider non-health factors. Consistent
with the 2021 Court Opinion, EPA is
proposing to revise the DLHS in this
rulemaking based on only health
considerations. See Unit IV for more
information on the proposed revisions
to the DLHS and DLCL.
Additionally, Executive Order 13990,
entitled Protecting Public Health and
the Environment and Restoring Science
to Tackle the Climate Crisis, directed
agencies to, among other things, review
certain regulations promulgated
between January 20, 2017, and January
20, 2021 (Ref. 12). The 2019 DLHS and
2021 DLCL final rules were among those
specifically designated for review in
accordance with Executive Order 13990
(Ref. 13). As a result, the Agency was
tasked with immediately considering
whether the final rules were aligned
with the identified national objectives
from Executive Order 13990, such as
listening to the science, improving
public health and protecting our
environment, and limiting exposure to
dangerous chemicals. As a result of its
own review in response to Executive
Order 13990 and the 2021 Court
Opinion, EPA has reconsidered the 2019
DLHS and 2021 DLCL final rules. If
finalized as proposed, EPA believes this
rule will result in a reduction of
exposure to dust-lead (beyond the 2019
and 2021 rules).
E. What are the estimated incremental
impacts of this action?
EPA has prepared an Economic
Analysis (EA), which is available in the
docket, of the potential incremental
impacts associated with this rulemaking
(Ref. 14). The analysis focused
specifically on the subset of target
housing and child-occupied facilities
affected by this rule. Although the
DLHS and DLCL do not compel specific
actions under the LBP Activities Rule to
address identified LBP hazards, the
DLHS and DLCL are directly
incorporated by reference into certain
requirements mandated by HUD in the
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housing subject to HUD’s Lead Safe
Housing Rule (LSHR). As such, the
analysis estimates incremental costs and
benefits for two categories of events: (1)
where dust-wipe testing occurs to
comply with HUD’s Lead-Safe Housing
Rule and (2) where dust wipe testing
occurs in response to blood lead testing
that detects a blood lead level (BLL)
above state or Federal action levels. The
following is a brief outline of the
estimated incremental impacts of this
rulemaking.
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1. Benefits
This rule would result in reduced
exposure to lead, yielding benefits to
residents of pre-1978 housing from
avoided adverse health effects. For the
subset of adverse health effects that
were quantified (i.e., the effect of
avoided IQ decreases on lifetime
earnings as an indicator of improved
cognitive function), the estimated
monetized and annualized benefits are
$1.069 billion to $4.684 billion per year
using a 3% discount rate, and $231
million to $1.013 billion per year using
a 7% discount rate. These benefits
calculations are sensitive to the
discount rate used and the range in the
estimated number of lead hazard
reduction events triggered by children
with tested BLLs above state or Federal
action levels. With respect to the latter,
the wide range is driven largely by
uncertainty about the BLLs at which
action might be taken, since in many
states the action level is currently higher
than the Federal blood lead reference
value.
Additionally, there are unquantified
benefits. These additional benefits
include avoided adverse health effects
in children, including decreased
attention-related behavioral problems,
decreased cognitive performance,
reduced post-natal growth, delayed
puberty, and decreased kidney function.
These additional unquantified benefits
also include avoided adverse health
effects in adults, including
cardiovascular mortality and impacts on
reproductive function and outcomes.
2. Costs
This rule is estimated to result in
quantified costs of $536 million to $784
million per year. These costs are
expected to accrue to landlords, owners
and operators of child-occupied
facilities, residential remodelers, and
abatement firms. Real estate agents and
brokers may incur negligible costs
related to the target housing definition
amendment. The cost calculations are
highly sensitive to the range in the
estimated number of lead hazard
reduction events triggered by children
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with elevated BLLs. In the events
affected by this rule, incremental costs
can be incurred for specialized cleaning
used to reduce dust-lead loadings (i.e.,
quantity of lead per unit of surface area)
to below the clearance levels. In some
instances, floors will also be sealed,
overlaid, or replaced, or window sills
will be sealed or repainted. Additional
costs may result from the retesting of
lead dust levels. Because of the lower
laboratory reporting limits necessary for
testing lead dust levels under this rule,
incremental laboratory test costs are
likely to increase. Additional potential
impacts to HUD programs and their
beneficiaries are discussed in Unit V.
3. Small Entity Impacts
This rule would directly impact
approximately 39,000 small businesses
of which 87% to 91% have cost impacts
less than 1% of revenues, 9% to 12%
have impacts between 1% and 3%, and
1% have impacts greater than 3% of
revenues. These small entities include
landlords, owners and operators of
child-occupied facilities, residential
remodelers, abatement firms, and real
estate agents and brokers.
4. Environmental Justice
EPA is proposing this rulemaking
under TSCA Title IV, as explained in
Unit I.B. This rule would address lead
exposure, as discussed throughout this
proposal. EPA prepared an Economic
Impact Analysis for this rulemaking that
assessed whether there are
disproportionate effects to communities
from lead exposure. EPA identified an
existing concern: children living in
communities with environmental justice
concerns have significantly higher BLLs
than other children (Ref. 15). This rule
addresses health concerns for all
affected communities, including those
identified with environmental justice
concerns. As identified in EPA’s
Economic Impact Analysis, this rule
would reduce identified
disproportionate impacts to
communities with environmental justice
concerns. The primary and alternative
regulatory options under consideration
are expected to affect housing units
receiving Federal assistance under
HUD’s LSHR and housing units with a
child with a blood lead level above a
Federal, state, or local blood lead
threshold. Because, in general, only
lower income households are eligible to
receive Federal housing assistance, the
occupants of housing subject to the
LSHR (and thus benefitting from the
proposed regulation) are considered an
overburdened community. Additional
details on any identified
disproportionate impacts to
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communities with environmental justice
concerns are contained in Unit IX.J. of
this preamble and Section 8.6 of the
economic impact analysis.
5. Children’s Environmental Health
Consistent with Executive Order
13045, EPA evaluated the health and
safety effects of this action on children.
Children are disproportionately
impacted by lead exposure. Children
can have greater exposures than adults
because they crawl on floors and often
put their hands and other objects (that
can have lead from dust on them) into
their mouths and are more susceptible
than adults to adverse health effects due
to their rapid anatomical growth and
physiological differences in lead uptake
and metabolism. This rule protects
children from these disproportionate
environmental health risks.
This action is subject to EPA’s Policy
on Children’s Health (https://
www.epa.gov/children/childrens-healthpolicy-and-plan) because the rule has
considerations for human health and
early life exposures. Accordingly, we
have evaluated the environmental
health or safety effects of dust-lead
exposure on children. The results of this
evaluation are contained in the EA and
the TSD, where the health impacts of
lead exposure on children are discussed
more fully (Refs. 14 and 16). The
documents referenced above are
available in the public docket for this
action.
The primary purpose of this rule is to
reduce exposure to dust-lead hazards in
target housing where children reside
and in child-occupied facilities. EPA’s
analysis indicates that there will be
approximately 217,432 to 436,642
children under age six per year affected
by the rule (Ref. 14). Proposing GTZ for
the DLHS is a more protective approach,
supported by the modeled results from
the TSD and that the current state of the
science does not support identifying a
threshold of dust-lead exposure below
which there would be no adverse
human health effects. Additionally, the
proposed DLCL of 3/20/25 mg/ft2 for
floors, window sills and troughs
respectively, is the lowest option under
consideration and according to the TSD
it is estimated to be the most protective
of children’s IQ when compared to the
other options evaluated for this
proposed rulemaking.
6. Effects on State, Local, and Tribal
Governments
EPA has concluded that this action
has federalism implications because it
imposes substantial direct compliance
costs on public housing authorities that
state or local governments may be
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obligated to offset. These compliance
costs result from application of EPA’s
standards in HUD’s LSHR. While some
HUD funding for LBP projects exists, the
Federal Government may not provide
the funds necessary to pay the entirety
of the costs. These costs to public
housing authorities—estimated at $143
million for the primary option—cover
additional lead hazard reduction
activities, cleaning, and dust-lead
testing to ensure that public housing
units are in compliance with the LSHR.
EPA also estimates annual compliance
costs of approximately $904 thousand to
public school districts that operate a
child-occupied facility built before
1978. Additionally, states that have
authorized LBP Activities programs
must demonstrate that they have DLHS
and DLCL at least as protective as the
levels at 40 CFR 745.65 and 40 CFR
745.227. However, authorized states are
under no obligation to continue to
administer the LBP Activities program,
and if they do not wish to adopt the new
DLHS and DLCL they can relinquish
their authorization. In the absence of a
state authorization, EPA will administer
these requirements. EPA provides a
preliminary federalism summary impact
statement, which is found in Unit IX.E.
Additionally, this action contains a
Federal mandate under the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act (UMRA), 2 U.S.C.
1531–1538, that may result in
expenditures of $100 million or more
for State, local, and Tribal governments,
in the aggregate, or the private sector in
any one year. Accordingly, EPA has
prepared a written statement as required
under section 202 of UMRA, which is
summarized in Unit IX.D. and included
in the public docket (Ref. 17). This
action is not subject to the requirements
of section 203 of UMRA because it
contains no regulatory requirements that
exceed the inflation-adjusted cost
significance threshold or uniquely affect
small governments.
This action would not have
substantial direct effects (as specified in
Executive Order 13175) on one or more
federally recognized Indian Tribes. This
action neither creates an obligation for
Tribes to administer LBP Activities
programs nor alters EPA’s authority to
administer these programs. However,
through a live consultation on this
rulemaking the Agency will solicit input
from Tribal officials from the four
Indian Tribes currently with authorized
programs during the public comment
period. EPA will ensure that the
consultation materials are accessible to
Tribal officials so that they may view it
later as they consider submitting
feedback during the public comment
period. The consultation will also be
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open to any Tribal officials who would
like to participate. If a Tribal official is
interested in attending the consultation
on behalf of an Indian Tribe, please
consult the technical person listed
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT.
Additionally, this rule would not
have any significant or unique effects on
small governments. See Unit IX. for
more information on the Executive
Orders.
II. Background
A. Health Effects of Lead
Lead exposure has the potential to
impact individuals of all ages, but it is
especially harmful to young children
because the developing brain can be
particularly sensitive to environmental
contaminants (Refs. 4, 5, and 8).
Ingestion of lead-contaminated dust is a
major contributor to BLLs in children,
particularly those who reside in homes
built prior to 1978 (Refs. 17 and 18).
Throughout early childhood, floor dust
contamination is a source of lead
exposure with the potential to affect
children’s BLLs (Ref. 20). Infants,
toddlers, and young children are more
highly exposed to lead through dust on
floors and other surfaces at home and in
child-care facilities than older children
and adults because they crawl on floors
and often put their hands and other
objects that can have lead from dust on
them into their mouths. This is the main
pathway of childhood exposure to lead
(Ref. 4).
Lead exposure in young children can
cause neurocognitive decrements, such
as reduction in intelligence as measured
by IQ. Depending on the exposure and
other factors, the effect may persist into
adolescence and adulthood (Refs. 4, 8
and 20). In children, lead exposure can
also cause adverse developmental,
neurobehavioral, hematological, and
immunological effects, as well as
sensory effects such as hearing loss
(Refs. 4, 5, and 8). In adults, lead
exposure can cause adverse
cardiovascular, hematological, renal,
neurocognitive, neurobehavioral,
immunological, and reproductive effects
(Refs. 4, 5, and 8). Lead is also classified
as ’’reasonably anticipated to be a
human carcinogen by the National
Toxicology Program (NTP) (Ref. 21) and
the EPA has concluded that lead
exposure has a ‘‘likely causal
relationship’’ with carcinogenesis (Ref.
4). In addition to the harmful effects
experienced by the mother, lead can be
transferred to the fetus during
pregnancy and there is evidence that
suggests adverse effects on the
developing fetus including inhibited
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fetal growth (Refs. 4 and 5). Given
young children’s disproportionate
exposure to dust-lead in target housing,
this rulemaking principally considers
their exposure and associated adverse
health effects.
The best available science informs
EPA’s understanding of the
relationships between exposures to
dust-lead, BLLs, and adverse human
health effects. These relationships are
summarized in the Integrated Science
Assessment (ISA) for Lead, finalized in
June 2013 (known as the 2013 Lead ISA)
(Ref. 4), and the Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry
(ATSDR) Toxicological Profile for Lead,
which was released by the Department
of Health and Human Services in
August 2020 (‘‘ATSDR Tox Profile for
Lead’’) (Ref. 8). The 2013 Lead ISA is a
synthesis and evaluation of scientific
information on the health and
environmental effects of lead, including
cognitive function decrements in
children (Ref. 4). The 2013 Lead ISA, as
well as NIEHS’ 2012 National
Toxicology Program (NTP) monograph
on lead, summarize the scientific
evidence regarding potential health
effects associated with low-level lead
exposure and acknowledge
uncertainties in the data (Refs. 4 and 5).
Based on the epidemiological studies
and the evidence available at that time,
the EPA stated in the 2013 ISA that
harmful effects on children’s cognition
as measured by IQ were observed in
groups with mean BLLs as low as 2 mg/
dL, and further that ‘‘A threshold for
cognitive function decrements is not
discernable from the available evidence
(i.e., examination of early childhood
blood Pb or concurrent blood Pb in the
range of < 1 to 10 mg/dL).’’ (Ref. 4).
Additionally, the Federal Lead Action
Plan, which was written by the
President’s Task Force on
Environmental Health Risks and Safety
Risks to Children, consisting of 17
Federal departments and offices, states
that ‘‘Lead exposure to children can
result from multiple sources and can
cause irreversible and life-long health
effects. No safe blood lead level in
children has been identified.’’ (Refs. 9
and 22).
For further information regarding lead
and its health effects, see the TSD for
this rulemaking and the 2013 ISA for
lead (Refs. 4 and 16).
B. Federal Actions To Reduce Lead
Exposures
Title X of the Housing and
Community Development Act (also
known as the Residential Lead-Based
Paint Hazard Reduction Act of 1992 or
‘‘Title X’’), codified primarily at 42
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U.S.C. 4822 and 4851 et seq. (Ref. 1),
was a Federal response to the national
crisis of childhood lead exposure and
assigned responsibilities to Federal
agencies with the overall goal of
developing a ‘‘national strategy to build
the infrastructure necessary to eliminate
lead-based paint hazards in all housing
as expeditiously as possible’’ (42 U.S.C.
4851(a)(1)). Subtitle B of Title X (106
Stat. 3912 through 3924), addressing
lead exposure reduction, added Title IV
to TSCA (codified at 15 U.S.C. 2681 et
seq.) (Ref. 23).
Since the establishment of Title X,
EPA and HUD have promulgated both
joint and separate regulatory actions in
an effort to eliminate LBP hazards.
Those actions include requirements for
disclosure of known LBP or any known
LBP hazards (Ref. 7), training and
certification requirements for
contractors performing LBP activities
(Ref. 24), the establishment of standards
that identify lead-based paint hazards
and post-abatement clearance levels
(i.e., the DLHS and DLCL) (Refs. 2, 3 and
6), regulations covering renovation or
remodeling activities (Refs. 25, 26 and
27), provisions for interested states,
territories, and Tribes to apply for and
receive authorization to administer their
own LBP Activities and renovation,
repair and painting (RRP) programs, and
requirements to control LBP and LBP
hazards in federally-assisted target
housing (Ref. 28). Additional
description of and background on
Federal actions to reduce lead exposure
to can be found in the 2021 DLCL
rulemaking (Ref. 3).
In addition, EPA has developed a
Lead Strategy to lay out an all-of-EPA
plan to strengthen public health
protections and address legacy lead
contamination for communities with the
greatest exposures and promote
environmental justice (https://
www.epa.gov/lead/final-strategy-reducelead-exposures-and-disparities-uscommunities). EPA plans to continue its
work to equally protect people of all
races, ethnic groups, income levels,
disabilities, and life stages, including
young children and pregnant women,
who are the most vulnerable to the toxic
effects of lead. The proposed actions in
this notice are part of those efforts, as
dust-lead from lead-based paint remains
one of the leading causes of lead
exposure in the United States (Ref. 10).
C. Applicability and Uses of DLHS and
DLCL
The DLHS and DLCL reconsidered in
this regulation support EPA’s lead-based
paint (LBP) activities program (i.e.,
inspections, risk assessments, and
abatements) and disclosure program,
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both of which apply to target housing
(i.e., most pre-1978 housing) and COFs
(pre-1978 non-residential properties
where under the current regulation,
children 6 years of age or under spend
a significant amount of time such as
daycare centers and kindergartens)
(codified at 40 CFR part 745, subpart L).
The statutory definition of target
housing was amended by Congress in
2017, and EPA is planning to make the
necessary conforming regulatory
changes, including changing the age to
under six years of age, within this
rulemaking; see Unit IV.F.1. for more
information. Apart from COFs, no other
public or commercial buildings are
covered by this proposal.
The DLHS and DLCL are incorporated
into requirements for risk assessment
and post-abatement work. When
conducted, LBP activities must be
performed by a certified individual or
firm (40 CFR 745.220) in accordance
with the work practices outlined in the
1996 LBP Activities Rule (40 CFR
745.227). EPA administers the LBP
activities program only where states
(including the District of Columbia and
the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico),
territories, or Tribes are not authorized
by EPA to operate their own lead
abatement programs (see 40 CFR part
745, subpart Q). Currently the states in
which the LBP program is administered
by EPA are Alaska, Arizona, Florida,
Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico,
New York, South Carolina, South
Dakota, and Wyoming. In addition, EPA
administers the LBP program in the
territories of American Samoa, Guam,
Northern Marianas, and the U.S. Virgin
Islands, as well as most Tribal Lands.
All other states have EPA-authorized
LBP programs. Additionally, the
Cherokee Nation, Upper Sioux
Community, Lower Sioux Indian
Community, and the Bois Forte Band of
Chippewa have EPA-authorized LBP
programs.
To administer the disclosure program,
EPA and HUD jointly developed
regulations (known as the Disclosure
Rule under section 1018 of Title X (42
U.S.C. 4852d)) requiring a seller or
lessor of most pre-1978 housing to
disclose the presence of any known LBP
and/or LBP hazards, such as soil-lead
hazards or dust-lead hazards, to the
purchaser or lessee (24 CFR part 35,
subpart A; 40 CFR part 745, subpart F).
Under these regulations, the seller or
lessor also must provide the purchaser
or lessee any available records or reports
‘‘pertaining to’’ LBP and/or LBP hazards
(40 CFR 745.107(a)(4); 24 CFR
35.88(a)(4)). Leases of target housing are
exempt from disclosure requirements in
limited circumstances, such as where
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the housing has been found to be LBP
free by a certified inspector (24 CFR
35.82; 40 CFR 745.101). For more
information on how the DLHS and
DLCL revisions impact various EPA and
HUD programs, see Unit V.A. and Unit
V.B.
1. Dust-Lead Hazard Standards
The DLHS support and implement
major provisions of TSCA Title IV and
provide the basis for risk assessors to
determine whether dust-lead hazards
are present during a risk assessment or
a lead hazard screen. A risk assessment
may be required by the LSHR where
dust wipe testing occurs to comply with
the LSHR (e.g., for certain properties
receiving Federal assistance) or by other
law or regulation where dust-lead
testing occurs in response to the
discovery of a child with a BLL that
exceeds a Federal, state, or local
threshold. Additional information on
the LSHR and the subparts which
require risk evaluation is discussed in
the EA (Ref. 14). The objective of a risk
assessment is to determine, and then
report the existence, nature, severity,
and location of LBP hazards in
residential dwellings and COFs through
an on-site investigation, which includes
both a visual assessment and a
collection of environmental samples.
The environmental samples include,
among other things, dust wipe samples
(taken using documented methodologies
as defined in 40 CFR 745.227(a)(3)) from
floors and window sills. Those samples
are required to be analyzed by a
laboratory that is recognized under
NLLAP, which is an EPA program that
defines the minimum requirements and
abilities that laboratories must meet to
attain EPA recognition as an accredited
testing laboratory (the standards for the
program are laid out in the Laboratory
Quality System Requirements) (Ref. 29).
A risk assessor compares the results of
the dust wipe samples to the current
DLHS. If the dust-lead loadings from the
samples are at or above the applicable
DLHS, then a dust-lead hazard is
present (40 CFR 745.227(d)).
Ultimately, the risk assessor prepares
a risk assessment report for the property
owner or manager, which lists any LBP
hazards (including a dust-lead hazard)
that were found and includes any
recommendations for next steps, such as
acceptable options for controlling the
hazards via interim controls and/or
abatement. These options are intended
to allow the property owner to make an
informed decision about what actions to
take to protect the health of current and
future residents. Under EPA’s rule, a
risk assessment/risk assessment report
does not compel or require action;
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rather it simply provides property
owners with recommendations as
appropriate (40 CFR 745.227(d)).
A lead hazard screen also includes a
visual inspection and collection of
environmental samples, although it is
not as comprehensive as a risk
assessment or conducted as often. A
lead hazard screen may be used to
determine if a full risk assessment is
necessary. During a lead hazard screen,
a risk assessor checks for deteriorated
LBP and collects two composite dust
samples (in residential dwellings), one
from floors and one from window sills
(more composite dust samples are
required in multi-family dwellings or
COFs). Samples are taken using
documented methodologies. The risk
assessor prepares a lead hazard screen
report but is not required to include
determinations about the LBP hazards
or recommendations for interim controls
and/or abatement but could include
information on whether a follow-up risk
assessment is warranted (40 CFR
745.227(c)).
Both risk assessments and lead hazard
screens can only be performed by risk
assessors certified according to the
procedures in 40 CFR 745.226.
2. Dust-Lead Clearance Levels
The DLCL are incorporated into the
post-abatement work practices outlined
in the LBP Activities Rule and represent
‘‘the amount of lead in dust on a surface
following completion of an abatement
activity’’ (40 CFR 745.227, 745.223)
(Ref. 24). TSCA section 401 defines
abatements as, ‘‘measures designed to
permanently eliminate lead-based paint
hazards,’’ (15 U.S.C. 2681(1)), while
interim controls are ‘‘designed to
temporarily reduce human exposure or
likely exposure to lead-based paint
hazards,’’ (40 CFR 745.83 and 745.223).
Abatement and/or interim controls
could be recommended in a risk
assessment report to inform the property
owner about potential future action(s)
they could take. After an abatement is
complete, a risk assessor or inspector
determines whether there are any
‘‘visible amounts of dust, debris or
residue,’’ which will need to be
removed before clearance sampling
takes place (40 CFR 745.227(e)(8)). Once
the area is free of visible dust, debris,
and residue, and one hour or more after
final post-abatement cleaning ceases,
clearance sampling for dust-lead (via
dust wipe samples) can take place and
will be conducted ‘‘using documented
methodologies that incorporate
adequate quality control procedures’’
(40 CFR 745.227(e)(8)). Only a properly
trained and certified risk assessor or
inspector can conduct clearance
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sampling. An NLLAP-recognized
laboratory must analyze the dust wipe
samples and a risk assessor or inspector
must compare the results from window
sills, floors, and window troughs to the
appropriate DLCL.
Every post-abatement sample must
test below the DLCL in order to fulfill
the post-abatement work practices of the
LBP Activities Rule. If a single sample
is equal to or greater than the
corresponding DLCL, then the
abatement fails clearance and the
components represented by the failing
sample must be recleaned and retested
(40 CFR 745.227(e)(8)). After all dust
wipe samples show dust-lead loadings
below the DLCL, an abatement report is
prepared (in accordance with the
requirements in 40 CFR 745.227(e)(10)),
copies of any reports required under the
LBP Activities Rule are provided to the
building owner (and to potential lessees
and purchasers under the LBP
Disclosure Rule by those building
owners or their agents), and all required
records are retained by the abatement
firm or by the individuals who
developed each report for no fewer than
three years (40 CFR 745.227(i)).
D. Limitations of DLHS and DLCL
The DLHS are intended to identify
dust-lead hazards during risk
assessments, while the DLCL are part of
post-abatement work practices, ensuring
that clearance is achieved. Both
regulatory values have several key
limitations. Since the DLHS and DLCL
were established and revised for the
purposes of Title X and TSCA Title IV
only, they do not apply to housing and
COFs built during or after 1978, nor do
they apply to pre-1978 housing that
does not meet the definition of target
housing (40 CFR 745.61 and 745.223). If
one chooses to apply the DLHS or the
DLCL to situations beyond the scope of
Title X and TSCA Title IV, care must be
taken to ensure that the action taken in
such settings is appropriate, and that the
action is adequate to provide any
necessary protection for children or
other individuals exposed.
These standards cannot be used to
identify that housing is free from all
risks from exposure to lead including
but not limited to dust-lead, soil-lead, or
lead in drinking water, as risks are
dependent on many factors. For
instance, the physical condition of a
property that contains LBP may change
over time, resulting in an increase in
risk. Plus, EPA’s DLHS do not require
the owners of properties covered by this
proposal to evaluate their properties for
the presence of dust-lead hazards, nor to
take action if dust-lead hazards are
identified (although these standards can
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be incorporated into certain
requirements mandated by state, Tribal
and local governments, as well as other
Federal agencies). Additionally,
consistent with the 2021 Court Opinion
which instructed EPA to consider only
health factors when setting the DLHS
and affirmed that EPA could consider
other factors (i.e., reliability,
effectiveness, and safety) when setting
the DLCL, EPA is proposing that the
DLCL would be greater than the DLHS
based on its consideration of other
factors (e.g., laboratory capabilities/
capacity, and achievability after an
abatement). As a result, and given the
change in the definition of abatement
discussed in Unit IV.D. of this preamble,
there may be dust-lead left behind that
meets the definition of an LBP hazard
after an abatement is considered
complete, due to dust-lead levels that
are reportable but are less than the
proposed DLCL. Also, as has been the
case historically, achieving the DLCL
after an abatement does not mean that
the home is free from all exposure to
lead, including from other media such
as soil-lead or lead in drinking water.
EPA will continue coordinating with
other Federal agencies to encourage best
practices for owners and occupants of
post-abatement properties to conduct
ongoing maintenance that will help to
continue to lower dust-lead levels, as
well as work collectively as an Agency
to reduce overall lead exposure through
all pathways.
E. Litigation Overview
As previously discussed, EPA revised
the DLHS to 10 mg/ft2 for floors and 100
mg/ft2 for window sills in a final rule in
July 2019 (Ref. 2). Later that same year,
multiple organizations, including A
Community Voice, California
Communities Against Toxics, Healthy
Homes Collaborative, New Jersey
Citizen Action, New York City Coalition
to End Lead Poisoning, Sierra Club,
United Parents Against Lead National,
and We Act for Environmental Justice,
petitioned the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Ninth Circuit to review the 2019
DLHS Rule (Ref. 30).
In response to the Petition for Review,
on May 14, 2021, the Court remanded
the 2019 DLHS Rule without vacatur
and directed EPA to revisit it in
conjunction with a reconsideration of
the DLCL (Ref. 11). In its opinion
accompanying the remand, the Court
instructed EPA to consider only health
factors when setting the DLHS and
affirmed that EPA could continue to
consider non-health factors when
setting the DLCL. Specifically, the 2021
Court Opinion held that EPA’s 2019
DLHS Rule ‘‘looked to other factors,
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including feasibility and efficacy,’’
when setting the DLHS, instead of
‘‘set[ting] the hazard standards at the
point at which the level [of] dust-lead
creates hazards to human health’’ A
Cmty. Voice, 997 F.3d at 989 and 990.
The Court also held that ‘‘TSCA [Title]
IV gives the EPA latitude to consider
‘reliability, effectiveness, and safety’’’
when promulgating regulations ‘‘[w]ith
respect to implementation, including
abatement,’’ thus enabling consideration
of practicability when setting the DLCL.
Id. at 995. The Court explained that
‘‘[t]his is in line with the overall
statutory scheme that differentiates
between identification of hazards and
implementation of remedial measures.’’
Id. The Court also explained elsewhere
in the 2021 Court Opinion that, if an
agency relies on uncertainty for
regulatory action or inaction, the agency
must ‘‘provide reasons why uncertainty
justifies their actions’’ Id. at 993.
Consistent with the 2021 Court Opinion,
EPA is proposing to revise the DLHS in
this rulemaking based only on health
considerations.
In addition, the Court held that EPA
violated TSCA Title IV by leaving the
soil-lead hazard standards (SLHS) at the
values set in 2001, reasoning that EPA
had an ongoing duty to update the
standards. The SLHS identify leadcontaminated soil at target housing and
pre-1978 COFs that would result in
adverse human health effects. Soils that
contain lead at levels determined to be
hazardous to human health are
considered contaminated. Lead
inspectors, risk assessors, and
abatement professionals use the SLHS to
determine if soil-lead hazards are
present and to inform options for
reducing risk. Due to resource
considerations and to act as
expeditiously as possible to revise the
DLHS and DLCL, EPA will address the
SLHS in a separate rulemaking. (For
more background on resource
constraints under TSCA, please see
Congressional testimony from EPA
leadership (Refs. 31 and 32)). EPA listed
this SLHS rulemaking in the Spring
2023 Unified Agenda of Regulatory and
Deregulatory Actions under RIN 2070–
AL12 as a long-term action, indicating
the Agency’s commitment to meet the
statutory requirement of addressing the
SLHS revision but indicating that the
Agency does not expect to propose this
action in the next 12 months (Ref. 33).
EPA has however, initiated work on the
SLHS rulemaking and, as this
rulemaking on the DLHS and DLCL
progresses and as resources allow, EPA
intends to work further on the technical
analysis for SLHS in preparation for the
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SLHS rulemaking. The Agency also
intends to build off of the technical
analysis utilized for this rulemaking for
the SLHS rulemaking, mirroring where
possible so as to reduce resource
constraints and considerations.
The Court also held that, to be
consistent with its health-only
interpretation of an LBP hazard (i.e.,
soil, dust), the definition of LBP must
‘‘encompass all levels of lead in paint
that lead to adverse human health
effects.’’ A Cmty. Voice, 997 F.3d at 992.
The Court stated that ‘‘EPA ha[d] not
explained why uncertainty justifies its
decision to leave the definition of leadpaint as-is.’’ Id. at 993. The Court also
noted that much knowledge has been
gained since Congress adopted the 1992
definition and that the U.S. Consumer
Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has
adopted a regulation that bans the
production of paint with lead content of
over 0.009 percent by weight. The CPSC
standard, however, applies to new paint
while TSCA is concerned with the
hazards posed by existing paint in pre1978 structures and different
information and considerations are
relevant in that context. The definition
of LBP (1.0 milligrams per square
centimeter or more than 0.5 percent by
weight) is incorporated throughout the
LBP regulations, and application of this
definition is central to how the LBP
program functions. In the 2019 DLHS
Rule, EPA discussed the Agency’s need
for more information to establish a
statistically valid causal relationship
between concentrations of lead at low
levels in paint and dust lead loadings
that cause lead exposure. Additionally,
information is still needed to quantify
the direct ingestion of paint through
consumption of paint chips or through
teething on painted surfaces. Finally, it
is important to understand how
capabilities among various LBP testing
technologies would be affected under a
possible revision to the definition, such
as field portable X-ray fluorescent
devices which are the primary tools for
lead inspections and risk assessments.
They are calibrated to the current
definition of LBP, and so EPA needs to
fully understand the repercussions such
a revision to the definition may have on
these portable field technologies to
ensure the technological feasibility.
EPA plans to sponsor a technical
workshop to obtain additional
information needed to address data gaps
related to the definition of LBP that
were outlined in the 2019 DLHS Rule.
In preparation for the LBP technical
workshop, the Agency performed a
literature review for sources relevant to
the definition of LBP, consulted other
Federal agencies, and refreshed
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materials done for the 2019 rulemaking.
With this information the data gaps
have been refined to add further
specificity, which allows for a more
targeted scope for both continued
investigation and for the technical
workshop. The more specific data gaps
that EPA continues to investigate
include empirical data on the
relationship between low levels of lead
in paint and dust-lead, as well as data
on the common exposure scenarios that
may inform this relationship (for
example, dust-lead generation during a
renovation scenario versus slowly
deteriorating paint). Currently the
available empirical data and modeling
approaches for estimating the
relationship between lead content in onthe-wall paint and lead in related
environmental media, including dust,
are applicable at or above the current
LBP definition. EPA believes that to use
the available empirical data and
modeling approaches to estimate dustlead loadings at low levels of lead in
paint (particularly levels that are lower
than the current definition by an order
of magnitude or more) will introduce
significant uncertainty to any
estimations. Data and models applicable
to lower levels of lead in paint are
needed to develop an approach to
estimate dust-lead from low levels of
lead in paint, which will allow EPA to
estimate incremental blood lead changes
and associated health effect changes that
may occur due to low levels of lead in
paint. For the ingestion exposure
pathway, EPA is exploring possible
modeling solutions as well as seeking
quantitative measures of ingestion and
exposure (such as data on duration and
frequency of consumption, and common
paint chip characteristics). Studies on
this subject have documented this
behavior as a risk factor for exposure to
lead from LBP, however the studies
have not provided quantitative
estimates of paint ingestion, which are
needed to quantify exposure. Lastly,
EPA continues to investigate constraints
to the field measurement options for
low levels of lead in paint. Different
technologies have different limitations
in accuracy, processing time, detection
limits, accessibility, and destructiveness
among other factors. These practical
considerations are important to consider
in understanding how a change in the
definition may affect the ability of the
regulated community to use certain
technologies, potentially impacting the
residents of target housing and
occupants of COFs. On top of these data
gaps, EPA is exploring the relationship
between the two different units used in
the current definition (milligram per
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square centimeter and percent by
weight) to inform whether and how to
develop a conversion between the two.
The search for relevant information to
develop the conversion and exploration
of the uncertainty involved with such a
conversion is underway. EPA intends
the technical workshop to explore these
issues and position the Agency to
reconsider the definition of LBP in light
of the most current scientific
information. EPA will collaborate with
HUD on the technical workshop
regarding these lead-based paint
definition data needs.
Similar to the SLHS rulemaking, due
to resource considerations and EPA’s
interest in acting as expeditiously as
possible to revise the DLHS and DLCL
and to hold the aforementioned LBP
technical workshop, EPA will address
the definition of lead-based paint in a
separate rulemaking. EPA has listed this
rulemaking on the definition of LBP in
the Spring 2023 Unified Agenda of
Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions
under RIN 2070–AL11 as a long-term
action, indicating the Agency’s
commitment to meet the statutory
requirement of addressing the definition
of LBP revision but that the Agency
does not expect to propose this action
in the next 12 months (Ref. 33).
Rulemakings such as those necessary
for revisions to SLHS and the definition
of LBP are complex, highly resourceintensive activities that usually occur as
part of options development and
decision-making. A rulemaking’s
development generally entails scientific,
economic, legal, and other technical
analyses. For many rulemakings, this
includes research and data gathering,
which itself can sometimes necessitate
exercising other information collection
tools and following appropriate
procedural requirements (e.g.,
Paperwork Reduction Act). To develop
a rulemaking, EPA also often consults
with governments and key stakeholders.
Federal law may require such
consultations based on anticipated
regulatory impacts (e.g., the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act and the
Regulatory Flexibility Act).
Additionally, various executive orders
may also require the Agency to engage
in such consultations.
A rulemaking package often requires
the development of complex supporting
documents including an EA and a TSD,
similar to those included alongside this
reconsideration rulemaking (Refs. 14
and 16). A complete TSD includes
several components which may require
internal and external stakeholder
dialogue and scientific peer review,
including model and input data
revisions, health and exposure metrics
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of interest, environmental fate and
exposure mechanisms for either soil or
the definition of LBP, characterization
of uncertainties in modeling, and
literature reviews (which have not been
done for soil since before the 2001 LBP
Rule was finalized). If existing models
and analytical methods are insufficient
to conduct the analysis to support the
rulemaking, then they must be
developed as part of the technical work
done in support of the rulemaking
effort. Developing new models can take
a considerable length of time and novel
analyses may require peer-review,
further extending the rulemaking
timeline. The magnitude and effort of an
SLHS TSD would mirror previous DLHS
and DLCL TSDs; see the technical
documents prepared in support of the
2019 DLHS Final Rule, the 2021 DLCL
Final Rule, or this reconsideration
rulemaking (Refs. 16, 19, and 34).
An EA includes various components
such as a description of the need for
Federal regulation; a profile of affected
industries and populations; an overview
of existing Federal, state and local
regulations; a specification of the
baseline state of the world and estimate
of the number of events affected by the
regulation; thorough analysis on the
consequences of regulatory policy being
considered and how regulated entities
will respond; quantification and
monetization of the regulation’s costs,
benefits, and net benefits; a description
of unquantified or qualitative benefit
descriptions; and an assessment of
uncertainty surrounding estimates. An
EA also includes various additional
analyses related to statutory compliance
and Executive orders, including but not
limited to RFA/SBREFA (Small
Business Impacts), UMRA (Unfunded
State, Local, or Tribal Mandates), PRA
(Paperwork Reduction), Executive Order
12898 (Environmental Justice),
Executive Order 13045 (Protection of
Children), Executive Order 13132
(Federalism), Executive Order 13175
(Coordination with Tribal
Governments), and Executive Order
13211 (Energy Effects). A rulemaking
also involves preparing Federal Register
documents to present, generally, the
preamble to and regulatory text of the
proposed and final rule. Such published
documents reflect the culmination of
the development and review of the
complex supporting documents and the
resulting decision-making, which
includes internal steps at the Agency to
reach office wide agreement, as well as
external to the Agency, such as holding
potential public consultations,
completing interagency review and
convening a Small Business Advocacy
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Review (SBAR) Panel as necessary.
These processes can also take many
months or years. The proposed and final
rules also present statutory and
Executive Order review analyses. The
Agency may also need to publish
Federal Register documents to extend
or reopen public comment periods—or
even to announce new public comment
periods related to a Notice of Data
Availability or a supplemental Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking—should new
information become available, or the
Agency determine that it needs to alter
its proposal before taking final action.
The current rulemaking on the DLHS
and DLCL is one more step toward
complete implementation of TSCA Title
IV. Given existing resource constraints
and the additional complications for the
SLHS and the definition of LBP
discussed earlier in this section, EPA
does not believe that either the SLHS or
the definition of LBP could have been
reconsidered on this current
rulemaking’s timeline. Instead, EPA will
reconsider the SLHS and the definition
of LBP as important next steps. Courts
‘‘have recognized that, under the
‘pragmatic’ one-step-at-a-time doctrine,
‘agencies have great discretion to treat a
problem partially’ and ‘regulat[e] in a
piecemeal fashion.’ ’’ Transportation
Div. of the Int’l Ass’n of Sheet Metal,
Air, Rail & Transportation Workers v.
Fed. R.R. Admin., 10 F.4th 869, 875
(D.C. Cir. 2021) (quoting Ctr. for
Biological Diversity v. EPA, 722 F.3d
401, 409–10 (D.C. Cir. 2013)); cf.
Massachusetts v. EPA, 549 U.S. 497, 524
(2007) (recognizing that ‘‘[a]gencies, like
legislatures, do not generally resolve
massive problems in one fell regulatory
swoop’’). EPA intends to conduct
rulemakings on the SLHS and the
definition of LBP, as identified in the
Spring 2023 Unified Agenda of
Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions, to
address the issues identified by the
Ninth Circuit in its May 2021 opinion
(Refs. 11 and 33).
III. Technical Analyses
In its evaluation of options for
reconsidering the DLHS and DLCL, EPA
estimated children’s BLL and associated
IQ decrements. Estimated BLL and IQ
decrements provide the means to
quantify the effects that long-term
exposure to the analyzed dust-lead
loading levels can have on young
children. The TSD (Ref. 16) and EA (Ref.
14) accompanying this proposed
rulemaking estimated the expected
impacts of the candidate DLHS and
DLCL options on BLLs and associated
IQ decrements of exposed children in
target housing. See Unit IV. on the
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approaches for developing the options
for DLHS and DLCL.
The TSD uses both mechanistic and
empirical models to predict the possible
BLLs of children in target housing
exposed to homogenous candidate
values for dust-lead levels (e.g.,
candidate options for the DLHS) and
characterizes the probabilistic
variability due to biological response
and variation in other sources of lead
exposure at each possible candidate
dust-lead level. The first approach used
mechanistic modeling that includes use
of age-specific ingestion rates, activity
patterns, and background exposures.
The second approach used empirical
data that includes co-reported dust-lead
and BLL measurements in the homes of
children; these dust-lead and BLL data
are used to develop an empirical
relationship to estimate BLLs for each
candidate dust-lead level. Both
approaches (mechanistic and empirical)
are compared to increase our confidence
in the estimates of the relationship
between dust-lead loadings and BLL
(Section 6.3 of the TSD). The various
components of the model and input
parameters used in this rulemaking have
been the subject of multiple Science
Advisory Board Reviews, workshops
and publications in the peer reviewed
literature focused on dust-lead (Refs. 18,
35, 36, 37, 38, and 39). Specifically, the
mechanistic blood lead modeling for
this rulemaking reflects the application
of an extensively peer-reviewed model
by EPA (the Stochastic Human Exposure
and Dose Simulation—Integrated
Exposure Uptake Biokinetic model
coded in R, referred to as R–SHEDS–
IEUBK) using updated data sources and
tailored to the dust-lead target housing
scenario, described in depth in
Appendix E of the TSD.
Detailed discussion of the limitations
and uncertainties in blood lead
modeling at the low BLL and exposure
levels considered for this rulemaking
can be found in Section 8 of the TSD
(Ref. 16). In brief, IEUBK, as a
standalone biokinetic model, was
evaluated for performance in groups for
which the geometric mean BLL is as low
as 2.3 mg/dL. Some of the groups at the
lowest levels of dust lead exposure
modeled for this rulemaking had mean
estimated BLL lower than this value
(between 0.81 and 1.12 mg/dL
depending upon age), which are outside
the range for which the underlying
biokinetic model (IEUBK) was
evaluated. In order to address this
concern, EPA conducted an evaluation
of the R–SHEDS–IEUBK model used in
this analysis with a dataset for which
the geometric mean BLL in children
aged 1 to 2 years old is 1.09 mg/dL. This
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evaluation found that the R–SHEDS–
IEUBK model had good agreement with
the reference dataset at low percentiles,
as well as at the median and at the 95th
percentile. See Table 8–2 and Appendix
D in the TSD (Ref. 16).
In contrast to the TSD, which
estimates the health risk and exposure
associated with dust-lead loading
candidates for a hypothetical
subpopulation of children in target
housing without consideration to how
many children are actually affected by
the rule, the EA estimates benefits that
accrue to only the subpopulation which
would be impacted by the DLHS and
DLCL revisions. Rather than assuming
all households living in target housing
are impacted by the regulatory change,
the EA instead estimates benefits solely
for instances when dust-lead levels
would be tested. These instances of dust
wipe testing are henceforth referred to
as ‘‘triggering events.’’ For the
subpopulation of children who are
affected by these events, the EA
estimates quantified benefits from
avoided IQ losses. The EA uses real
world data to characterize (1) variability
in the housing stock that is affected, (2)
how surface-by-surface dust-lead
loadings change due to the DLHS/DLCL,
(3) the number of children living in
affected housing units, and (4) resultant
changes in BLLs and IQ that are
expected. In modeling the relationships
between dust-lead loadings and BLL/IQ,
the EA presents results based on both
the empirical and mechanistic
approaches laid out in the TSD. EPA
considered several methods to impute
the relationship between BLL and IQ
below the lowest BLLs observed in the
underlying empirical data, and a range
of IQ loss results based on the methods
considered are presented in the EA (see
TSD section 5 and EA section 6.4). The
IQ loss estimates presented in Unit IV.
and in Section 7 of the TSD result from
a linearization method, which resulted
in the most conservative estimates of IQ
loss.
Both the TSD and the EA present
probabilistic distributions of estimated
change in BLL or IQ decrement for
young children up to the age of six.
However, these distributions represent
subpopulations of exposed children
characterized in differing ways. The
TSD presents the expected response for
a hypothetical exposure, accounting for
varying sources of background exposure
(e.g., food, soil, water) and biological
variability. The EA estimates expected
results from triggering events,
recognizing exposure to the
hypothetical conditions in the TSD are
rare as dust-lead levels across target
housing are generally quite low and
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existing abatements/interim controls
typically overshoot the clearance levels
considerably. Thus, the distributions of
BLLs and IQ decrements presented in
the TSD represent the impact of
children’s exposures to hypothetical
dust-lead levels while the EA estimates
distributions of BLLs and IQ decrements
across all children living in housing that
would be directly impacted by this
proposed rule.
The analyses that EPA developed and
presented in the TSD and EA for this
rule were specifically designed to
estimate BLLs and associated effects on
IQ that might accrue to the
subpopulation, i.e., children living in
pre-1978 housing. EPA notes that its
different program offices estimate
exposures for different populations,
different media, and under different
statutory requirements and thus
different models or parameters may be
a better fit for their purposes. As such,
the approach and modeling parameters
chosen for this rulemaking should not
necessarily be construed as appropriate
for, or consistent with, those of other
EPA programs.
IV. Proposed Rule
As explained in Unit II.E., the 2021
Court Opinion of the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that
EPA must reconsider the DLHS in
conjunction with the DLCL (Ref. 11).
Accordingly, EPA is proposing to
change the DLHS from 10 mg/ft2 and 100
mg/ft2 for floors and window sills to a
non-numeric value called GTZ or any
reportable level of dust-lead analyzed by
an NLLAP-recognized laboratory.
Lowering the DLHS (independent of the
DLCL revisions) provides the regulatory
benefit of additional disclosure of LBP
hazards in target housing and COFs.
This results in an estimated increase in
individuals who are aware of the
presence of dust-lead and the various
actions that can be taken to minimize
dust-lead hazards and take actions to
protect themselves from exposure. See
Unit IV.A.1. for additional information
describing the proposed DLHS of ‘‘any
reportable level.’’ EPA is also proposing
to revise the DLCL from 10 mg/ft2, 100
mg/ft2 and 400 mg/ft2 for floors, window
sills, and troughs to 3 mg/ft2, 20 mg/ft2,
and 25 mg/ft2, and requesting comment
on an alternative DLCL option of 5 mg/
ft2, 40 mg/ft2, and 100 mg/ft2.
A. Dust-Lead Hazard Standards
Approach
In the 2001 LBP Hazards Rule EPA
discussed the dilemma the Agency
faced when establishing a dust-lead
hazard, especially the challenges
associated with choosing ‘‘which [BLLs]
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are truly hazardous’’ and how to
interpret the statutory criteria from
TSCA Section 401 (i.e., ‘‘would result in
adverse human health effects’’ (15
U.S.C. 2681(10)) given the uncertainties
that existed (Ref. 6). As a result, EPA
took a pragmatic approach to setting the
DLHS and focused on the potential for
risk reduction, cost-benefit balancing
and other relevant factors, establishing
the standards at 40 mg/ft2 and 250 mg/
ft2 for floors and sills, respectively. As
an aside, at that time the Agency did not
establish a DLHS for troughs as it found
that window sills and troughs were
highly correlated and concluded that
testing both surfaces would not improve
a risk assessor’s ability to characterize
risk. Building off the precedent
established in 2001, the 2019 DLHS
Rule ‘‘evaluated the relationship
between dust-lead levels and children’s
health, and . . . the application of those
standards in lead risk reduction
programs.’’ In addition, when
establishing the 2019 DLHS, EPA also
assessed laboratory capabilities,
resources for addressing LBP hazards
and consistency across the Federal
Government (Ref. 2). At that time EPA
reasonably believed it had the discretion
to set the DLHS based on both risk
reduction and whether the standards
were achievable, especially given the
existing programs in place to reduce
LBP hazards and revised the DLHS to 10
mg/ft2 and 100 mg/ft2 for floors and sills,
respectively (Ref. 2).
Ultimately, the 2021 Court Opinion,
which is discussed in Unit II.E., led EPA
to undertake a major shift in its
approach to residential LBP hazard
control and the LBP activities program
because the Opinion found that EPA did
not have the authority, when setting the
DLHS, to consider non-health factors
(e.g., laboratory capabilities, resources
for addressing LBP hazards, consistency
across the Federal Government, or costbenefit balancing). Consistent with the
2021 Court Opinion, EPA is proposing
to revise the DLHS in this rulemaking
based only on health considerations.
EPA intends health-only considerations
in this DLHS context to refer to the
effects of lead on health after exposure
to dust-lead loadings, considering the
statutory definition’s focus on ‘‘any
condition that causes exposure to lead
from lead-contaminated dust . . . that
would result in adverse human health
effects’’ (15 U.S.C. 2681(10)). These
health-only considerations do not
include broader public health concerns
(such as health trade-offs and policy
impacts on public housing).
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1. Rationale for Selecting the Proposed
DLHS
EPA is proposing a non-numeric
DLHS that is any reportable level of
dust-lead for floors and window sills as
analyzed by an NLLAP-recognized
laboratory. Proposing a DLHS for floors
and window sills only, is consistent
with current practice and regulatory
history which has not included a hazard
standard specifically for troughs.
‘‘Reportable level’’ is not defined in
EPA’s 40 CFR 745 or EPA’s current
guidance for NLLAP-recognized
laboratories, titled Laboratory Quality
System Requirements (or LQSR 3.0).
EPA is proposing to define ‘‘reportable
level’’ in the regulations to mean the
lowest analyte concentration (or
amount) that does not contain a ‘‘less
than’’ qualifier and that is reported with
confidence for a specific method by an
NLLAP-recognized laboratory. In other
words, EPA interprets ‘‘any reportable
level’’ of dust-lead to be any level
greater than or equal to the lowest value
a laboratory can reliably report to a
client or the regulated community (i.e.,
any reportable level of dust-lead in a
laboratory sample result report that does
not contain a ‘‘less than’’ (‘‘<’’)
qualifier).
Under the LQSR, an NLLAPrecognized laboratory must demonstrate
it can achieve a quantitation limit equal
to or less than 50% of the lowest action
level for dust wipe samples (more
discussion on the ‘‘action level’’ is
found in Unit IV.A.1.c). In addition, a
report of zero concentration is not
permitted and laboratories must
establish a method of limiting the lower
reported values to a positive finite lead
level that is appropriate for the
technology being used. Measured lead
levels below this positive finite value
must be reported with a qualifier ‘‘less
than’’ (‘‘<’’) this positive finite value
(Ref. 29).
Based on these current minimum
standards for NLLAP-recognized
laboratories and previous laboratory
stakeholder input, EPA expects that the
lowest reportable level will be
equivalent to the laboratory’s
quantitation limit in some cases, but
could be lower depending on laboratory
capabilities. Ultimately, the proposed
DLHS of ‘‘any reportable level’’ is not
dependent on the DLCL or quantitation
limit, but rather is based on the
capabilities of individual laboratories.
EPA is requesting comment on the
appropriateness of this interpretation
and of the proposed definition of
‘‘reportable level.’’
EPA refers to this non-numeric DLHS
approach as GTZ. Given the statutory
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language in TSCA Section 401 that
defines what a ‘‘LBP hazard’’ is (i.e., as
conditions of LBP and leadcontaminated dust and soil that ‘‘would
result in adverse human health effects’’),
EPA believes that it cannot set the DLHS
at zero because zero does not identify a
level of exposure to dust-lead loadings
that would cause adverse health effects.
Rather EPA believes the proposed
standard of ‘‘any reportable level’’ is an
appropriate DLHS based on dust-lead
exposure related health factors only,
and in accordance with the 2021 Court
Opinion by taking into consideration
the modeling data outlined in TSD and
the current state of the science on lead
exposure and children’s BLL. The
proposed GTZ approach represents a
shift in the LBP activities program to a
more inclusive and protective DLHS,
compared to the current 2019 and 2021
levels. If finalized as proposed, the GTZ
approach will be inclusive of any
reportable level of dust-lead and will
not distinguish between severe, less
severe, or negligible risks.
As discussed further in Unit IV.A.2
Other DLHS Options EPA Considered,
two other approaches were also
considered for revising the DLHS,
including a numeric standard based
entirely on the modeling data laid out
in the TSD (summarized in TSD Table
2–2), and an approach that would use
the background dust-lead levels of
housing built in or after 1978 (called
post-1977 background). EPA seeks
comment on its proposed and potential
alternative approaches to updating the
DLHS.
a. GTZ Rationale: Modeled Discussion
The GTZ approach is primarily
supported by the modeling results
provided in the TSD and discussed
further in Unit IV.A.3. In the TSD
(which is introduced in Unit III) EPA
estimated BLL and related changes in IQ
(a measure of cognitive function) in
young children. The results show that as
dust-lead levels in housing decrease
below the current standard (i.e., 10 mg/
ft2 and 100 mg/ft2 for floors and window
sills), so do children’s BLL and IQ
decrement from lead exposure. When
modeling GTZ, EPA used estimated
dust-lead loadings ranging from 0.7 to
2.2 mg/ft2 for floors and 0.8 to 4.4 mg/ft2
for window sills. These are assumed
values for a GTZ DLHS paired with the
proposed or alternative DLCL, and
account for the lower reporting
thresholds that EPA estimates
laboratories will realistically attain
under this proposal. EPA collected
information on real-world laboratory
reporting limits from stakeholder
outreach conversations as well as
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publicly available sources. GTZ values
listed above are based on the average of
reporting limits at laboratories that
currently report numeric dust wipe
loadings at levels 50% below the
proposed DLCL options. For the details
of these calculations, see Sections 4.1
and 2.4.6 of the EA (Ref. 14). EPA also
used a hypothetical dust-lead loading
value of zero. Details about how the
TSD results are interpreted are
described in Unit IV.A.2., and the
modeled results themselves, which are
supportive of the GTZ approach, are
described in Unit IV.A.3.
b. GTZ Rationale: No Threshold Has
Been Identified
According to TSCA Title IV, the
DLHS should identify the level of dustlead exposure that ‘‘would result in
adverse human health effects’’ (15
U.S.C. 2681(10)). GTZ is a more
protective approach compared to the
current regulatory landscape and all the
options that were considered for this
rulemaking (except post-77
background). GTZ also acknowledges
that the current state of scientific
evidence does not identify a BLL
threshold below which there is no
association of adverse effects on
children’s cognition. Depending on the
exposure and other factors, the effects
on IQ associated with childhood lead
exposure may persist into adolescence
and adulthood (Refs. 4 and 8). EPA also
favored such an approach for the DLHS
under TSCA Title IV in part because a
more protective approach to DLHS, such
as GTZ, aligns with the Congressional
purpose for disclosure elsewhere under
Title X (notably, as implemented in the
Lead Disclosure Rule) and because
Congress used the word ‘‘hazard’’ in the
‘‘lead-based paint hazard’’ term, even
though the definition uses more risklike language by introducing
consideration of the level of exposure
that would result in adverse health
effects.
EPA’s 2013 Lead ISA stated that
harmful effects on children’s cognition
as measured by IQ were observed in
groups with mean BLLs as low as 2 mg/
dL, and further that despite there being
some uncertainty in epidemiological
studies on lead exposure and BLLs
(especially for older children and
adults) that ‘‘A threshold for cognitive
function decrements is not discernable
from the available evidence (i.e.,
examination of early childhood blood
Pb or concurrent blood Pb in the range
of <1 to 10 mg/dL).’’ (Ref. 4)). This
statement was based on a synthesis of
the extensive literature examining the
relationship between BLL and cognitive
function, including a landmark pooled
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cohort study meta-analysis by Lanphear
et al. (Refs. 40 and 41), the results of
which have been confirmed by repeated
re-analysis (Refs. 42 and 43). While the
2013 ISA went on to state that ‘‘the
current evidence does not preclude the
possibility of a threshold for
neurodevelopmental effects in children
existing with lower blood levels than
those currently examined’’, the Federal
Lead Action Plan articulated the U.S.
Government position that ‘‘no safe
blood lead level in children has been
identified.’’ (Ref. 9). Further, the
analysis that supports this rule
examined the 95th percentile of
children’s modeled BLLs and the
associated IQ losses (Ref. 16), which for
all options considered is at or above the
group mean BLLs for which IQ loss is
observed in the literature examined in
the ISA (Ref. 4 and 16).
EPA understands the limitations of
the epidemiological analyses, the lack of
scientific studies evaluating low BLLs
and acknowledges that a threshold
could exist that is currently
unidentified; but ultimately in its
assessment of the available scientific
research findings in the 2013 ISA for
lead, the Agency observed that there is
no evidence of a threshold below which
there are no harmful health effects from
lead exposure. EPA continues to
acknowledge the aforementioned
uncertainties and notes that science is
constantly evolving and, as additional
data become available (e.g., exposure
and health impacts), then EPA may
undertake a new rulemaking to propose
changing the standards in the future to
reflect any new data or information
about an acceptable threshold of effects
on cognition in children.
Additionally, the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC)
acknowledges that ‘‘[s]cientific evidence
suggests that there is no known safe
[BLL], because even small amounts of
lead can be harmful to a child’s
developing brain’’ (Ref. 44). When the
original DLHS and DLCL were proposed
and finalized in 1998 and 2001 the CDC
had set a ‘‘level of concern’’ for
children’s BLL at ≥10 mg/dL (Refs. 45
and 46). In 1991, when that level was
established as a level that should
prompt public health actions, the CDC
concurrently recognized that a BLL of
10 mg/dL did not define a threshold for
the harmful effects of lead (Ref. 45). One
goal for the level was that ‘‘all lead
poisoning prevention activities should
be to reduce children’s BLLs below
10 mg/dL’’ (Ref. 45). Accordingly, in the
1998 proposal EPA stated that,
‘‘[a]lthough the scientific community
has not been able to identify a threshold
of exposure below which adverse health
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50455
effects do not occur, the evidence of
health effects below 10 mg/dL is not
sufficiently strong to warrant concern’’
(Ref. 47). In the final rule in 2001, EPA
determined the lowest candidate DLHS
by using a 1 to 5% probability of an
individual child developing a BLL of
10 mg/dL (Ref. 6).
In the 2019 DLHS Rule, EPA
recognized that ‘‘[a]lthough health risks
to young children decrease with
decreasing dust-lead levels, no non-zero
lead level, including background levels,
can be shown to eliminate health risk
entirely.’’ At that time, EPA also
recognized the CDC’s 2012 decision to
discontinue its use of a 10 mg/dL blood
lead ‘‘level of concern’’ and to introduce
a population-based blood lead reference
value (BLRV) to identify children
exposed to more lead than most other
children in the United States (Ref. 48).
The BLRV represents the 97.5th
percentile of the U.S. population BLL
distribution in children ages 1 to 5 from
the National Health and Nutrition
Examination Surveys (NHANES). This
means that by definition 2.5 percent of
children ages 1 to 5 in the NHANES
survey have a BLL greater than the
BLRV. This metric was established in
part because ‘‘no safe blood lead level
in children ha[d] been identified,’’ (Ref.
48). In 2012 the BLRV was 5 mg/dL,
based on young children’s BLL in the
2007–2010 NHANES, and in 2021 it was
lowered to 3.5 mg/dL based on the
children’s lower BLLs observed in the
2015–2018 NHANES (Ref. 46). The
BLRV is not based on a health endpoint,
but rather is a statistical point in the
distribution of children’s BLLs in the
U.S. used as a screening tool to identify
children who have higher levels of lead
in their blood compared with most
children.
Establishing a health-based only
standard for dust-lead hazard, as well as
clearance levels that consider other
factors (i.e., take into account reliability,
effectiveness, and safety), is similar to
EPA’s implementation of some other
programs governing lead exposure. For
example, under the Safe Drinking Water
Act (SDWA), EPA is required to
establish a maximum contaminant level
goal (MCLG) at a level at which, in the
Administrator’s judgement, ‘‘no known
or anticipated adverse effects on the
health of persons occur and which
allows an adequate margin of safety.’’
Section 1412(b)(4). EPA established a
health-based MCLG of zero for lead in
drinking water. National Primary
Drinking Water Regulations include
either an enforceable maximum
contaminant level (MCL) or treatment
technique requirements, EPA can set a
treatment technique requirement in lieu
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of an MCL if ‘‘it is not economically or
technologically feasible to ascertain the
level of the contaminant.’’ SDWA
Section 1412(b)(7)(A). In addition to the
MCLG, EPA established treatment
technique requirements for lead taking
into account several factors (56 FR
26460). Unlike many other drinking
water contaminants, lead is generally
not present in source water but enters
drinking water from corrosion of
plumbing materials that contain lead
including lead service lines and premise
plumbing. Occurrence of lead in
drinking water is variable within a
system and across systems due to factors
such as amount of lead in any
individual site’s plumbing, physical and
chemical characteristics of the water,
and consumer use patterns.
Additionally, sources of lead can be
beyond the control of the water system
to replace, such as premise plumbing.
Water systems can adjust or add
treatment to control the corrosivity of
the water to reduce lead leaching from
lead pipes and premise plumbing. EPA
is required to consider technical
feasibility and costs when establishing
the treatment technique, which is
analogous to EPA’s development of the
clearance levels that also include nonhealth-based factors. Under EPA’s
treatment technique rule for lead in
drinking water, EPA established a nonhealth-based action level which, if
exceeded, requires water systems to take
actions to reduce elevated levels of lead
in drinking water.
Because of the 2021 Court Opinion
remanding the DLHS for reconsideration
based only on health factors, the results
of the analysis in the TSD, and the lack
of a discernible threshold in the
evidence for the association of blood
lead with harmful effects on cognition
in young children, EPA proposes to
change the DLHS to any reportable level
of lead analyzed by an NLLAPrecognized laboratory.
c. LQSR Action Level
Given that GTZ is a non-numeric
value, if finalized as proposed, the
DLCL, rather than the DLHS, would
become the ‘‘action level’’ as described
in the Laboratory Quality System
Requirements (LQSR 3.0), as well as for
when a risk assessor would recommend
an abatement (see Unit IV.D. for more
information on EPA’s proposed change
to the definition of abatement).
According to the current LQSR, NLLAPrecognized laboratories that analyze
dust wipe samples for lead must show
that they can achieve a quantitation
limit ‘‘equal to or less than . . . 50% of
the lowest action level [i.e., regulatory
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criterion for defining an LBP hazard (15
U.S.C. 2681(10)) because it requires EPA
to choose a cutoff for when
unacceptable risk exists. EPA noted in
2001, even if the science and
environmental-lead prevalence data
were perfect, there would likely be no
agreement on the level, or certainty, of
risk that is envisioned in the phrase
‘‘would result in adverse human health
effects.’’ Thus, EPA explained that it
‘‘would not be appropriate to base a
[LBP] hazard standard on any specific
probability of exceeding any specific
[BLL].’’ (Refs. 2 and 6). EPA continues
to agree with the challenges highlighted
in 2001 and 2019.
2. Other DLHS Approaches EPA
When choosing health or exposure
Considered
metrics to evaluate the DLHS
EPA considered two other approaches
approaches based on the TSD results,
for revising the DLHS: a numeric
the Agency has considered three factors:
standard based on the probability of
(1) the CDC’s BLRV (which is a not a
exceedance of one or more IQ or BLL
health-based end point but rather is a
metrics as determined by the Agency,
statistical measure of relative exposure),
and an approach that would use the
(2) responsiveness to feedback received
background dust-lead levels of housing
previously from various scientific
built in 1978 and beyond as the DLHS
bodies, and (3) Agency precedent. The
(known as ‘‘post-1977 background’’).
TSD considers BLL and IQ changes in
The three approaches (i.e., GTZ,
two ways: relative to aggregate/total lead
numeric standard, and post-1977
exposure (which includes exposure
background) take different analytical
from other media: soil, diet, water, and
paths to revising the DLHS based only
air in addition to dust) and relative to
on health considerations. EPA is
incremental/dust-only lead exposure
proposing the GTZ approach, given the
(Ref. 16). For example, in 2001 the
discussion laid out in Unit IV.A.1. but
lowest DLHS candidate was identified
welcomes comment on the other two
by using a 1 to 5% probability of an
approaches outlined in both the
individual child developing a BLL of 10
preamble and in the TSD (Ref. 16).
mg/dL (Ref. 6), which represented total
BLL, inclusive of exposure to lead
a. Numeric Standard Approach
In addition to the GTZ approach, EPA through other media.
In the TSD analyses for this proposal,
also explored a ‘‘numeric standard’’
EPA compared BLL in young children,
approach, meaning that the Agency
with an emphasis on 2-year-old children
would propose a numerical DLHS with
because this is the age of greatest
a rationale based solely on the
modeled exposure, from aggregate or
interpretation of the TSD results. To do
total exposure from all media (i.e., dust,
so, the Agency would need to establish
soil, diet, water, and air) to the CDC
a health or exposure metric of interest
(i.e., target BLL or IQ change) that would BLRV of 3.5 mg/dL. This BLL value is
not-health based and does not represent
be acceptably protective of human
a toxicity threshold (and is subject to
health. Estimated BLL and IQ
change over time, since the CDC BLRV
decrements in children exposed to
changes as the BLLs in the population
hypothetical dust-lead loading values
are included in the TSD for every DLHS change); however, CDC explains that it
can still be used as a tool to ‘‘ (1) help
candidate considered for all three
approaches (i.e., GTZ, numeric standard determine whether medical or
environmental follow-up actions should
and post-1977 background), as well as
be initiated for an individual child and
the primary and alternative DLCL
(2) prioritize communities with the most
options. These values are estimated to
need for primary prevention of exposure
help EPA analyze the impacts of this
proposed rulemaking on the health (i.e., and evaluate the effectiveness of
prevention efforts’’ (Ref. 46).
IQ decrement) and dust-lead exposure
Importantly, even at zero dust-lead,
of the subpopulation in question (i.e.,
children are already estimated to have a
young children in pre-1978 buildings
5.7% probability of exceeding the BLRV
and COFs) and to inform a costs and
given the impact of background lead
benefits analysis in the EA.
exposures from other media (e.g., soil,
In 2001 and 2019, EPA expressed the
diet, water, and air) (Ref. 16).
challenges of meeting the statutory
limit] for dust wipe samples’’ (Ref. 29).
The quantitation limit must also be ‘‘at
least 2 times but no greater than 10
times the method detection limit’’ (Ref.
29). Therefore, due to the non-numeric
nature of the proposed DLHS of ‘‘any
reportable level,’’ these current testing
requirements will rely on the numerical
DLCL to establish the quantitation limit
that any laboratory (that wishes to
maintain or obtain NLLAP recognition)
must be able to demonstrate. Note
however, that the proposed DLHS of
‘‘any reportable level’’ is still considered
distinct from the DLCL and the
quantitation limit.
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TABLE 1—PERCENT EXCEEDANCE VALUES FOR ZERO, AGE: 2 YR OLD (30 MONTHS)
Probability
Floor
(μg/ft2)
Approach
Zero 1 ........................................................
1 The
Sill
(μg/ft2)
Total BLL >3.5
μg/dL
0
0
Total BLL >5
μg/dL
5.7%
Dust only BLL
>1 μg/dL
Dust only BLL
>2.5 μg/dL
0.0%
0.0%
2.2%
exceedance values for zero dust-lead are provided for comparison with the DLHS candidates; it is not a candidate value.
In 2011, EPA’s Scientific Advisory
Board (SAB) and in 2012 the Children’s
Health Protection Advisory Committee
(CHPAC) both expressed support for an
incremental BLL approach that focuses
on dust-lead exposure only. In 2011
SAB reviewed EPA’s Approach for
Developing Lead Dust Hazard
Standards for Residences (November
2010 Draft) and Approach for
Developing Lead Dust Hazard
Standards for Public and Commercial
Buildings (November 2010 Draft) and
provided feedback that there are several
key advantages to the incremental
approach (e.g., reducing uncertainty
from estimating exposures from other
media) and provided that a change in
BLL ‘‘of 1 or 2 mg/dL at the 90th
percentile’’ could be an example of a
target risk level. Similarly, CHPAC
expressed support for using an
incremental approach and preferred
levels such that an adverse change in
BLL is ‘‘no greater than 1 or 2.5 mg/dL’’
(Ref. 49).
As a result, EPA also estimated what
dust-lead levels (considering only the
dust-lead component in the multi-media
exposure modeling) would result in
incremental BLL change ranging
between 1 and 2.5 mg/dL based on
exposure assumptions described in the
TSD (Ref. 16).
For this reconsideration rulemaking
the Agency considered the estimated
total/aggregate IQ change (i.e., the
estimated total or aggregate IQ change
from modeled BLL including all
modeled sources of lead exposure) at
age six and compared it to a threshold
of 1 to 2 points. IQ changes due to
background exposures to lead in other
media (e.g., soil, diet, water, and air) are
estimated to already have a 48.7%
probability to exceed 2 points for
children in target housing without also
considering additional dust-lead
exposure (Ref. 16).
TABLE 2—PERCENT EXCEEDANCE VALUES FOR ZERO, AGE: 6 YR OLD (72 MONTHS)
Probability
Floor (μg/ft 2)
Approach
Sill (μg/ft 2)
Total IQ >1pt
Zero 1 ........................................................
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1 The
0
0
Total IQ >2pt
88.9%
48.7%
Dust only IQ
>1pt
Dust only IQ
>2pt
0.0%
0.0%
exceedance values for zero dust-lead are provided for comparison with the DLHS candidates; it is not a candidate value.
In addition to total/aggregate IQ
change, EPA determined BLLs that were
estimated to result in an incremental
loss of 1 to 2 IQ points from exposure
to only dust-lead (i.e., exclusive of lead
in other media such as soil, diet, water,
and air). This metric is explicitly healthbased, in that it is an estimated health
effect. There is EPA precedence for
using the metric of an incremental
change in IQ with a range of values of
1 to 2 points to inform national
standards decisions. This includes the
2008 and 2016 decisions on the primary
national ambient air quality standard
(NAAQS) for lead, which was informed
by consideration of air-related IQ
decrement estimates based on an
evidence-based framework, with a focus
on the at-risk subpopulation of children
living near sources who are likely to be
most highly exposed (Ref. 50). In their
review of various technical documents
supporting both the 2008 and 2016
NAAQS reviews, the Clean Air
Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC)
supported using an incremental 1 to 2
point IQ decrement approach for
consideration during development of
the air standard (Refs. 50 and 51).
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As reported in the TSD, EPA
evaluated several numeric DLHS
candidates that the Agency thought
were appropriate given the health and
exposure metrics of interest, and the
uncertainty of the model at low loading
values. The numeric DLHS candidates
were 1/10 mg/ft2 (i.e., 1 mg/ft2 for floors
and 10 mg/ft2 for sills), 2/20 mg/ft2, 3/30
mg/ft2, and 5/40 mg/ft2 and those values
were compared to the specified BLL and
IQ metrics to estimate the probability of
exceeding the BLL or IQ targets. For
example, a 2-year-old living in pre-1978
housing exposed to 3 mg/ft2 on floors
and 30 mg/ft2 on window sills would
have a 4.8% probability of exceeding,
for example, 5 total mg/dL BLL. Under
this numeric standard approach, EPA
would plan to use the threshold of 5%
probability of exceedance for a child
from the sub-population of interest (i.e.,
young children living in pre-1978
housing and COFs). This is similar to
the 1 to 5% probability that was used
in 2001 for the lowest DLHS candidate
(Ref. 6).
Due to the aforementioned
complexities with identifying a cutoff of
risk or specific IQ/BLL metrics of
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interest that would be acceptable for
purposes of setting the DLHS, as well as
the reasons for favoring GTZ, EPA is not
proposing the numeric standard
approach for the DLHS as the Agency’s
preferred option. For specific discussion
on the modeled numeric DLHS
candidates and IQ/BLL metrics, see Unit
IV.A.3. EPA welcomes comment on this
numeric standard approach including
the IQ/BLL metrics under consideration
(i.e., the target values of interest) and the
use of a 5% probability of exceedance.
b. Post-1977 Background Approach
EPA also considered an approach to
revise the DLHS that would align target
housing dust-lead levels with dust-lead
levels in housing built after lead-based
paint was banned. This approach would
result in lowering the DLHS to the dustlead background levels of housing built
after 1977 (known as ‘‘post-1977
background’’), which are presumably
not from LBP. In 1978, the CPSC banned
lead in paint and similar surface-coating
materials for consumer use in excess of
0.06% and revised the level in 2009 to
0.009% following the Consumer
Product Safety Improvement Act of
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2008 (Pub. L. 110–314). As a result of
CPSC’s 1978 lead paint ban, the focus of
EPA’s LBP activities program is target
housing which includes most pre-1978
housing and COFs.
Post-1977 background dust-lead
values were calculated from a weighted
geometric mean of the dust-lead
loadings from the American Healthy
Homes Survey II and were found to be
0.2 mg/ft2 for floors and 0.8 mg/ft2 for
window sills (Refs. 14 and 52). Setting
the DLHS at the post-1977 background
dust-lead levels would allow EPA to
focus on dust-lead hazards above what
is expected in housing without LBP (i.e.,
after CPSC established a maximum level
of lead in paint for consumer products,
including home paints). Establishing
DLHS for target housing and COFs in
this way, using post-1977 background
dust-lead levels, would address
disparities in the dust-lead levels that
children in target housing may be
exposed to and the corresponding
disparate health risks. This approach
would also align with the focus of Title
X on lead hazards in housing
constructed before 1978. Using this
approach, DLHS would be established at
0.2 mg/ft2 for floors and 0.8 mg/ft2 for
window sills as the dust-lead levels that
would result in adverse human health
effects. However, there are questions
about whether the post-1977
background approach would as directly
address the 2021 Court Opinion as the
GTZ approach. Due to those concerns
and the reasons for favoring GTZ, EPA
is not proposing the post-1977
background approach for the DLHS as
the Agency’s preferred option.
As statistical points in a distribution
of environmental data, the calculation of
the average background value is highly
influenced by the way in which data/
measurements below the analytical
detection limit are treated. Further
discussion on deriving these candidates
can be found in the TSD Section 2.3.
The TSD models the health and
exposure outcomes based on these
candidate DLHS of 0.2 mg/ft2 for floors
and 0.8 mg/ft2 for window sills, as
described in Unit IV.A.3. EPA welcomes
comment on this background approach,
and its appropriateness given the
description above, 2021 Court Opinion
and the statutory authority.
3. Modeled Results for All Three DLHS
Approaches
The TSD that accompanies this
proposal evaluated the DLHS candidates
of all three approaches (i.e., GTZ,
numeric standard, and post-1977
background). Estimates for BLLs of
children exposed to the DLHS dust-lead
loadings were evaluated for children at
each age up to age six, including age
two (generally, age two is the age of
greatest modeled exposure), and leadrelated reduction in IQ at age six was
estimated from the lifetime average BLL
(average of BLLs across the period prior
to age six). This approach is consistent
with the study from which the BLL
concentration-IQ response function was
drawn. This study related IQ quantified
at about six years of age to each child’s
lifetime average BLLs (based on blood
Pb measurements taken from six months
up to age of the IQ test (Refs. 40 and 41).
In the following discussion, both the
model results for two-year BLL and the
estimates of IQ change at six-years, are
represented, referring to them as the
results for ‘‘young children’’ for brevity.
EPA considered numerous dust-lead
loadings, including: 0.7/0.8 mg/ft2, (i.e.,
0.7 mg/ft2 for floors and 0.8 mg/ft2 for
window sills) which is the GTZ option
partnered with the primary DLCL option
(3/20/25 mg/ft2 for floors, window sills,
and window troughs respectively) and
2.2/4.4 mg/ft2, which is the GTZ
partnered with the alternative DLCL
option (5/40/100 mg/ft2). Other modeled
dust-lead loadings are 0.2/0.8 mg/ft2,
which is the post-1977 background
dust-lead level, 1/10 mg/ft2, 2/20 mg/ft2,
3/30 mg/ft2, 5/40 mg/ft2, and 10/100 mg/
ft2, which is the 2019 DLHS. Zero was
also provided for comparison purposes
with the DLHS candidates and is not
itself a candidate value. More
information on the TSD and the health/
exposure metrics (i.e., IQ and BLL
decrements) that were analyzed can be
found in Unit III. and Unit IV.A.2.a.
DLHS candidates associated with
GTZ, post-1977 background, and the
numeric standard (1/10 mg/ft2)
approaches are associated with the
lowest BLLs when compared to the
other numeric DLHS candidates (2/20
mg/ft2, 3/30 mg/ft2 and 5/40 mg/ft2 and
the current DLHS of 10/100 mg/ft2 for
floors and window sills). The TSD
modeling results for young children
exposed to dust-lead associated with the
loading candidates from the GTZ
approach (which range from 0.7 to 2.2
mg/ft2 for floors and 0.8 to 4.4 mg/ft2 for
window sills depending on which DLCL
it is coupled with, see Unit IV.A.1.a. for
more information) show that young
children would have a 0.0 to 10.6%
probability of exceeding an incremental
BLL of 1 to 2.5 mg/dL (Tables 7–2 and
7–3 in the TSD). However, the results
for GTZ partnered with the primary
DLCL option (0.7/0.8 mg/ft2), and post1977 background (0.2/0.8 mg/ft2) are the
only two DLHS candidates that keep
both the percentage of exceedance of
incremental BLL of 1 to 2.5 mg/dL below
5% probability (which is the threshold
of interest EPA identified).
When comparing the three DLHS
approaches to total BLL, the modeling
includes exposure from other media
such as soil, diet, water, and air.
Importantly, even at zero dust-lead,
children would still have a 5.7%
probability of exceeding the BLRV given
the impact of these other exposures.
Thus, none of the considered DLHS
candidates resulted in less than 5%
probability of exposed children’s BLL
exceeding the CDC BLRV. However, the
TSD modeling results did show that for
young children exposed to dust-lead
loadings using the GTZ approach, the
post-1977 background approach or the
numeric DLHS candidate of 1/10 mg/ft2
would have approximately a 7.3 to 9.1%
probability of exceeding a total BLL of
3.5 mg/dL, the CDC’s BLRV. This is
lower than the 10.3 to 13.9% probability
when exposed to other numeric DLHS
candidates (2/20 mg/ft2, 3/30 mg/ft2 and
5/40 mg/ft2 for floors and window sills)
and the 18.0% probability when
exposed to the current DLHS of 10 mg/
ft2 for floors and 100 mg/ft2 for window
sills. Therefore, while no DLHS option
results in a less than 5.7% probability
of exposed children’s BLL exceeding the
CDC BLRV given their likely exposures
to other sources of lead, the options
with the lowest levels (GTZ, post-1977
background, and 1/10 mg/ft2) result in
exposed children experiencing about a
two to three times less likelihood of
exceeding the CDC BLRV compared to
the current DLHS.
TABLE 3—PERCENT EXCEEDANCE VALUES FOR DLHS CANDIDATES, AGE: 2 YR OLD (30 MONTHS)
Probability
Approach
Floor
(μg/ft2)
Zero 1 ........................................................
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Sill
(μg/ft2)
0
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Total BLL >3.5
μg/dL
(%)
0
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Total BLL >5
μg/dL
(%)
5.7
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Dust only BLL
>1 μg/dL
(%)
Dust only BLL
>2.5 μg/dL
(%)
0.0
0.0
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TABLE 3—PERCENT EXCEEDANCE VALUES FOR DLHS CANDIDATES, AGE: 2 YR OLD (30 MONTHS)—Continued
Probability
Floor (μg/ft2)
Approach
Post-1977 Background ............................
GTZ With 3/20 DLCL ...............................
Numeric ....................................................
GTZ With 5/40 DLCL ...............................
Numeric ....................................................
Numeric ....................................................
Numeric ....................................................
Current Standard .....................................
1 The
Sill (μg/ft2)
0.2
0.7
1
2.2
2
3
5
10
Total BLL >3.5
μg/dL
(%)
0.8
0.8
10
4.4
20
30
40
100
Total BLL >5
μg/dL
(%)
7.3
8.2
9.1
10.1
10.3
11.8
13.9
18.0
Dust only BLL
>1 μg/dL
(%)
Dust only BLL
>2.5 μg/dL
(%)
1.0
3.7
6.6
10.6
12.5
17.2
23.0
36.7
0.0
0.1
0.5
1.0
1.2
2.0
3.2
6.5
2.8
3.0
3.3
3.9
4.1
4.8
5.5
7.5
exceedance values for zero dust-lead are provided for comparison with the DLHS candidates; it is not a candidate value.
DLHS candidates associated with GTZ
and post-1977 background are also
estimated to be associated with the
lowest IQ decrements when compared
to the other DLHS candidates (GTZ
partnered with the alternative DLCL, 1/
10 mg/ft2, 2/20 mg/ft2, 3/30 mg/ft2 and 5/
40 mg/ft2, and the current DLHS of 10/
100 mg/ft2 for floors and window sills).
GTZ partnered with the primary DLCL
option (0.7/0.8 mg/ft2), and post-1977
background (0.2/0.8 mg/ft2) are the only
two DLHS candidates estimated to have
a 0.6 to 2.5% probability of exceeding
2 points of incremental IQ loss from
dust-exposure, keeping the percentage
of exceedance of 2 points of IQ loss
below 5% probability.
TABLE 4—PERCENT EXCEEDANCE VALUES FOR DLHS CANDIDATES, AGE: 6 YR OLD (72 MONTHS)
Probability
Approach
Floor
(μg/ft2)
Zero 1 ........................................................
Post-1977 Background ............................
GTZ With 3/20 DLCL ...............................
Numeric ....................................................
GTZ With 5/40 DLCL ...............................
Numeric ....................................................
Numeric ....................................................
Numeric ....................................................
Current Standard .....................................
1 The
0
0.2
0.7
1
2.2
2
3
5
10
0
0.8
0.8
10
4.4
20
30
40
100
Total IQ
1pt
(%)
Total IQ >2pt
(%)
88.9
94.7
96.4
97.0
97.7
97.9
98.5
98.8
99.4
48.7
63.1
70.4
74.5
78.5
80.0
82.3
85.1
90.3
Dust only IQ
>1pt
(%)
0.0
6.2
18.5
30.2
40.7
44.6
53.6
62.7
75.8
Dust only IQ
>2pt
(%)
0.0
0.6
2.5
5.2
9.0
11.0
16.0
22.4
37.9
exceedance values for zero dust-lead are provided for comparison with the DLHS candidates; it is not a candidate value.
B. Dust-Lead Clearance Levels
Approach
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS3
Sill
(μg/ft2)
TSCA Title IV granted EPA the
authority to regulate LBP activities, and
to take into account reliability,
effectiveness, and safety (15 U.S.C.
2682(a)(1)) when setting the DLCL.
While considering those three criteria,
the 2001 LBP Hazards Rule modified the
work practice standards to include
DLCL, which ‘‘are used to evaluate the
effectiveness of cleaning following an
abatement’’ (Ref. 6). In both the 2001
LBP Hazards Rule and the 2021 DLCL
Rule, the DLCL were finalized as the
same value as the DLHS for floors and
window sills. When originally
established, EPA considered the DLCL
in the broader context of Title X, and
selected DLCL that were compatible
with a ‘‘workable framework for leadbased paint hazard evaluation and
reduction.’’ EPA chose DLCL that were
consistent with the DLHS in part to
ensure they were ‘‘as easy as possible to
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understand and implement’’ (Ref. 47).
At that time EPA established the DLCL
and the DLHS at 40 mg/ft2 and 250 mg/
ft2 for floors and window sills, with a
separate DLCL of 400 mg/ft2 for troughs.
In 2021 the DLCL set by EPA
continued to mirror the DLHS as it had
done historically, as the Agency
explained that it wanted to update the
DLCL to achievable levels that would
demonstrate elimination of dust-lead
hazards under the 2019 DLHS of 10 mg/
ft2 for floors and 100 mg/ft2 for window
sills. The 2021 updates to the DLCL
restored consistency between the DLCL
and DLHS, which had been lowered in
2019 without a corresponding
amendment to the DLCL. Previous
public comments received on the 2018
DLHS proposal and 2020 DLCL proposal
favored lowering the DLCL to be
consistent with the DLHS (Refs. 53 and
54). As a result, in 2021 EPA finalized
DLCL of 10 mg/ft2 for floors and 100 mg/
ft2 for window sills (the same levels as
the DLHS), and ‘‘EPA considered the
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achievability of these levels, how the
lower dust-lead loadings can be reliably
detected by laboratories, the
effectiveness of these levels, and
consistency with the revised 2019
standards and across the Federal
Government’’ (Ref. 3).
The 2021 Court Opinion affirmed that
‘‘TSCA [Title] IV gives the EPA latitude
to consider ‘reliability, effectiveness,
and safety’’’ when promulgating
regulations ‘‘[w]ith respect to
implementation, including abatement.’’
A Cmty. Voice, 997 F.3d at 995 (Ref. 11).
This would include the DLCL as they
represent part of post-abatement work
practices. The Court continued by
emphasizing that this gives EPA more
discretion when setting the DLCL
because they are relevant to the
implementation of remedial measures,
rather than the identification of a hazard
(i.e., DLHS). The Court analogized this
dichotomy to other environmental
statutory schemes (see also Unit
IV.A.1.b. for EPA’s discussion of the
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SDWA). The Court also held that the
DLCL and DLHS are directly related and
must be reconsidered together. Yet the
Court recognized the difference in
statutory authority and considerations
(see Unit IV.A. for more information on
DLHS).
In accordance with the 2021 Court
Opinion, EPA is proposing to revise the
DLCL in the same proceeding as the
reconsideration of the 2019 DLHS, and
given the Court’s direction for how to
revise the DLHS and DLCL, EPA is
proposing clearance levels that are
decoupled from the DLHS (see Unit I.B
and C. for more background on
decoupling). EPA evaluated the 2021
DLCL in accordance with the statute
and is proposing to revise the DLCL
from 10 mg/ft2, 100 mg/ft2 and 400 mg/ft2
for floors, window sills, and troughs,
respectively, to 3 mg/ft2, 20 mg/ft2, and
25 mg/ft2. EPA is proposing to revise the
DLCL in order to reduce exposure to
dust-lead beyond the 2021 levels.
Additionally, New York City (NYC) has
lowered their clearance levels since the
2021 DLCL final rule, which shows that
levels below EPA’s 2021 DLCL are
achievable. Discussion on NYC’s
clearance levels can be found in Unit
IV.B.2.d. Accordingly, EPA is also
requesting comment on an alternative
DLCL of 5 mg/ft2, 40 mg/ft2, and 100 mg/
ft2, as well as whether another DLCL is
appropriate given reliability,
effectiveness and safety and why, see
Unit VII.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS3
1. Selecting the Proposed DLCL
EPA is proposing to revise the DLCL
given the statutory criteria of reliability,
effectiveness, and safety, based on
consideration of HUD’s Lead Hazard
Control Clearance Survey (LHCCS), the
potential for risk reduction by lowering
exposure to dust-lead, and an evaluation
of laboratory capabilities and capacity.
a. Lead Hazard Control Clearance
Survey
EPA collaborated with HUD to
develop the 2015 LHCCS to examine
whether HUD’s Office of Lead Hazard
Control and Healthy Homes (OLHCHH)
Lead Hazard Control (LHC) grantees
could achieve DLCL below the
standards at that time (40 mg/ft2, 250 mg/
ft2 and 400 mg/ft2 for floors, window
sills and troughs, respectively). LHC
work performed by the grantees must be
conducted by LBP certified individuals.
Since most of the LHC grantees use
commercial firms in their area, HUD
OLHCHH believes that the grantees are
conducting a large percentage of these
activities and are therefore
representative of the regulated
community.
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At that time, 98 LHC grantees
completed the survey, giving HUD
information from housing units in
which lead hazard control activities
took place from 2010 through 2012, for
a total dataset of 1,552 housing units
including 7,211 floor samples and 4,893
window sill samples (Ref. 55). The data
were analyzed to determine the
percentage of samples cleared at or
below specific values. Numerical
modeling was performed to estimate
loadings that fell below laboratory
detection limits. For more information
on how that analysis was conducted
please see Appendix D of the EA (Ref.
14). Since the 2015 LHCCS report was
published, to the Agency’s knowledge,
there has not been any data or source of
information of this magnitude in terms
of DLCL samples alongside the details of
the clearance process, including the
number of tests performed (with results)
and the type of additional work or
cleaning performed. EPA found this
2015 LHCCS report still relevant and
recent enough to provide meaningful
input to inform this reconsideration
rulemaking.
In terms of the primary DLCL option
EPA is proposing, 64% of the 2010 to
2012 samples showed dust-lead levels at
or below 3 mg/ft2 for floors, 64% were
at or below 20 mg/ft2 for window sills,
and 64% were at or below 25 mg/ft2 for
window troughs. As a result,
approximately 64% of samples from the
LHCCS data had dust-lead levels at or
below the primary DLCL option of 3 mg/
ft2 for floors, 20 mg/ft2 for window sills
and 25 mg/ft2 for troughs, which EPA
believes is achievable, especially since
the survey respondents were only
required to achieve clearance below the
2001 DLCL at that time (40/250/400 mg/
ft2 for floors, window sills and troughs,
respectively). It is possible that the
percentage of samples achieving
clearance may be even higher today, due
to the 2021 revision of the DLCL to 10/
100 mg/ft2, meaning clearance has had to
be achieved at these lower levels or
below, since that time. Given leadhazard control work has been subject to
the current DLCL of 10/100 mg/ft2 for
some time, EPA is requesting comment
from the regulated community regarding
their ability to clear to 3/20/25 mg/ft2
after various lead hazard control
activities and given any additional
cleaning necessary to make sure the
dust-lead levels fall below the DLCL.
See Unit IV.B.2.a. for more information
on the LHCCS results for the alternative
DLCL of 5/40/100 mg/ft2 for floors,
window sills and troughs, respectively.
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b. Primary DLCL Modeling Results
EPA must understand the estimated
health impacts of dust-lead exposure
when selecting a DLCL that is reliable,
effective, and safe, and in order to
inform the EA. The TSD that
accompanies this proposal includes
evaluation of the 2021 DLCL (10/100 mg/
ft2 for floors and window sills), and the
primary DLCL (3/20 mg/ft2 for floors/
window sills) and alternative DLCL (5/
40 mg/ft2 for floors/window sills)
options. The unique dust-lead
contribution to exposure from window
troughs cannot be distinguished from
window sills given the strong
correlation between dust-lead loadings
on the two surface types, the lack of
data on access to window troughs
versus window sills by children, and
the paired impacts in window sills and
window troughs from intervention
studies addressing lead paint in window
trim and casings. Further discussion on
exposure to window troughs can be
found in the TSD in Appendix C. As a
result, exposure to window trough dustlead and resultant benefits from a
lowered DLCL for troughs is not
calculated separately for this
rulemaking.
The TSD also describes modeling of
dust-lead exposures at the specific
DLCL options for window sills and
floors only and estimates of both BLLs
that were evaluated for children at each
age up to age six, including age two
(generally, this is the age of greatest
modeled exposure), and lead-related
reduction in IQ at age six was estimated
from the lifetime average BLL (average
of BLLs across the period prior to age
six). More information on estimated
potential impacts from dust-lead
exposures analyzed in the TSD, can be
found in Unit III. Technical Analyses
and Unit IV.A.2.a. Modeled Approach.
Compared to the alternative DLCL
option, the primary option (3/20/25 mg/
ft2 for floors, window sills and troughs)
is expected to be more health protective
in that it results in the least amount of
dust-lead left on a surface after the
completion of an abatement. The
modeling results provided in the TSD
show that young children in pre-1978
housing exposed to dust-lead loadings
of 3 mg/ft2 for floors and 20 mg/ft2 for
sills would have a 11.3% probability of
exceeding a total BLL of 3.5 mg/dL
(CDC’s BLRV). This is lower than the
18.0% probability when exposed to the
current DLCL of 10 mg/ft2 for floors and
100 mg/ft2 for window sills and the
13.9% probability when exposed to the
alternative DLCL. Total BLL includes
exposure from other media such as soil,
diet, water, and air; even at zero dust-
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BLL exceeding 1 to 2.5 mg/dL, compared
to 3.2 to 23.0% probability for the
alternative DLCL (5/40/100 mg/ft2). The
primary DLCL is also estimated to have
a 14.6% probability of exceeding 2 IQ
points decrement from dust exposure,
while the alternative DLCL is estimated
lead, children would still have a 5.7%
probability of exceeding the CDC’s
BLRV from these other sources. When
considering dust-lead exposure only,
the primary option for DLCL (3/20/25
mg/ft2), is estimated to result in 1.6 to
16.0% probability of young children’s
to result in a 22.4% probability of
exceeding 2 IQ points decrement from
dust exposure. Ultimately, the primary
DLCL option is expected to result in a
higher reduction of dust-lead exposure
than the alternative DLCL.
TABLE 5—PERCENT EXCEEDANCE VALUES FOR DLHS CANDIDATES, AGE: 2 YR OLD (30 MONTHS)
Probability
Approach
Floor
Zero 1 ......................
3/20 DLCL ..............
5/40 DLCL ..............
Current Standard ...
1 The
(μg/ft2)
(μg/ft2)
Sill
0 ..........................
3 ..........................
5 ..........................
10 ........................
0 ..........................
20 ........................
40 ........................
100 ......................
Total BLL >3.5
μg/dL
(%)
5.7 .......................
11.3 .....................
13.9 .....................
18.0 .....................
Total BLL >5
μg/dL
(%)
2.2
4.5
5.5
7.5
.......................
.......................
.......................
.......................
Dust only BLL >1
μg/dL
(%)
0.0 .......................
16.0 .....................
23.0 .....................
36.7 .....................
Dust only BLL
>2.5 μg/dL
(%)
0.0
1.6
3.2
6.5
exceedance values for zero dust-lead are provided for comparison with the DLHS candidates; it is not a candidate value.
TABLE 6—PERCENT EXCEEDANCE VALUES FOR DLHS CANDIDATES, AGE: 6 YR OLD (72 MONTHS)
Probability
Approach
Floor
(μg/ft2)
Zero 1 ........................................................
3/20 DLCL ................................................
5/40 DLCL ................................................
Current Standard .....................................
1 The
0
3
5
10
Total IQ >1pt
(%)
0
20
40
100
Total IQ >2pt
(%)
88.9%
98.2%
98.8%
99.4%
48.7%
81.8%
85.1%
90.3%
Dust only IQ
>1pt
(%)
0.0%
51.4%
62.7%
75.8%
Dust only IQ
>2pt
(%)
0.0%
14.6%
22.4%
37.9%
exceedance values for zero dust-lead are provided for comparison with the DLHS candidates; it is not a candidate value.
c. Laboratory Capabilities for Primary
DLCL
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS3
Sill
(μg/ft2)
To better understand current
laboratory capabilities for specific
equipment types, and the impact that
the primary and alternative DLCL
options, especially given that a nonnumeric DLHS would shift the LQSR
‘‘action level’’ to the DLCL, EPA spoke
with nine NLLAP-recognized
laboratories about their dust wipe
testing programs (Refs. 56, 57, 58, 59,
60, 61, 62, 63 and 64). EPA was
interested in information from
laboratories who had high dust wipe
testing capacity and laboratories that
had both a flame atomic absorption
spectroscopy (FAAS) and the more
sensitive laboratory instruments such as
inductively coupled plasma atomic
emission spectroscopy (ICP–AES) or an
inductively coupled plasma mass
spectroscopy (ICP–MS). The Agency
wanted additional background on ICP
instruments and their use for dust wipe
testing in general. Among the
laboratories EPA spoke to, six were
accredited to use FAAS, five were
accredited to use ICP–AES, and two
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were accredited to use ICP–MS to
analyze dust wipe samples for lead.
Eight of the nine laboratories provide
commercial testing services, four of
which are the largest U.S. lead
laboratories by dust wipe test volume.
The information received from
stakeholder outreach indicates that
laboratories using ICP–AES equipment
for dust wipe testing have a reporting
limit of ≤3 mg/wipe. The five
laboratories with ICP–AES capabilities
have current reporting limits ranging
from 0.5 mg/wipe to 3 mg/wipe. EPA
believes that laboratories with more upto-date instruments and optimized
methods should be able to satisfy the
LQSR dust wipe recommendations and
the regulatory limit of the primary DLCL
option of 3/20/25 mg/ft2 and the
quantitation limit of equal to or less
than 50% of that level (i.e., 1.5/10/12.5
mg/ft2). If finalized as proposed, EPA
believes that ICP–AES would likely
become the instrument standard for dust
wipe testing for lead at the NLLAP
laboratories, as other technologies were
not reported to consistently meet the
quantitation limit described above. For
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more information on the on how the
alternative DLCL compares or the
impact it could have on NLLAPrecognized laboratories, see Unit
IV.B.2.c.
FAAS has been the most popular
choice for lead dust wipe testing
because it has a lower purchase price
and operating cost, is fast and easy to
use, and was sensitive enough for the
2019 and 2021 rules’ DLHS and DLCL
of 10 mg/ft2 on floors and 100 mg/ft2 on
window sills. As shown in the table
below, Table 2–9 of the EA, over twothirds of laboratories recognized under
the NLLAP for lead dust wipe testing
currently use FAAS, and over half of
these NLLAP laboratories rely solely on
FAAS (Ref. 14). EPA seeks information
on whether and the extent to which labs
that do not have any or have only
limited ICP capabilities would adopt
ICP technology for dust wipe testing if
it were to effectively become the
standard for dust wipe testing for lead.
In addition, EPA requests comment on
the timing, benefits, and challenges
associated with ICP adoption.
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TABLE 7—ANALYTICAL EQUIPMENT USED FOR LEAD DUST WIPE TESTING BY LABORATORIES RECOGNIZED UNDER NLLAP
PROGRAM
Total number
of laboratories
accredited
Equipment
Commercial
laboratories
accredited
FAAS ........................................................................................................................................................................
ICP–AES ..................................................................................................................................................................
ICP–MS ....................................................................................................................................................................
FAAS and ICP–AES ................................................................................................................................................
FAAS and ICP–MS ..................................................................................................................................................
ICP–AES and ICP–MS ............................................................................................................................................
56
27
5
10
2
1
54
19
1
10
2
1
Total ..................................................................................................................................................................
101
87
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS3
Sources: Methods described in accreditation certificates for NLLAP laboratories, and descriptions on laboratory websites.
Several concerns about switching to
ICP instruments were raised by
laboratories, such as, a reduction in the
throughput rate, need for additional
equipment and staff due to the
complexity of the machines (compared
to FAAS), higher prices, delayed
turnaround, and concerns over
maintaining the current sample volume
and ultimately whether to continue
keeping dust wipe testing for lead in
their portfolio/revisiting their business
model. Based on the outreach
conducted, laboratories indicated that
the throughput rate on ICP–AES
machines is roughly seven to 12 times
slower than FAAS throughput. One
major laboratory EPA spoke to estimated
that they would have to purchase three
to six new instruments, hire several
highly qualified technicians, and run
the laboratory on shifts over 24 hours to
meet current demand for dust wipe tests
conducted solely by ICP. This shift in
instrumentation is estimated to increase
both cost per sample as well as
turnaround time. Laboratories
mentioned that for clearance a
substantial portion of their dust wipe
testing clients request same-day or nextday turnaround on samples so that
residents can quickly reoccupy their
homes. Several laboratories doubted the
technical feasibility of providing sameday or next-day turnarounds at
sufficient volume should they switch to
ICP technology thereby, potentially
delaying homeowners from quickly
reoccupying their homes and renters
from quickly beginning occupancy or
from quickly reoccupying their rental
housing. Dust wipe testing by ICP–AES
is also estimated to be about 125% more
expensive per sample than testing by
FAAS, and laboratories expressed
concerned that less overall dust wipe
testing will occur because state and
local municipalities often have a fixed
budget for their housing and health
programs. See the EA for more specific
information on the breakdown of the
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cost estimates of dust wipe testing. EPA
also seeks information on the potential
geographic impacts of the proposal on
laboratory testing for lead dust wipes.
Finally, EPA found that several highvolume laboratories forecast that dust
wipe test volumes will continue to grow
over the next decade (Refs. 60 and 61).
First, a growing proportion of
laboratories’ dust wipe testing business
comes from landlords who need to
comply with municipal housing
regulations set by states or localities.
Laboratories expect similar regulations
to be enacted in the coming years,
increasing demand for dust wipe testing
for clearance (Ref. 61). Second, in recent
years laboratories have received an
increased volume of test samples
generated by disaster recovery
programs. When there is a natural
disaster (such as a major flood) that
requires clean-up and re-construction of
pre-1978 housing, laboratories can
receive an unexpected spike in dust
wipe tests. Laboratories pointed out that
the increasing rate of disaster-related
demand spikes may overwhelm their
capacity if only ICP can be used for dust
wipe testing. If finalized as proposed,
this rulemaking will also likely increase
the amount of dust wipe testing
required given the proposed regulatory
levels. EPA seeks comment on the
extent to which laboratories would be
able to accommodate increased or
emergency demand for dust wipe testing
if this proposal is finalized.
The Agency is proposing 3/20/25 mg/
ft2 as the primary DLCL option due to
the potential for risk reduction as
discussed in Unit IV.B.1.b. Given
information gathered via EPA’s outreach
to laboratories, EPA is concerned that
setting clearance levels too low may
deter participation in lead-hazard
control programs and activities that
require dust wipe testing or cause a
market failure that does not allow the
current volume of testing to continue.
As a result, EPA is requesting comment
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on the reliability, effectiveness, and
safety of the primary DLCL of 3/20/25
mg/ft2 for floors, window sills, and
troughs, including specifically the
impact on laboratory capability as well
as the accuracy of the information
presented. See Unit VII. Request for
Comments for more information.
2. Alternative DLCL
EPA is requesting comment on an
alternative option to revise the DLCL for
floors, window sills, and troughs from
10 mg/ft2, 100 mg/ft2 and 400 mg/ft2,
respectively to 5 mg/ft2, 40 mg/ft2, and
100 mg/ft2, respectively. EPA chose 5/
40/100 mg/ft2 as the alternate DLCL
based on consideration of HUD’s
LHCCS, potential for risk reduction, an
evaluation of laboratory capabilities as
well as high confidence that these
standards can be successfully
implemented, as shown by the use of
these clearance levels currently in NYC.
Another consideration supporting the
alternative DLCL option is to avoid
potentially spreading the resources for
LBP hazard mitigation so broadly that
they may be diverted from scenarios
that present the greatest risk. EPA notes
that the EA indicates that the alternative
DLCL option is estimated to have
positive net benefits. See EA, Table ES–
11.
a. Lead Hazard Control Clearance
Survey
The LHCCS indicates that 73% of
samples from 2010 to 2012 showed
dust-lead levels at or below 5 mg/ft2 for
floors, 89% were at or below 40 mg/ft2
for window sills, and 94% were at or
below 100 mg/ft2 for window troughs. As
such, overall more than 72% of samples
had dust-lead levels at or below the
alternative DLCL option of 5/40/100 mg/
ft2 for floors, window sills and window
troughs. This is compared to 64% of
samples clearing at or below the
primary DLCL option of 3/20/25 mg/ft2.
As a result, EPA has high confidence
that the alternative DLCL option is
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achievable, while considering reliability
and effectiveness. EPA is requesting
comment on whether the LHCCS data
support the reliability and effectiveness
of the alternative DLCL option, and
whether the regulated community can
clear to 5/40/100 mg/ft2 after various
lead hazard control activities and
specialized cleaning.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS3
b. Alternative DLCL Modeling Results
The alternative (5/40/100 mg/ft2 for
floors, window sills and troughs)
represents a 50% or more reduction of
dust-lead left on a surface following the
completion of an abatement, when
compared to the current DLCL (10/100/
400 mg/ft2). This alternative DLCL
option would be beneficial to
maintaining lower children’s BLLs and
protecting against associated health
outcomes such as decreased IQ. The
modeling results provided in the TSD
show that young children in pre-1978
housing exposed to dust-lead loadings
of 5 mg/ft2 for floors and 40 mg/ft2 for
window sills would have an estimated
13.9% probability of exceeding a total
BLL of 3.5 mg/dL (CDC’s BLRV); this is
compared to the primary DLCL option
(3/20/25 mg/ft2) which would result in a
11.3% probability of exceedance (a
difference of 2.6% between the primary
and alternative DLCL options).
Ultimately, both options are lower than
the 18.0% probability of exceedance of
the BLRV when exposed to the current
DLCL of 10 mg/ft2 for floors and 100 mg/
ft2 on window sills.
When considering dust-lead exposure
only, young children in pre-1978
housing exposed to the alternative DLCL
would have a 3.2 to 23.0% probability
of exceeding a BLL of 1 to 2.5 mg/dL
based on the modeled results, compared
to 1.6 to 16.0% probability for the
primary DLCL (3/20/25 mg/ft2). The
alternative DLCL is also estimated to
have a 22.4% probability of exceeding 2
points of IQ loss. As with total BLL, this
is a considerable reduction from the
37.9% chance of exceeding 2 points of
IQ loss for young children living in
target housing who are exposed the
current DLCL, but still higher than the
primary DLCL estimate of 14.6%. EPA
must understand the impact on health
effects when selecting a DLCL that is
reliable, effective, and safe, and to
inform the EA. Overall, the modeling
within the TSD indicated that the
alternative DLCL (5/40/100 mg/ft2 for
floors, window sills and troughs)
represents a reduction in risk from the
current clearance levels of 10/100/400
mg/ft2, but that risk is still higher than
the estimated results for the primary
DLCL. For a table representation of
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these modeling results, please see Unit
IV.B.1.b. (Tables 5 and 6).
c. Laboratory Capabilities for
Alternative DLCL
EPA spoke with nine NLLAPrecognized laboratories about their dust
wipe testing programs. For additional
details about the laboratory outreach see
Unit IV.B.1.c. Laboratory Capabilities
and the EA (Ref. 14). Based on EPA’s
laboratory outreach, EPA has increased
confidence relative to the proposed
DLCL (i.e., 3/20/25 mg/ft2), that
laboratories can numerically quantify
dust-lead levels of 5 mg/wipe with FAAS
technology and attain a quantitation
limit of equal to or less than 50% of that
level (i.e., 2.5/20/50 mg/ft2). Three major
laboratories EPA spoke with already
report at this level with FAAS, and the
remaining three laboratories using
FAAS that EPA talked to expressed no
concern about attaining this level in the
future if they ask their customers to
wipe 2 ft2 instead of 1 ft2 (Refs. 57, 60
and 64). EPA is requesting comment on
whether the alternative DLCL option
(i.e., 5/40/100 mg/ft2 for floors, window
sills and troughs) would allow NLLAPrecognized laboratories to continue
using FAAS technology, if it would
mitigate any unintended reductions in
dust wipe capacity (due to throughput
time, cost, labor, etc.) and avoid any
negative impacts on other programs that
require specific testing using ICP–AES
or FAAS.
Should EPA finalize the DLCL at 5/
40/100 mg/ft2 and given no changes to
the LQSR, EPA’s laboratory outreach
suggests that a handful of smaller
laboratories with dated FAAS
equipment may elect to discontinue
their dust wipe programs for lead. Due
to the expected continuing participation
of other smaller as well as large-volume
laboratories, EPA believes that these
limited discontinuations are unlikely to
impact the nationwide availability or
market pricing of tests (see the EA for
a breakdown of cost estimates).
Additionally, EPA does not foresee any
concerns reporting to 40 mg/ft2 on
window sill or 100 mg/ft2 on troughs
(even with the small surface areas) if
laboratories successfully attain a
regulatory limit of 5 mg/ft2.
EPA also received feedback that the
alternative DLCL option (5/40/100 mg/
ft2) could better mitigate any negative
impacts on other programs that require
specific testing using ICP–AES or FAAS
equipment. Laboratories currently use
their ICP–AES machines for a variety of
purposes. Most notably, this equipment
is regularly used for the characterization
of metals in hazardous waste and
measuring lead in drinking water.
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Under the primary DLCL option 3/20/25
mg/ft2, laboratories would face a
significant increase in demand for use of
their ICP machines, which could result
in substantial downstream effects on the
availability and price of testing for other
lead and non-lead programs.
Additionally, some laboratories
mentioned they might eliminate use of
their FAAS machines to streamline
laboratory functionality. This may have
downstream effects on testing for lead in
soil, paint chips, and air; laboratories
currently test these matrices by FAAS
with some frequency. If laboratories
decide maintaining FAAS is no longer
viable for their primary line of business
(dust wipes), all lead matrices could be
added to ICP queue, which would
worsen availability issues and increase
prices.
The Agency is requesting comment on
whether reliability, effectiveness and
safety support the DLCL alternative
option of 5/40/100 mg/ft2. EPA is
interested in setting a DLCL that has a
high potential for risk reduction;
however, the Agency also wants to
finalize an option that is achievable and
encourages (not deters) participation in
lead-hazard control programs and
activities that require dust wipe testing.
As a result, EPA is requesting comment
on the alternative DLCL option of 5/40/
100 mg/ft2 for floors, window sills, and
troughs (compared to the primary DLCL
option), the impact that level could have
on laboratories, and the accuracy of the
information presented. See Unit VII.
Request for Comments for more details.
d. New York City
Between 2019 and 2021 NYC
Department of Health and Mental
Hygiene lowered their lead dust
clearance and lead dust hazard risk
assessment testing standards twice. NYC
lowered their standards for floors,
window sills and window wells (i.e.,
troughs), respectively, from 40 mg/ft2,
250 mg/ft2, and 400 mg/ft2 to 10 mg/ft2,
50 mg/ft2, and 100 mg/ft2 in 2019
(effective June 12, 2019) and again to 5
mg/ft2, 40 mg/ft2, 100 mg/ft2 in 2021
(effective June 1, 2021) (Refs. 65 and
66). The Agency spoke to the New York
City Department of Health and Mental
Hygiene and received feedback that
although there was a transitionary
period that lasted several months and
had various challenges, overall, the
regulated community was able to adjust
and comply with the new lower
standards (Ref. 67). Based on NYC’s
experience, EPA believes that the
alternative DLCL option (i.e., 5 mg/ft2, 40
mg/ft2, 100 mg/ft2 for floors, window sills
and window troughs) can be considered
effective and reliable.
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C. Cross Reference With HUD
Regulations
EPA is proposing to modify 40 CFR
745.227(h) to clarify that the proposed
DLCL would differ from the DLHS, that
the Agency does not intend to compel
clearance down to the DLHS, and to
alleviate potential regulatory confusion
surrounding clearance. HUD’s LSHR’s
clearance regulations at 24 CFR
35.1340(d), which apply to both
abatement and non-abatement activities,
currently refer to 24 CFR 35.1320(b)(2),
which in turn cross-references EPA’s
regulations at 40 CFR 745.227(h), which
currently discusses EPA’s DLHS but not
EPA’s DLCL. See Unit III.A.3.f the 2019
DLHS Rule for additional background
on this topic (Ref. 2). As explained
earlier in this preamble, prompted by
analysis conducted following the 2021
Court Opinion, EPA is proposing a
DLHS that is no longer the same value
as the DLCL. As a result, EPA is
proposing to clarify the language at 40
CFR 745.227(h), so it is clear, including
when referenced by the LSHR, that EPA
does not intend to compel clearance to
the DLHS, whether in federally assisted
housing or not.
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D. Definition of Abatement
EPA is proposing to amend the
definition of abatement in EPA’s LBP
activities regulations and thus modify
the trigger for when EPA recommends
an abatement. This change is intended
to align with the proposed decoupling
of the DLHS and DLCL and to focus
impacted entity resources (e.g., HUD,
city, state) on the situations that present
the most risk. TSCA Section 401(1)
defines an abatement as ‘‘any set of
measures designed to permanently
eliminate lead-based paint hazards
. . .’’ and includes ‘‘the removal of
lead-based paint and lead-contaminated
dust, the permanent containment or
encapsulation of lead-based paint . . .
and all preparation, cleanup, disposal,
and postabatement clearance testing
activities associated with such
measures.’’ EPA included a definition of
abatement, which closely resembles the
statutory language, within the LBP
activities regulations at 40 CFR 745.223.
An abatement under the LBP activities
regulations is described as ‘‘any
measure or set of measures designed to
permanently eliminate lead-based paint
hazards’’ and specifically includes
‘‘projects resulting in permanent
elimination of lead-based paint hazards
. . .’’
The 2021 Court Opinion stated that
‘‘TSCA [Title] IV gives the EPA latitude
to consider ‘reliability, effectiveness,
and safety’’’ when promulgating
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regulations ‘‘[w]ith respect to
implementation, including abatement’’
(Ref. 11). Hence, in considering revising
the DLCL, EPA must and has considered
whether reliability, effectiveness and
safety support changing the regulatory
definition of abatement. Given that
under this statutory scheme EPA only
intends to compel post-abatement
clearance to the proposed DLCL, the
Agency is proposing to change the
regulatory definition of abatement so
that the recommendation for action
applies when dust-lead loadings are at
or above the DLCL (which continues to
incorporate non-health-based factors
such as reliability), rather than at or
above the DLHS as has been the case
historically (but which, going forward in
accordance with the 2021 Court
Opinion, can no longer incorporate nonhealth-based factors such as reliability).
This is deemed necessary due to the
decoupling of the DLHS from the DLCL,
and EPA’s desire to avoid situations
where abatements are designed to
eliminate dust-lead levels to the DLHS
and are unable to do so in a reliable and
effective manner. Otherwise, EPA
would be recommending an abatement
if dust-lead levels are between the DLHS
and the DLCL, even though such an
abatement would only need to pass
clearance below the DLCL. Also, where
an abatement is conducted, a cyclical
pattern could result, where an
abatement successfully passes clearance
below the DLCL but an abatement is still
recommended by EPA if dust-lead levels
are at or above the DLHS. Thus, EPA is
proposing to change the regulatory
definition to require that abatements
eliminate dust-lead hazards to below the
DLCL to ensure that successful
abatements can be considered complete.
Relatedly, as explained in Unit IV.E,
EPA is proposing amendments to the
abatement report to help protect from
exposure even after the abatement is
complete.
An additional benefit to modifying
the trigger for when EPA recommends
an abatement is that it allows the
regulated community to focus resources
on situations that present more risk. As
discussed in the 2001 and 2019 final
rules, an important concern for EPA is
having the resources for LBP hazard
mitigation distributed so broadly that
they may be diverted from situations
that present the greatest risk. As a result,
EPA is proposing to change the
regulatory definition of abatement to
permanently eliminate dust-lead
hazards to below the DLCL and
requesting public comment on this
proposal. EPA believes that this
proposed amendment to the regulatory
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definition appropriately applies the
statutory definition in the context of this
rule, where the statute requires EPA to
consider reliability, effectiveness, and
safety for purposes of EPA’s TSCA
section 402 DLCL regulations.
Furthermore, the statutory definition of
abatement in TSCA section 401 states
that the set of measures covered by the
term are to be ‘‘in accordance with the
standards established by the
Administrator’’ under TSCA Title IV,
which refers to the ‘‘standards for
performing [LBP] activities’’ as what
EPA’s TSCA section 402 regulations
shall contain. Note that nothing in this
rulemaking changes the fact that owners
of properties covered by the LBP
Activities Rule are not compelled to
evaluate their properties for the
presence of dust-lead hazards, nor
compelled by EPA to take action (such
as an abatement) if dust-lead hazards are
identified at or above the DLCL,
although HUD and some state or local
governments may require action.
E. Abatement Report
As explained in Units IV.A. and B.,
EPA is proposing to lower the current
DLHS to any reportable level analyzed
by an NLLAP-recognized laboratory,
and the DLCL to 3 mg/ft2, 20 mg/ft2, and
25 mg/ft2 for floors, window sills and
troughs, respectively. The DLHS
identify when pre-1978 housing or a
COF has a dust-lead hazard present. If
finalized as proposed, it is likely that
once a project passes clearance and the
abatement can be considered complete,
there could still be dust-lead hazards
present due to the DLHS being any
reportable level. The Agency realizes
the challenge this creates for the
regulated community and to keep dustlead levels down and mitigate exposure,
EPA is proposing to amend the
requirements for what needs to be
included in an abatement report.
After the completion of an abatement,
a report is required to be developed by
a certified supervisor or project
designer. The list of what needs to be
included in the abatement report is
described at 40 CFR 745.227(e)(10), and
consists of elements such as the start
and completion dates of the abatement,
information about the risk assessor or
inspector conducting the sampling, any
clearance testing and soil analyses, etc.
EPA is proposing to modify 40 CFR
745.227(e)(10) to include a requirement
to add specific language into each
abatement report, when dust-lead levels
are between the DLHS and the DLCL.
That language refers the public to a
useful reference titled ‘‘Protect Your
Family From Lead in Your Home’’ and
acknowledges that LBP hazards
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(particularly dust-lead hazards) could
remain after an abatement. The goal of
including this language in an abatement
report is to ensure that occupants are
provided information and tools
available to them to minimize dust-lead
hazards and take actions to protect
themselves from exposure even after the
abatement is complete.
The certified firm (or individual who
prepared the report) must keep the
abatement reports for at least 3 years
and must provide a copy to the
individual or entity who ‘‘contracted for
its services’’ (40 CFR 745.227(i)). EPA is
requesting comment on the proposed
language to be added to the abatement
report.
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F. Other Amendments
In order to conform the regulations to
a statutory change, make several other
amendments to improve efficiency of
the program and make several
regulatory text corrections, EPA is
proposing to amend 40 CFR part 745,
subparts E (Residential Property
Renovation), F (Disclosure of Known
Lead-Based Paint and/or Lead-Based
Paint Hazards Upon Sale or Lease of
Residential Property), and L (LeadBased Paint Activities).
1. Definition of Target Housing
EPA is proposing to update the
definition of target housing in 40 CFR
745.103 and 40 CFR 745.223 to align
with the statutory changes made in
2017, and to make conforming edits to
language in 40 CFR 745.223 and 40 CFR
745.227. Target housing defines which
housing is subject to EPA’s LBP rules.
Within section 237(a) through (c) of
Title II of Division K of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2017 (Pub. L. 115–
31, 131 Stat. 788 and 789), Congress
amended HUD and EPA’s statutory
definitions of target housing to include
0-bedroom dwellings if a child less than
6 years of age resides or is expected to
reside in such housing (42 U.S.C.
4822(e); 42 U.S.C. 4851(b)(27); 15 U.S.C.
2681(17)). The proposed change to the
definition of target housing in 40 CFR
745.103 and 40 CFR 745.223 would
conform to the statutory language by
defining target housing as any housing
constructed prior to 1978, except
housing for older adults or persons with
disabilities or any 0-bedroom dwelling
(unless any child who is less than 6
years of age resides or is expected to
reside in such housing). For
consistency, EPA is also proposing to
revise the definition of living area in 40
CFR 745.223 to change the age from 6
and under to less than 6 years of age.
Similarly, language describing the age of
children in 40 CFR 745.227(c)(2)(i),
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(c)(2)(iv), (c)(2)(v), (d)(3), (d)(5), and
(d)(6)(ii) would be updated from 6 years
of age and under to under age 6 to
conform to the statutory language as
amended.
2. Definition of Child-Occupied Facility
(COF) and Living Areas
EPA is proposing to revise the
definition of COF in 40 CFR 745.223
and related regulatory language in 40
CFR 745.227 to establish consistency
throughout the LBP regulations. The
LBP Activities regulations define COFs
as buildings or portions of buildings,
constructed prior to 1978, in which the
same child regularly visits on at least
two different days within any given
week, with their visits lasting at least 3
hours with combined visits of at least 6
hours, and combined annual visits
lasting at least 60 hours. COFs may
include, but are not limited to, day-care
centers, preschools and kindergarten
classrooms. Living areas define any area
of a residential dwelling used by one or
more children which include, but are
not limited to, living rooms, kitchen
areas, dens, play rooms, and children’s
bedrooms. Currently, the definition of
COF at 40 CFR 745.223 identifies
children impacted by the LBP Activities
regulations as age 6 and under, while
the definition of COF in the RRP
regulations at 40 CFR 745.83 identifies
children impacted by the RRP
regulations as under 6 years of age. In
order to establish consistency in age
throughout the LBP regulations,
including with the definition of target
housing and the RRP regulations’
definition of COF, EPA is proposing to
change the language in the definition of
COF in 40 CFR 745.223 to less than 6
years of age. Language describing the
age of children in 40 CFR 745.227(d)(7)
would also be updated from 6 years of
age and under to under age 6 to
conform.
3. Electronic Submissions
EPA is proposing to require
submissions for application payments,
applications, and notices to be done
electronically. Under this proposal, this
rule would specifically define
‘‘electronic’’ in 40 CFR 745.83 and 40
CFR 745.223 to mean ‘‘the submission
of an application, payment, or notice
using the Agency’s Central Data
Exchange (CDX), or a successor
platform.’’ In 2016, the U.S. Treasury
Department changed their process so
that paper checks would no longer be
allowed for payment of fees associated
with RRP or abatement programs. Since
that time, applications that require
payment, such as individual and firm
certifications as well as training
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50465
provider accreditation applications,
have been submitted electronically via
CDX. Therefore, EPA is proposing to
amend 40 CFR 745.89 (a)(1), 40 CFR
745.92(c)(2), and 40 CFR 745.238(e)(2)
to conform to the 2016 U.S. Treasury
Department process and require
payments to be made only electronically
via CDX or a successor platform.
Currently there’s no specific
submission method defining how to
submit applications in EPA’s LBP
regulations. This ambiguity allows for
the potential of written applications to
be submitted which requires time
consuming activities such as data entry
and accrues administrative costs.
Therefore, EPA is proposing to amend
40 CFR 745.89 (a)(1), (b)(1), (b)(1)(i), and
(c)(1); 40 CFR 745.225(b)(1), (e)(5), (f)(2),
and (j)(2); 40 CFR 745.226(a), (e), (f), and
(h)(1)(iii); 40 CFR 745.227(e)(4)(vii) and
40 CFR 745.238(d), and (e) to reflect the
proposed requirement of submitting
applications electronically via CDX or a
successor platform. This will add
further clarification and uniformity to
this process.
Additionally, EPA is proposing to
require that abatement and training
notifications be submitted electronically
via CDX or a successor platform.
Requiring electronic submissions and
eliminating fax submissions would
remove the need for fax machine
maintenance and would also reduce
phone service costs. Therefore, EPA is
proposing to amend 40 CFR
745.225(c)(13)(vi) and (14)(iii) to require
submission of abatement and training
notifications to occur electronically via
CDX or a successor platform.
4. Disclosure Rule Warning Statement
EPA is proposing to update the
Disclosure Rule’s Lead Warning
Statement in 40 CFR 745.113(b)(1) to
address a drafting error. Both the
preamble of the Disclosure Rule
(required by Section 1018 of Title X),
and the relevant public sample form
include the following language: ‘‘Before
renting pre-1978 housing, lessors must
disclose the presence of known leadbased paint and/or lead-based paint
hazards in the dwelling,’’ which is
consistent with EPA and HUD’s
adaptation to leasing contracts of the
statutory language in Section 1018 (Ref.
7). However, the Lead Warning
Statement in 40 CFR 745.113(b)(1) does
not include the word ‘‘known.’’ To
conform this regulatory text with the
statutory and preamble language, EPA is
proposing to amend the Lead Warning
Statement to include the word ‘‘known’’
when discussing lessors disclosing the
presence of LBP and/or LBP hazards in
the dwelling.
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5. Disclosure Rule Reference
8. Incorporation by Reference
EPA is proposing to amend the
Disclosure Rule at 40 CFR 745.113(a)(4)
and 40 CFR 745.113(b)(4) to include the
correct lead hazard information
pamphlet reference, 15 U.S.C. 2686.
This reference further discusses the
requirements for the lead hazard
information pamphlet and is the basis
for its statutory authority. The current
reference of 15 U.S.C. 2696 does not
exist and was a drafting error.
EPA is also considering adding
incorporations by reference for two
voluntary consensus standards, each of
which is already included in the
definition of ‘‘wipe sample’’ at 40 CFR
745.63: American Society for Testing
and Materials (ASTM) E1728 and ASTM
E1792. EPA intends to incorporate by
reference the most recent version of
each standard (i.e., ASTM E1728–20
and ASTM E1792–20). Copies of these
materials may be obtained from ASTM
International, 100 Barr Harbor Dr., P.O.
Box C700, West Conshohocken, PA
19428–2959, or by calling (877) 909–
ASTM, or at https://www.astm.org.
ASTM standards referenced in this rule
are also available for public review in
read-only format in the ASTM Reading
Room at https://www.astm.org/epa.htm
only for the duration of the public
comment period.
If you have a disability and the format
of these materials intended for
incorporation by reference interferes
with your ability to access the
information, please contact EPA’s
Rehabilitation Act Section 508 (29
U.S.C. 794d) Program at https://
www.epa.gov/accessibility/forms/
contact-us-about-section-508accessibility or via email at section508@
epa.gov. To enable us to respond in a
manner most helpful to you, please
indicate the nature of the accessibility
issue, the web address of the requested
material, your preferred format in which
you want to receive the material
(electronic format (ASCII, etc.), standard
print, large print, etc.), and your contact
information.
6. Definition of Housing for the Elderly
EPA is proposing to add the definition
of ‘‘housing for the elderly’’ to 40 CFR
745.223 in order to clarify the term
‘‘elderly’’ used in the definition of
‘‘target housing,’’ also in 40 CFR
745.223. EPA already defines ‘‘housing
for the elderly’’ in 40 CFR 745.103 as
‘‘retirement communities or similar
types of housing reserved for
households composed of one or more
persons 62 years of age or more at the
time of initial occupancy’’ under
Subpart F, ‘‘Disclosure of Known LeadBased Paint and/or Lead-Based Paint
Hazards Upon Sale or Lease of
Residential Property.’’ The proposal to
include the same definition in Subpart
L, ‘‘Lead-Based Paint Activities’’ would
add clarity and consistency throughout
the LBP program.
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7. Obsolete Regulatory Text
EPA is proposing to revise and delete
obsolete regulatory text where language
is out of date or no longer applicable in
40 CFR 745.81(a)(4)(i) and (b); 40 CFR
745.90(a)(3), and (4); 40 CFR
745.225(i)(2); and 40 CFR 745.226(f)(5).
For example, 40 CFR 745.81(b) currently
reads: ‘‘Before December 22, 2008,
renovators or firms performing
renovations in State and Indian Tribal
areas without an authorized program
may provide owners and occupants
with either of the following EPA
pamphlets: Protect Your Family From
Lead in Your Home or Renovate Right:
Important Lead Hazard Information for
Families, Child Care Providers and
Schools. After that date, Renovate Right:
Important Lead Hazard Information for
Families, Child Care Providers and
Schools must be used exclusively.’’ This
information is outdated; therefore, EPA
is proposing to update and consolidate
this section to read: ‘‘After December 22,
2008, renovators or firms performing
renovations in States and Indian Tribal
areas without an authorized program
must provide owners and occupants the
following EPA pamphlet: Renovate
Right: Important Lead Hazard
Information for Families, Child Care
Providers and Schools.’’
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V. Implications of Proposed Rule for
Existing HUD and EPA Programs
A. HUD Programs
1. Lead-Safe Housing Rule
HUD has specific authority to control
LBP and LBP hazards in certain
federally owned and federally-assisted
target housing (Ref. 28). HUD’s
regulations at 24 CFR 35.1320(b)(2)
cross-reference EPA’s regulations at 40
CFR 745.227(h), which currently
discusses EPA’s DLHS but not EPA’s
DLCL. Due to the current crossreference, the HUD regulations have
been read as requiring entities receiving
government funding currently to
conduct post-abatement clearance until
the levels are below EPA’s DLHS, which
at the time this cross-reference was
made, were the same values as EPA’s
DLCL. Due to the 2021 Court Opinion,
EPA is now proposing approaches for
these standards that would result in
decoupling the DLHS and DLCL as
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explained in Unit IV. EPA is proposing
modifications to 40 CFR 745.227(h) to
clarify that the Agency does not intend
to compel clearance down to the DLHS
and to alleviate potential regulatory
confusion surrounding clearance (as
discussed in Unit IV.C of this notice).
Other impacts of EPA’s proposal
could include a possible decrease in the
number of landlords participating in
certain HUD programs, as well as
families potentially shifting from
assisted housing to unassisted housing,
which has been shown to be associated
with a higher prevalence of LBP hazards
(Refs. 68 and 69) and higher BLLs (Ref.
70). As discussed in Unit II.A., lead
exposure, even in small amounts, can
cause substantial and long-lasting health
problems, particularly through its
effects on children’s development.
Access to secure housing is also an
important social determinant of health
(Ref. 71). Research finds negative health
effects resulting from three key
mechanisms of housing insecurity: lack
of housing affordability leading to stress
and material deprivation (Refs. 72, 73,
74 and 75), lack of housing stability
(Refs. 76, 77, 78, 79 and 80), and lack
of safe and adequate housing (Refs. 81,
82, 83, 84 and 85). HUD’s housing
assistance programs play a critical role
in helping nearly 5 million households
(Ref. 86) avoid housing insecurity and
its harmful effects on physical and
mental health (Refs. 70, 87, 88, 89, and
90). Despite such Federal assistance, the
nation faces a critical shortage of
affordable rental housing affecting about
8 million very low-income households
(Ref. 91). EPA considered the proposed
changes to the DLHS and DLCL and the
potential impacts on HUD’s housing
programs within the EA (see Section
10.2 for this discussion) (Ref. 14).
Existing research on landlord
participation in the Housing Choice
Voucher program (Refs. 92, 93, 94 and
95) suggests that more stringent
standards or uncertainty as to how to
meet those standards could be a
disincentive for private target housing
providers to participate in HUD’s rental
assistance programs including the
Housing Choice Voucher program
(tenant-based rental assistance program)
and the project-based assistance
programs, which could in turn reduce
access to affordable and stable housing
associated with a relatively lower
prevalence of LBP hazards than
unassisted housing. As a result, EPA is
requesting information and comment on
whether adoption of the proposed DLHS
and DLCL or alternative regulatory
options under consideration would lead
to an increase in housing insecurity or
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lead exposures. If so, EPA is requesting
comment on whether there would be
any adverse health effects due to this
potential increase in housing insecurity
alongside the health benefits of reduced
lead exposure, as well as whether there
are changes that EPA could make to the
rule that maintain landlord
participation in rental assistance
programs while achieving the objectives
of the statute.
EPA expects relatively limited
impacts on housing supply due to this
rulemaking for some housing types
subject to HUD’s LSHR. Subpart F of the
LSHR covers HUD-owned single family
housing properties for sale that are sold
under a HUD mortgage program. HUD
(i.e. the Federal Government) would be
responsible for all costs associated with
compliance to a stricter DLHS/DLCL
before selling the property. While
modest delays may occur in closing on
sale transactions for these properties, a
reduction in housing supply covered
under this subpart is unlikely. Subpart
G of the LSHR covers multi-family
housing where either HUD is the owner
of a mortgage or the owner of a property
receives mortgage insurance under a
program run by HUD. Housing covered
under this subpart of the LSHR has risk
assessment, interim control, and LBP
maintenance requirements, but private
landlords for these properties directly
seek out Federal funds, and even if
some of the federally-provided money is
spent complying with a stricter DLHS/
DLCL to comply with the LSHR,
participating grantees should typically
have a positive net return. To ensure all
potential impacts of the rule are
considered, EPA is requesting comment
on impacts to housing covered under
these other LSHR subparts as well as
additional factors that should be
considered as part of the EA.
2. Grantee Programs
On February 16, 2017, HUD issued
policy guidance to establish new and
more protective requirements for dustlead action levels for its Lead-Based
Paint Hazard Control (LBPHC) and Lead
Hazard Reduction Demonstration
(LHRD) grantees (the requirements also
apply to related HUD grants authorized
by Title X, section 1011 (42 U.S.C.
4852), under similar names, including
Lead Hazard Reduction grants and their
High Impact Neighborhoods and
Highest Lead-Based Paint Abatement
Needs grant categories) (Ref. 96). The
guidance adopted dust-lead action
levels of 10 mg/ft2 for floors and 100 mg/
ft2 for window sills, respectively, for
initiating lead hazard control activities
under these grant programs, and lead
clearance action levels of 10 mg/ft2 for
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floors, and 100 mg/ft2 for window sills
and troughs, respectively, for clearing
such lead hazard control activities. If
the proposed changes to the DLCL
discussed in Unit IV are finalized,
LBPHC and LHRD grantees would be
required by EPA’s regulations to clear
lead abatement projects to the updated
DLCL of 3 mg/ft2, 20 mg/ft2, and 25 mg/
ft2 for floors, window sills, and troughs
respectively. If EPA finalizes the
proposed changes to the DLHS and
DLCL, HUD has informed the Agency
that it would likely issue new policy
guidance on initiating lead hazard
control activities and on clearing lead
abatement projects under these grant
programs, and that it would consider
issuing new policy guidance on clearing
interim control projects under these
grant programs.
3. EPA–HUD Disclosure Rule
Under the Disclosure Rule (Ref. 7),
prospective sellers and lessors of target
housing, which is most pre-1978
housing, must provide purchasers and
renters with a federally approved lead
hazard information pamphlet and
disclose known LBP and/or LBP
hazards, and any available records,
reports, and additional information
pertaining to LBP and/or LBP hazards.
The information disclosure activities are
required before a purchaser or renter is
obligated under a contract to purchase
or lease target housing. The records or
reports pertaining to LBP and/or LBP
hazards include, among other things,
results from risk assessments, regardless
of whether the levels of dust-lead are
above or below the dust-lead hazard
standards, and from post-abatement
dust wipe testing, above or below the
clearance levels. Because disclosure is
required in target housing regardless of
whether dust levels are above or below
the DLHS or DLCL, finalizing the GTZ
approach for the dust-lead hazard
standards and lowering the dust-lead
clearance levels would not result in
more disclosures; rather it would result
in more disclosures indicating that a
lead-based paint hazard is present (since
the proposed GTZ is lower than the
current DLHS from 2019). EPA is also
proposing changes to the definition of
‘‘target housing’’ (40 CFR 745.223)
which expands the universe of housing
subject to the Disclosure Rule
requirements. This is reflective of a
change to the statutory definition (Pub.
L. 115–37, Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2017, Division K, Title II, section
237(c)). This proposed conforming
change to the regulatory definition of
target housing to include 0-bedroom
dwellings where a child resides may
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slightly increase the number of
disclosures issued.
4. HUD Guidelines
The HUD Guidelines for the
Evaluation and Control of Lead-Based
Paint Hazards in Housing (https://
www.hud.gov/program_offices/healthy_
homes/lbp/hudguidelines) were
developed in 1995 under section 1017
of Title X. The Guidelines provide
detailed, comprehensive, and technical
information on how to identify LBP
hazards in residential housing and
COFs, and how to control such hazards
safely and efficiently. The Guidelines
were revised in 2012 to incorporate new
information, technological advances,
and new Federal regulations, including
EPA’s LBP hazard standards. If EPA
finalizes changes to the DLHS and DLCL
as proposed, HUD has informed the
Agency that it would likely revise
Chapter 5 of the Guidelines on risk
assessment and reevaluation, Chapter 12
on abatement, and Chapter 15 on
clearance, and make conforming
changes elsewhere as needed (Ref. 97).
B. EPA LBP Programs
1. LBP Activities Rule
LBP activities include risk
assessments, inspections, and
abatements. If this rule is finalized as
proposed, it will have impacts to LBP
activities, including: the definition of
abatement, what is considered a DLHS,
the DLCL used to determine whether an
abatement can be considered complete,
and the definition of target housing.
As stated earlier in this preamble,
EPA’s risk assessment work practice
standards provide the basis for risk
assessors to determine whether LBP
hazards are present in target housing
and COFs. As part of a risk assessment,
dust samples are taken from floors and
window sills to determine if dust-lead
levels exceed the DLHS. The results of
the sampling, among other things, are
documented in a risk assessment report
which is required under the LBP
Activities Rule (Ref. 24). In addition to
the sampling results, the report must
describe the location and severity of any
dust-lead hazards found and describe
interim controls or abatement measures
needed to address the hazards.
Under this proposed rule, sampling
results reporting any level of lead
analyzed by an NLLAP-recognized
laboratory will indicate that a dust-lead
hazard is present on the surfaces tested.
EPA expects that the proposed DLHS
will result in more hazards being
identified in a portion of target housing
and COFs that undergo risk
assessments. This proposed rule does
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not change any other risk assessment
requirements; however, it does
recommend changes to the definition of
abatement, which is discussed in the
following paragraph.
Abatements are currently defined as
any measures or set of measures
designed to permanently eliminate leadbased paint hazards and include
activities such as the removal of paint
and dust, the permanent enclosure or
encapsulation of lead-based paint, the
replacement of painted surfaces or
fixtures, and all preparation, cleanup,
disposal, and post-abatement dust wipe
testing activities associated with such
measures. The proposed change to the
definition of abatement would shift the
recommendation for an abatement to
when the dust-lead loadings are at or
above the DLCL. Because the proposed
DLCL are lower than the 2019 DLHS,
more recommendations for abatement
are expected. However, not every
circumstance where dust-lead hazards
are identified will result in an EPA
recommendation for abatement, i.e.,
when dust-lead loadings are at or above
the DLHS, but below the DLCL.
Similarly, EPA recommends interim
controls only in circumstances when
dust-lead loadings are at or above the
DLCL, rather than the DLHS, for the
reasons explained above.
After LBP abatements are conducted,
EPA’s regulations require a certified
inspector or risk assessor to conduct
post-abatement dust wipe testing of the
abated area. If the dust wipe sample
results show dust-lead loadings equal to
or exceeding the applicable DLCL, ‘‘the
components represented by the failed
sample shall be recleaned and retested.’’
See 40 CFR part 745.227(e)(8)(vii). In
other words, the abatement is not
cleared until the dust wipe samples in
the work area are below the DLCL. If
this rule is finalized as proposed,
inspectors and risk assessors would
compare dust wipe sampling results for
floors, window sills and troughs to the
revised DLCL of 3 mg/ft2, 20 mg/ft2, and
25 mg/ft2, respectively. Dust wipe
sampling results at or above the DLCL
would indicate that the components
represented by the sample must be
recleaned and retested.
Lastly, as described in Unit IV.F.1,
this proposed rule conforms the
regulatory definition of target housing
with the statute to include any 0bedroom dwellings constructed prior to
1978 if a child less than 6 years of age,
resides or is expected to reside in such
housing, which could increase the
number of homes covered by this
regulation. In addition, EPA is
proposing regulatory changes to adjust
the age requirements from 6 years of age
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and under, to under age 6 for the
definition of target housing, COFs and
living area, which could reduce the
number of homes and COFs covered by
this regulation; see Units IV.F.1. and 2.
for more information.
2. Previous LBP-Related Activities
Since the DLHS do not compel
specific EPA actions, revisions to the
DLHS would not in and of themselves
compel any actions under the LBP
Activities Rule, retroactively or
otherwise, but actions would be
compelled under other laws or
regulations, including HUD’s LSHR and
possibly those of some state, local,
Tribal or territorial governments.
Inspection reports and risk assessments
describe conditions at a specific time. A
report that indicates no presence of LBP
and/or an LBP hazard should not imply
the absence of those conditions in
perpetuity. Additionally, the DLHS may
be incorporated into requirements
mandated by state, Federal, Tribal, and
other programs that may require actions
based on the revised DLHS. Those other
authorities may want to consider
guidance or other communications with
their regulated communities, so those
entities understand how to comply with
the various programs that reference the
DLHS.
The DLCL however, are used to
evaluate the effectiveness of a cleaning
following an abatement. After the dust
wipe samples show dust-lead loadings
below the DLCL, an abatement report is
prepared, copies of any reports required
under the LBP Activities Rule are
provided to the building owner (and to
potential lessees and purchasers under
the LBP Disclosure Rule by those
building owners or their agents), and all
required records are also retained by the
abatement firm or by the individuals
who developed each report. The
proposed DLCL of 3 mg/ft2 for floors,
20 mg/ft2 for window sills, and 25 mg/ft2
for troughs would not impose
retroactive requirements on regulated
entities that have previously performed
post-abatement clearance. These
updated DLCL would only apply to
post-abatement clearance sampling and
analysis conducted after the compliance
date for that portion of the final rule
(i.e., one year after publication of the
final rule).
In addition, this rulemaking does not
impose retroactive requirements to
regulated entities that have previously
complied with the Disclosure Rule. In
accordance with 40 CFR 745.107, a
seller or lessor generally must properly
disclose any available records or reports
pertaining to LBP and/or LBP hazards
before the purchaser or lessee is
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obligated under any contract to
purchase or lease target housing. The
seller or lessor is not required to
disclose reports or records that may be
created in the future, after the close of
that transaction. Additionally, any LBPfree certification that was issued by a
certified inspector, and was issued
before the effective date of this
rulemaking, is still valid going forward
and may continue to be used for
exemption to the Disclosure Rule.
3. Renovation, Repair, and Painting Rule
The proposed DLHS and DLCL would
not trigger new requirements under the
existing RRP Rule (40 CFR part 745,
subpart E). The existing RRP work
practices are required where LBP is
present (or assumed to be present) and
are not predicated by dust-lead loadings
exceeding the DLHS. The existing RRP
regulations do not require dust-lead
sampling prior to or at the conclusion of
a renovation and are not affected by a
change to the DLHS or DLCL. Therefore,
RRP regulations will not be directly
affected by the proposed revisions to the
DLHS or the DLCL.
The RRP Rule does require specific
post-renovation cleaning verification
under 40 CFR 745.85(b), but the rule
does not require dust wipe sampling
and analysis using the DLCL. However,
although optional under the RRP Rule,
dust wipe sampling for clearance using
the DLCL in accordance with the LBP
Activities Rule (40 CFR 745.227(e)(8))
may be required by contract or by
another Federal, state, territorial, Tribal,
or local law or regulation. At this time,
other than HUD’s Lead Safe Housing
Rule, for renovations of assisted target
housing, EPA is not aware of other laws
and regulations that require clearance
testing using EPA’s DLCL. EPA seeks
information on this point and welcomes
public comments.
4. Laboratory Quality System
Requirements
As discussed previously in Unit II.C.,
NLLAP is an EPA program under which
an accrediting organization assesses
whether a paint chip, dust, or soil
testing laboratory meets minimum
standards for laboratory analysis to
attain EPA recognition as an accredited
lead testing laboratory (https://
www.epa.gov/lead/national-leadlaboratory-accreditation-programnllap). Laboratories and other testing
firms recognized under NLLAP follow
the LQSR. This rulemaking does not
modify the minimum standards
outlined in the latest LQSR version 3.0.
However, changes to the action level
(i.e., the proposed DLCL) would impact
the quantitation limit that NLLAP-
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recognized laboratories would attain to
participate in the NLLAP, as that must
be equal to or less than 50% of the
lowest action level for dust wipe
samples per specific surface area (i.e.,
floors, window sills, window troughs)
(Ref. 29). If finalized as proposed, the
lowest action level for dust wipe
samples would be the DLCL of 3 mg/ft2
for floors, 20 mg/ft2 for window sills and
25 mg/ft2 for troughs. As a result, the
quantitation limit for NLLAP-recognized
labs would be equal to or less than
1.5 mg/ft2 for floors, 10 mg/ft2 for window
sills and 12.5 mg/ft2 for troughs.
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C. Authorized Programs
Pursuant to TSCA section 404 and
EPA’s regulations at 40 CFR part 745,
subpart Q, interested states, territories,
and federally recognized Tribes may
apply for and receive authorization to
administer their own LBP Activities
programs (as briefly described in Unit
II.C.), as long as their programs are at
least as protective of human health and
the environment as EPA’s program, and
provide adequate enforcement.
As part of the authorization process,
states, territories, and federally
recognized Tribes must demonstrate to
EPA that they meet the requirements of
the LBP Activities Rule. A state,
territory, or federally recognized Tribe
must demonstrate that it meets any new
requirements imposed by this
rulemaking upon finalization in its
application for authorization or, if
already authorized, in a report
submitted under 40 CFR 745.324(h) no
later than two years after the effective
date of the new requirements. If an
application for authorization has been
submitted but not yet approved, the
state, territory, or federally recognized
Tribe must demonstrate that it meets the
proposed requirements either by
amending its application, or in a report
it submits under 40 CFR 745.324(h) no
later than two years after the effective
date of the new requirements (40 CFR
745.325(e)).
VI. Proposed Effective and Compliance
Dates
EPA is proposing that the final rule
would become effective on the date that
is 60 days after publication in the
Federal Register. The Agency is
proposing an extended compliance date
of one year for the DLHS, the DLCL, and
the change to the abatement report
requirements (40 CFR 745.65 definition
‘‘dust-lead hazard’’; 40 CFR 227(h)(3)(i);
40 CFR 745.227(e)(8)(viii) and (10)(vii)).
EPA seeks comment on the appropriate
compliance date, including whether the
compliance date should be six months,
eighteen months, two years or another
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longer timeframe, as well as the
justification for the change.
EPA has considered the impacts of the
proposed DLHS and DLCL on NLLAPrecognized laboratories and is proposing
a subsequent compliance date of one
year after publication of the final rule in
Federal Register for certain provisions
under this rulemaking. The proposed
compliance date is intended to provide
a reasonable amount of time for NLLAPrecognized laboratories to take actions
to meet the lower LQSR quantitation
limit (50% of the lowest action level for
dust wipe samples) so they can continue
providing dust wipe testing services to
the regulated community and in
emergent situations by the compliance
date for the revised standards.
To obtain a better understanding of
laboratories’ capability and capacity for
dust wipe testing, EPA conducted
teleconferences with nine NLLAPrecognized laboratories (Refs. 56, 57, 58,
59, 60, 61, 62, 63 and 64). As explained
in Unit IV.B., based on the information
EPA received from this outreach, EPA
believes that laboratories with more up
to date ICP–AES instruments and
optimized methods should be able to
satisfy the LQSR dust wipe testing
procedures and the regulatory limit of
the primary DLCL option of 3 mg/ft2 for
floors, 20 mg/ft2 for window sills and
25 mg/ft2 for troughs (quantitation limit
of 1.5 mg/ft2 for floors, 10 mg/ft2 for
window sills and 12.5 mg/ft2 for
troughs). However, FAAS is the most
ubiquitous equipment used, and EPA is
estimating that accredited laboratories
may buy new equipment to meet the
lower LQSR limits. Based on the
outreach performed, laboratories may
need as little as six months but as much
as 18 months to finance and obtain new
equipment (such as ICP–AES), hire and
train staff, and potentially receive new
NLLAP accreditation (Refs. 56, 57 and
62). Two laboratories said it could take
as much as two years to adjust to
hypothetical regulatory changes such as
the ones being proposed (Refs. 58 and
59).
EPA therefore believes that the
proposed compliance date provides the
needed flexibility for laboratories while
ensuring that the revised DLHS and
DLCL become effective in a timely
manner. However, in consideration of
the feedback received from NLLAPrecognized laboratories during the
Agency’s outreach efforts, EPA is
requesting comment on the proposed
compliance date, whether six-months is
appropriate for the primary DLCL
option (i.e., 3/20/25 mg/ft2) or if 12
months, 18 months, or some other
amount of time is necessary, and why
the extra time is needed.
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Additionally, if the alternative DLCL
is finalized (i.e., 5/40/100 mg/ft2), based
on the laboratory outreach, EPA has
increased confidence that laboratories
can numerically quantify dust-lead
levels of 5 mg/wipe and attain a
quantitation limit of equal to or less
than 50% of that level (i.e., 2.5/20/
50 mg/ft2) with FAAS technology,
especially if the area tested is doubled
from one square foot to two. EPA is also
requesting comment on whether
NLLAP-recognized laboratories would
still need a six-month compliance date
if the Agency finalized the alternative
DLCL, or if 12-months, 18-months, or
some other amount of time would be
necessary to provide the flexibility that
laboratories need in that scenario and
why.
EPA is also proposing a six-month
compliance date for the DLHS along
with the DLCL and is interested in
revising both standards at the same time
to reduce any confusion and avoid any
concerns within the regulated
community that may be caused by
staggering the DLHS and the DLCL
compliance dates. EPA believes that
since the DLHS are non-numeric which
is different than they have been
historically, and as the program is
shifting to the DLCL becoming the
‘‘action level’’ for the LQSR, it is
important to allow ample time for the
regulated community to adapt to the
revised DLHS and DLCL. Additionally,
if the DLHS compliance date occurred
before the DLCL compliance date, EPA
is concerned it may trigger unnecessary
confusion for laboratories. EPA is
requesting comment on the
appropriateness of the DLHS and the
DLCL having the same compliance date.
VII. Request for Comments
A. Proposed Dust-Lead Hazard
Standards
EPA is seeking input on its proposal
to lower the DLHS to any reportable
level of dust-lead analyzed by an
NLLAP-recognized laboratory, and the
two alternative approaches to revising
the DLHS—the numeric standard
approach and the post-1977 background
approach. EPA is requesting feedback
not only on all the approaches
considered but also on all the DLHS
options themselves outlined in the
preamble and within the TSD. EPA is
requesting comment on the
appropriateness of EPA’s interpretation
of ‘‘any reportable level.’’ EPA is also
requesting comment on whether
laboratories believe there are potential
inconsistencies with the lowest
reportable level within any one
laboratory or across the industry, the
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extent of these inconsistencies, and if
laboratories foresee this causing any
concern for their clients. EPA is also
requesting comment on the effects of not
setting the DLHS at a fixed numeric
value, and whether any potential
inconsistencies with individual
laboratory reporting levels (when
interpreting dust-lead results in relation
to the hazard standards), would cause
challenges for the regulated community
or other stakeholders, e.g., building
owners or residents.
EPA is also seeking any information
or data for a level of dust-lead exposure
that would not result in adverse health
effects, and any information on how
much exposure in terms of BLL or
change in IQ decrement would be the
most scientifically appropriate to
compare to the modeled results or as a
rationale to set the DLHS, including the
appropriate threshold of probability of
exceedance for a child from the subpopulation of interest.
B. Proposed Dust-Lead Clearance Levels
and Alternatives
EPA is requesting comment on its
proposal to lower the DLCL to 3 mg/ft2
for floors, 20 mg/ft2 for window sills, and
25 mg/ft2 for troughs. EPA is requesting
comment on NLLAP-recognized
laboratories’ ability to test to these
clearance levels, especially given that, if
finalized as proposed, the quantitation
limit would be 50% of the DLCL (i.e.,
1.5/10/12.5 mg/ft2) for laboratories that
remain in NLLAP. EPA is also
requesting comment on whether LBP
professionals can clean/achieve
clearance at these levels. EPA is also
interested in feedback on whether the
primary or alternative DLCL option is
preferred and if they appropriately take
into account reliability, effectiveness,
and safety. Also, in some cases, window
sills and troughs may have a small
surface area, and therefore, EPA is
requesting comment on the ability to
collect a sufficient amount of dust-lead
to meet all laboratories’ quantitation
limits with their existing analytical
equipment or any other equipment that
might be necessary for the DLCL
primary and secondary options
presented. EPA is also requesting
comment on whether there is any data
or information on whether window sills
and window troughs should have the
same clearance values, and why or why
not. EPA is interested in both feedback
and justification for whether a higher
trough value such as 100 mg/ft2 or if
another DLCL combination (for floors,
window sills and window troughs)
besides the primary and alternative
options considered is appropriate given
the statutory criteria of reliability,
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effectiveness, and safety. Lastly, EPA
requests comment on whether or not the
proposed DLCL would discourage
initiation of elective dust-lead
remediation altogether.
Additionally, EPA is seeking input on
a phased approach of establishing the
alternative, higher DLCL first (5/40/
100 mg/ft2) and then in a specific amount
of time, e.g., three years, lowering it to
the primary DLCL value (3/20/25 mg/ft2).
This phased approach would give
laboratories with FAAS equipment time
to purchase the more sensitive
equipment needed to achieve the lower
levels, hire new employees, become
accredited with the new equipment, etc.
EPA requests feedback on whether this
is an approach that should be
considered and, if so, what would be an
appropriate amount of time between the
first and second lowering of the DLCL.
C. Other Amendments
EPA is seeking comment on whether
the changes to the definition of
abatement make it clear that abatements
should only be recommended when the
dust-lead loadings are at or above the
DLCL, rather than at or above the DLHS
as it has been historically. EPA is also
interested in receiving feedback on its
proposed changes to 40 CFR 745.227(h)
(to alleviate potential regulatory
confusion surrounding clearance); as
well as the additional language being
added to the abatement report
requirements, including whether EPA
should make similar modifications to
the risk assessment report requirements
to add specific language explaining that
abatements should only be
recommended when the dust-lead
loadings are at or above DLCL. EPA is
also requesting comment on the
effectiveness of the proposed language
in the abatement report requirements to
educate the public on remaining dustlead hazards, promote behavior change,
and point them to educational materials
such as Protect Your Family. In those
circumstances where the additional
language would be added to abatement
reports, EPA is also interested in
feedback on whether the Protect Your
Family materials themselves should be
included alongside the abatement report
and why Protect Your Family should be
included. Separately, due to feedback
received during the UMRA/federalism
consultation: EPA is also interested in
feedback on whether additional
communication materials would be
beneficial for public housing authorities
to have access to in order to provide to
residents living in homes with dust-lead
hazards. If so, EPA is requesting
information on what type of materials,
for what DLHS and DLCL options, and
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for which type of stakeholder/end user
(if there are any besides public housing
authorities) would be helpful.
EPA is seeking comment on all other
amendments including the conforming
change to the definition of target
housing to provide consistency with the
statutory change to the definition, as
well as the conforming edits to
children’s age (i.e., under six) to provide
consistency within the LBP regulations.
EPA is requesting comment on how long
after final rule publication the
compliance date should be. EPA is
proposing to establish a compliance
date for the DLHS and DLCL that would
occur on the date that is one year after
the publication date of the final rule in
the Federal Register. The Agency
invites public comment on the adequacy
of the proposed compliance date. EPA is
also seeking feedback from states,
territories, or Tribes that are authorized
by EPA to operate their own LBP
activities programs, on the impact of
this proposed rule and if it will have
substantial direct effects on the states,
territories, or Tribes, on the relationship
between the U.S. government and the
states, territories, or Tribes, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government or between the
Federal Government and Indian Tribes,
such as whether states, territories, or
Tribes may relinquish their programs
back to EPA.
D. Methods, Models and Data
EPA is also requesting comment on
the methods, models and data used in
the EA and the TSD that accompany this
proposal. In particular, EPA requests
comment on the EA’s use of the lifetime
IQ concentration-response function to
calculate IQ loss for ages for young
children, particularly at low exposure
levels (see section 6.4 in the EA).
Additionally, EPA solicits comment and
peer reviewed information on evidence
relevant to quantifying and monetizing
the incremental contribution of blood
lead concentrations to other health and/
or behavioral endpoints, including adult
cardiovascular mortality.
EPA is proposing to update its
regulatory definition of target housing to
conform to the 2017 revised statutory
language (see Unit IV.F.1.). EPA
estimates that there are 10,850 pre-1978
dwellings that would be affected
because they have zero bedrooms and a
child under the age of 6 resides in them.
EPA’s EA for this action (Ref. 14)
estimates that the total annual cost
(including complying with existing
lead-based paint program requirements
for disclosure for real estate
transactions, disclosure for renovation
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activities, abatement, and the
renovation, repair and painting rule) in
newly defined target housing would be
$0.2 million. EPA’s analysis also
estimates that the annual benefits of
these requirements would be $3.7
million using a 3% discount rate and
$0.8 million using a 7% discount rate.
EPA requests comment on its estimate
of the number of affected housing units,
and on the methods and assumptions it
used to estimate the costs and benefits
resulting from aligning its regulatory
definition with the revised statutory
definition.
EPA is proposing to require
submissions for applications,
application payments, and abatement
and training notifications notices for the
lead paint program be made
electronically, instead of through mail,
fax, or hand delivery (see Unit IV.F.3.).
Based on its EA for this action (Ref. 14),
EPA expects that this automation would
save firms switching to electronic
reporting an average of 5 hours per firm
in labor, and that across all affected
firms the change would result in total
annual savings of approximately
$20,000 using a 3% discount rate and
$10,000 using a 7% discount rate. EPA
solicits comment on the benefits and
costs of requiring such electronic
reporting.
Certain provisions of the HUD LSHR
require lead hazard reduction activities
when dust-lead levels exceed the DLHS.
Given the nature of the proposed GTZ
approach, in order to account for these
activities in its EA (Ref. 14), EPA
estimated what the reportable levels
would be under the GTZ options, based
on the analytical equipment that
laboratories would likely use under
these options. According to the LQSR,
NLLAP-recognized laboratories must be
able to demonstrate a quantitation limit
less than or equal to half of the action
level in order to maintain or obtain
NLLAP recognition. Since the action
level under the GTZ options would be
the DLCL, the floor and window sill
reporting levels estimated for analytical
purposes for the GTZ options vary
depending on the DLCL levels that the
GTZ is paired with. Because some types
of laboratory equipment have
quantitation levels well below half of
the DLCL options, EPA estimated the
reporting limits for the mix of analytical
instruments likely to be used under the
GTZ options in order for the
quantitation limits to be at least half of
the DLCL. EPA solicits data on the
distribution of quantitation limits for
different types of analytical instruments
in order to allow the Agency to refine
its estimates of the reportable levels
under the GTZ/DLCL options that the
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Agency is considering. EPA also
requests data on the false positive and
false negative rates for testing lead in
dust using different types of analytical
equipment (e.g., FAAS, ICP–AES, and
ICP–MS).
EPA requests data on costs for dustlead testing that the Agency can use to
refine its EA for the final rule. EPA also
solicits information and comments
related to any other data, assumptions,
or methodology that EPA used to
estimate the costs of the proposed rule,
or on any costs that EPA did not
quantify. EPA also requests comment on
potential changes to the proposed rule
that would reduce impacts on small
entities while being consistent with
statutory requirements and still
achieving the rule’s objectives.
Also, due to feedback from the
UMRA/federalism consultation EPA is
interested in any comments that can
provide information on COFs,
particularly any information that could
help inform an EA, such as data on the
number and cost of abatements
partnered with recent dust-lead loading
results, how many children under six
were present in the COF at the time, etc.
Based on the information available to it
at the time of the proposal, EPA was
unable to quantify benefits to children
visiting COFs that would be affected by
this rule. Since the data EPA used were
only associated with the abatements in
states, territories and tribes where the
Agency administers the lead-based paint
activities program, EPA specifically
requests data on COF abatements in the
jurisdictions that are authorized to
administer their own lead abatement
programs. EPA also requests
information on the typical practices of
environmental investigations at childoccupied facilities, and whether or how
these practices may differ by type of
COF (e.g., public school, private school,
daycare center). EPA is interested in
whether state/local requirements ever
require routine dust wipe testing at
COFs in the absence of a child with a
blood lead level above a state or Federal
action level, or how often COFs
proactively have their dust-lead levels
voluntarily tested. EPA would also
welcome information on whether, in
real-world practice, COFs always
undergo dust wipe testing when a child
who frequents the facility has a BLL
above state or Federal action levels, or
whether COFs are only tested if an
investigation of the affected child’s
home reports no LBP, and if there are
other circumstances that might lead to
dust wipe testing at a COF.
Based on the information available to
it at the time of the proposal, EPA was
unable to quantify benefits to children
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visiting COFs that would be affected by
this rule. EPA requests information that
would allow it to estimate such benefits
for the final rule. EPA requests comment
on data sources for parameterizing the
R–SHEDS–IEUBK model used in the
TSD and EA to estimate changes in
blood lead levels for COFs (given that
children’s activity and exposure
patterns may differ between housing
and COFs, and the model is not
calibrated or validated for predicting
blood lead level changes in COFs), as
well as how to avoid double-counting
benefits between activities in target
housing and COFs. EPA requests
comment on sources of data including:
children’s activity patterns while
attending COFs, physical parameters of
COFs including area covered by
different flooring material types,
number and type of windows, and
information on frequency of
maintenance and cleaning. EPA also
requests information on the range of
baseline blood lead levels or lead
exposures across the population of
children that visit a COF where an
abatement occurs.
EPA also requests information and
data on the potential economic and
health impacts to current residents and
landlords of housing that is subsidized
by tenant-based rental or project
assistance programs run by HUD or
USDA. EPA also requests comment on
whether there are other types of assisted
housing programs where there is a
significant risk of landlords
withdrawing from the program due to
this rulemaking; specific factors that
determine whether landlords would
stop participating in Federal assistance
programs; and estimates of the cost
elasticity of landlord participation in
such programs. EPA also welcomes
comment and/or data that provides
evidence for direct or indirect health
impacts associated with relatively
higher potential lead exposures in
regard to housing insecurity attributable
to housing quality standards (both
generally and specific to lead-related
standards).
EPA is requesting comment on
research, studies, modeling, data, and
any other information on the effects of
the availability of target housing units
for low-income families, including
assisted target housing units, due to
housing quality standards. Furthermore,
EPA requests comment on potential
impacts to the non-federally-assisted
rental housing market, particularly
naturally-occurring low-income
housing, due to housing quality
standards, including quantitative
evidence of housing instability or
differential housing outcomes or lead
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exposures for families with young
children that have resulted from local,
state, or Federal lead paint regulations.
E. Other Requests for Comment
Finally, EPA is requesting comment
on the impacts on NLLAP-recognized
dust-lead laboratories, through
considerations such as: added
turnaround time for testing analysis
(affecting re-occupancy, including
temporary housing costs adding to
overall project costs); added laboratory
costs and the possibility of increasing
project costs; and possible loss to
NLLAP-recognized laboratories that
cannot or do not want to make the
investment and/or reduce their
throughput at the proposed lower DLHS
and DLCL. EPA is also interested in
information about possible solutions for
any unintended consequences of the
lower DLHS and DLCL (which are
consistent with the 2021 Court Opinion
that instructed EPA to consider only
health factors when setting the DLHS
and affirmed that EPA could consider
other factors i.e., reliability,
effectiveness, and safety, when setting
the DLCL).
In addition to the areas which EPA
has specifically requested comment,
EPA requests comment on all other
aspects of this proposed rule.
VIII. References
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The following is a list of the
documents that are specifically
referenced in this document. The docket
includes these documents and other
information considered by EPA,
including documents that are referenced
within the documents that are included
in the docket, even if the referenced
document is not physically located in
the docket. For assistance in locating
these other documents, please consult
the technical person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
1. Public Law 102–550, Title X—Housing and
Community Development Act, enacted
October 28, 1992 (also known as the
Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard
Reduction Act of 1992 or ‘‘Title X’’) (42
U.S.C. 4822 and 4851 et seq.). https://
www.epa.gov/lead/residential-lead-basedpaint-hazard-reduction-act-1992-title-x.
2. EPA. Review of the Dust-Lead Hazard
Standards and the Definition of Lead-Based
Paint; Final Rule. RIN 2070–AJ82. Federal
Register (84 FR 32632, July 9, 2019) (FRL–
9995–49). https://www.govinfo.gov/
content/pkg/FR-2019-07-09/pdf/201914024.pdf.
3. EPA. Review of Dust-Lead Post Abatement
Clearance Levels; Final Rule. RIN 2070–
AK50. Federal Register (86 FR 983,
January 7, 2021) (FRL–10018–61). https://
www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2021-0107/pdf/2020-28565.pdf.
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4. EPA. Integrated Science Assessment (ISA)
for Lead (Final Report, June 2013). U.S.
EPA, Washington, DC, EPA/600/R–10/
075F, 2013. https://www.epa.gov/isa/
integrated-science-assessment-isa-lead.
5. HHS, National Toxicology Program. NTP
Monograph on Health Effects of Low-Level
Lead. National Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park,
NC. NIH Pub. No. 12–5996. ISSN 2330–
1279. June 13, 2012. https://ntp.niehs.
nih.gov/ntp/ohat/lead/final/
monographhealtheffectslowlevellead_
newissn_508.pdf.
6. EPA. Lead; Identification of Dangerous
Levels of Lead; Final Rule. RIN 2070–
AC63. Federal Register (66 FR 1206,
January 5, 2001) (FRL–6763–5). https://
www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2001-0105/pdf/01-84.pdf.
7. HUD, EPA. Lead; Requirements for
Disclosure of Known Lead-Based Paint
and/or Lead-Based Paint Hazards in
Housing; Final Rule. RIN 2070–AC75.
Federal Register (61 FR 9064, March 6,
1996) (FRL–5347–9). https://
www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-1996-0306/pdf/96-5243.pdf.
8. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry, HHS. Toxicological Profile for
Lead. August 2020. https://www.atsdr.
cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp13.pdf.
9. President’s Task Force on Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks to Children.
Federal Action Plan to Reduce Childhood
Lead Exposures and Associated Health
Impacts. December 2018. https://
www.epa.gov/lead/federal-action-planreduce-childhood-lead-exposure.
10. EPA. EPA Strategy to Reduce Exposures
and Disparities in U.S. Communities.
October 27, 2022. https://www.epa.gov/
system/files/documents/2022-11/
Lead%20Strategy_1.pdf.
11. U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit. A Community Voice v. EPA, No.
19–71930, Opinion. May 14, 2021. https://
cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/
2021/05/14/19-71930.pdf.
12. Executive Order 13990. Protecting Public
Health and the Environment and Restoring
Science to Tackle the Climate Crisis.
Federal Register (86 FR 7037, January 25,
2021). https://www.govinfo.gov/content/
pkg/FR-2021-01-25/pdf/2021-01765.pdf.
13. The White House. Fact Sheet: List of
Agency Actions for Review. January 20,
2021. https://www.whitehouse.gov/
briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/
01/20/fact-sheet-list-of-agency-actions-forreview/.
14. EPA. Economic Analysis of the Proposed
Reconsideration of the Dust-Lead Hazard
Standards and Post-Abatement Clearance
Levels. June 2023.
15. EPA. America’s Children and the
Environment (ACE). ‘‘Biomonitoring—
Lead.’’ June 29, 2022.https://www.epa.gov/
americaschildrenenvironment/
biomonitoring-lead.
16. EPA. Technical Support Document for
the Reconsideration of the Dust-Lead
Hazard Standards and Dust-Lead PostAbatement Clearance Levels. June 2023.
17. EPA. Reconsideration of the Dust-Lead
Hazard Standards and Dust-Lead Post-
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Abatement Clearance Levels. Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act Statement. June
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18. Zartarian, V., Xue, J., Tornero-Velez, R.,
& Brown, J. Children’s Lead Exposure: A
Multimedia Modeling Analysis to Guide
Public Health Decision-Making.
Environmental Health Perspectives, 125(9),
097009–097009. September 12, 2017.
https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP1605.
19. EPA. Technical Support Document for
Residential Dust-lead Clearance Levels
Rulemaking Estimation of Blood Lead
Levels and Effects from Exposures to Dustlead. December 2020. https://
www.regulations.gov/document/EPA-HQOPPT-2020-0063-0395.
20. EPA. Air Quality Criteria for Lead; Final
Report. EPA/600/R–05/144aF-bF. October
2006. https://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/risk/
recordisplay.cfm?deid=158823.
21. HHS, National Toxicology Program. Lead
and Lead Compounds. 15th Report on
Carcinogens. National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences, Research
Triangle Park, NC. 15th edition. December
12, 2021. https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/ntp/roc/
content/profiles//lead.pdf.
22. President’s Task Force on Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks to Children.
Key Federal Programs to Reduce Childhood
Lead Exposures and Eliminate Associated
Health Impacts. November 2016. https://
ptfcehs.niehs.nih.gov/features/assets/files/
key_federal_programs_to_reduce_
childhood_lead_exposures_and_eliminate_
associated_health_impactspresidents_
508.pdf.
23. TSCA Title IV, Lead Exposure Reduction.
15 U.S.C. 2681 et seq. https://
www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/USCODE2020-title15/pdf/USCODE-2020-title15chap53-subchapIV.pdf.
24. EPA. Lead; Requirements for Lead-Based
Paint Activities in Target Housing and
Child-Occupied Facilities; Final Rule. RIN
2070–AC64. Federal Register (61 FR
45778, August 29, 1996) (FRL–5389–9).
https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR1996-08-29/pdf/96-21954.pdf.
25. EPA. Lead; Renovation, Repair, and
Painting Program; Final Rule. RIN 2070–
AC83. Federal Register (73 FR 21692,
April 22, 2008) (FRL–8355–7). https://
www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2008-0422/pdf/E8-8141.pdf.
26. EPA. Lead; Amendment to the Opt-Out
and Recordkeeping Provisions in the
Renovation, Repair, and Painting Program.
RIN 2070–AJ55. Federal Register (75 FR
24802, May 6, 2010) (FRL–8823–7). https://
www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2010-0506/pdf/2010-10100.pdf.
27. EPA. Lead; Clearance and Clearance
Testing Requirements for the Renovation,
Repair, and Painting Program. RIN 2070–
AJ57. Federal Register (76 FR 47917,
October 4, 2011) (FRL–8823–5). https://
www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2011-0805/pdf/2011-19417.pdf.
28. HUD. Requirements for Notification,
Evaluation and Reduction of Lead-Based
Paint Hazards in Federally Owned
Residential Property and Housing
Receiving Federal Assistance. RIN 2501–
AB57. Federal Register (64 FR 50140,
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September 15, 1999). https://
www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-1999-0915/pdf/99-23016.pdf.
29. EPA. Laboratory Quality System
Requirements (LQSR) Revision 3.0.
November 5, 2007. https://www.epa.gov/
sites/default/files/documents/lqsr3.pdf.
30. Petition for Review, A Cmty. Voice v. U.S.
Env’t Prot. Agency, 997 F.3d 983 (9th Cir.
2021) (No. 19–71930).
31. EPA. Testimony of Michal Ilana
Freedhoff before the Senate Committee on
Environment and Public Works. June 22,
2022. https://www.epw.senate.gov/public/_
cache/files/3/1/31e721e6-dc47-4eb3-a2415dcb0d5c9221/1424B42DD6F7DF8A
64EE202F42E44247. 06-22-2022-freedhofftestimony.pdf.
32. EPA. Testimony of Michael S. Regan
before the Senate Committee on
Environment and Public Works. March 22,
2023. https://www.epw.senate.gov/public/_
cache/files/5/0/504a2c31-4291-496c-b37e5322d5d5c7a8/3B200C21C840470
316D7F6842BFDD9EE. 03-22-2023-regantestimony.pdf.
33. Unified Agenda of Regulatory and
Deregulatory Actions. EPA Long-Term
Actions. Spring 2023. https://
www.reginfo.gov/public/do/
eAgendaMain?operation=OPERATION_
GET_AGENCY_RULE_LIST¤tPubId
=202304&showStage=
longterm&agencyCd=2000.
34. EPA, Office of Pollution Prevention and
Toxics. Technical Support Document for
Residential Dust-lead Hazard Standards
Rulemaking Approach taken to Estimate
Blood Lead Levels and Effects from
Exposures to Dust-lead. June 2019.
35. SAB. SAB review of EPA’s Approach for
Developing Lead Dust Hazard Standards
for Residences (November 2010 Draft) and
Approach for Developing Lead Dust
Hazard Standards for Public and
Commercial Buildings (November 2010
Draft). EPA–SAB–11–008. July 7, 2011.
https://sab.epa.gov/ords/sab/f?p=114:0:
16965043720403: APPLICATION_
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ID:964.
36. Versar, Inc. External Peer Review of EPA’s
Approach for Estimating Exposures and
Incremental Health Effects from Lead due
to Renovation, Repair, and Painting
Activities in Public and Commercial
Buildings. February 27, 2015. https://
www.regulations.gov/document/EPA-HQOPPT-2010-0173-0259.
37. Eastern Research Group, Inc. Summary
Report of the Peer Review Meeting for
EPA’s Draft Report, Proposed Modeling
Approaches for a Health-Based Benchmark
for Lead in Drinking Water. October 25,
2017. https://www.regulations.gov/
document/EPA-HQ-OW-2017-0300-0091.
38. Bevington, Charles, et al. ‘‘Relationship
between Residential Dust-Lead Loading
and Dust-Lead Concentration Across
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Building and Environment 188 (2021):
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2020.107359.
39. Frank, J., Poulakosc, A., Tornero-Velez,
R., & Xueb, J. Systematic Review and Metaanalyses of Lead (Pb) Concentrations in
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Food, and Air) Reported in the United
States from 1996 to 2016. Science of The
Total Environment, Volume 694, 133489.
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49. Children’s Health Protection Advisory
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53. EPA. Office of Pollution Prevention and
Toxics. Review of the Dust-lead Hazard
Standards and the Definition of LeadBased Paint. Response to Public
Comments. June 2019. https://
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54. EPA. Office of Pollution Prevention and
Toxics. Review of the Dust-Lead PostAbatement Clearance Levels. Response to
Public Comments. December 2020. https://
www.regulations.gov/document/EPA-HQOPPT-2020-0063-0397.
55. HUD, Office of Lead Hazard Control and
Healthy Homes. Lead Hazard Control
Clearance Survey. Final Report. October
2015. https://www.hud.gov/sites/
documents/clearancesurvey_24oct15.pdf.
56. EPA. Summary of discussion between
EPA and Stat Analysis Corporation. June
13, 2022.
57. EPA. Summary of discussion between
EPA and HIH Laboratory, Inc. June 14,
2022.
58. EPA. Summary of discussion between
EPA and Batta Environmental. June 14,
2022.
59. EPA. Summary of discussion between
EPA and EMSL Analytical, Inc. June 15,
2022.
60. EPA. Summary of discussion between
EPA and Environmental Hazard Services,
LLC. June 21, 2022.
61. EPA. Summary of discussion between
EPA and Accurate Analytical Testing, LLC.
June 22, 2022.
62. EPA. Summary of discussion between
EPA and Schneider Laboratories, Inc. June
30, 2022.
63. EPA. Summary of discussion between
EPA and Marion County Health
Department. July 11, 2022.
64. EPA. Summary of discussion between
EPA and GPI. July 12, 2022.
65. NYC. New Lead in Dust Standards for
New York City. June 2019. https://
www1.nyc.gov/assets/doh/downloads/pdf/
lead/lead-in-dust-standards.pdf.
66. NYC. New Lead in Dust Standards for
New York City. June 2021. https://
www1.nyc.gov/assets/doh/downloads/pdf/
lead/lead-in-dust.pdf.
67. EPA. Summary of discussion between
EPA and New York City Department of
Health and Mental Hygiene; Healthy
Homes Program. March 21, 2022.
68. David E Jacobs, et al. The Prevalence of
Lead-based Paint Hazards in U.S. Housing.
October 1, 2002. https://doi.org/10.1289/
ehp.021100599.
69. HUD. Office of Lead Hazard Control and
Healthy Homes. American Healthy Homes
Survey II Lead Findings. Final Report.
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October 29, 2021. https://www.hud.gov/
sites/dfiles/HH/documents/AHHS_II_
Lead_Findings_Report_Final_29oct21.pdf.
70. Ahrens, Katherine A., Barbara A. Haley,
Lauren M. Rossen, Patricia C. Lloyd, and
Yutaka Aoki. 2016. ‘‘Housing Assistance
and Blood Lead Levels: Children in the
United States, 2005–2012.’’ American
Journal of Public Health. 106,11: 2049–
2056. https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2016.
303432.
71. Bess, K.D., A.L. Miller, and R.
Mehdipanah. 2022. The Effects of Housing
Insecurity on Children’s Health: A Scoping
Review. Health Promotion International,
daac006. Advance online publication.
https://doi.org/10.1093/heapro/daac006.
72. Lee, C.Y., Zhao, X., Reesor-Oyer, L.,
Cepni, A.B., & Hernandez, D.C. (2021).
Bidirectional Relationship Between Food
Insecurity and Housing Instability. Journal
of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics,
121(1), 84–91. https://doi.org/10.1016/
j.jand.2020.08.081.
73. Baker, Emma, Laurence Lester, Kate
Mason, and Rebecca Bentley. 2020. Mental
Health and Prolonged Exposure to
Unaffordable Housing: A Longitudinal
Analysis. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric
Epidemiology. 55, 6: 715–721. https://
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32140739/.
74. Chung, Roger Yat-Nork et al. 2020.
Housing Affordability Effects on Physical
and Mental Health: Household Survey in a
Population with the World’s Greatest
Housing Affordability Stress. Journal of
Epidemiology and Community Health. 74,
2: 164–172. https://pubmed.ncbi.
nlm.nih.gov/31690588/.
75. Jenkins Morales, M., & Robert, S.A. 2022.
Housing Cost Burden and Health Decline
Among Low- and Moderate-Income Older
Renters. The Journals of Gerontology.
Series B, Psychological Sciences and Social
Sciences, 77(4), 815–826. https://doi.org/
10.1093/geronb/gbab184.
76. Jelleyman, T., and N. Spencer. 2008.
Residential Mobility in Childhood and
Health Outcomes: A Systematic Review.
Journal of Epidemiology and Community
Health. 62: 584–592. https://doi.org/
10.1136/jech.2007.060103.
77. Burgard, Sarah A., Kristin S. Seefeldt and
Sarah Zelner. 2012. Housing Instability and
Health: Findings from the Michigan
Recession and Recovery Study. Social
Science & Medicine. 75, 12: 2215. https://
doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.08.020.
78. Desmond, Matthew, and Rachel Tolbert
Kimbro. 2020. Eviction’s Fallout: Housing,
Hardship, and Health. Social Forces. 94, 1:
295–324. https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/
sov044.
79. DiTosto, Julia D., et al. 2021. Housing
Instability and Adverse Perinatal
Outcomes: A Systematic Review. American
Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology MFM.
3, 6: 100477. https://doi.org/10.1016/
j.ajogmf.2021.100477.
80. Collinson, Robert, John Eric Humphries,
Nicholas S. Mader, Davin K. Reed, Daniel
I. Tannenbaum, and Winnie van Dijk.
2022. Eviction and Poverty in American
Cities. NBER Working Paper No. 30382.
https://www.nber.org/papers/w30382.
81. Cutts, Diana Becker, et al. 2011. US
Housing Insecurity and the Health of Very
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Young Children. American Journal of
Public Health. 101, 8: 1508–1514. https://
doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2011.300139.
82. Solari, Claudia D. and Robert D Mare.
2012. ‘‘Housing Crowding Effects on
Children’s Wellbeing.’’ Social Science
Research. 41, 2: 464–476. https://
doi:10.1016/j.ssresearch.2011.09.012.
83. Ahmad, Khansa, Sebhat Erqou, Nishant
Shah, Umair Nazir, Alan R. Morrison,
Gaurav Choudhary, Wen-Chih. 2020.
‘‘Association of Poor Housing Conditions
with COVID–19 Incidence and Mortality
Across US Counties.’’ PLoS ONE. 15, 11:
e0241327. https://doi.org/10.1371/
journal.pone.0241327.
84. Marmot Review Team. 2011. The Health
Impacts of Cold Homes and Fuel Poverty.
London: Friends of the Earth and the
Marmot Review Team. https://
www.instituteofhealthequity.org/resourcesreports/the-health-impacts-of-cold-homesand-fuel-poverty.
85. ASHRAE Multidisciplinary Task Group.
2020. Damp Buildings, Human Health, and
HVAC Design. Atlanta, GA: ASHRAE.
https://www.techstreet.com/ashrae/
standards/damp-buildings-human-healthand-hvac-design?product_id=2110372.
86. HUD. Data compiled from HUD’s Picture
of Subsidized Households dataset,
available at https://www.huduser.gov/
portal/datasets/assthsg.html.
87. Fenelon, Andrew, Natalie Slopen, Michel
Boudreaux, and Sandra J. Newman. 2018.
‘‘The Impact of Housing Assistance on the
Mental Health of Children in the United
States.’’ Journal of Health and Social
Behavior. 1–17. https://doi.10.1177/
0022146518792286.
88. Fenelon, Andrew, et al. 2017. Housing
Assistance Programs and Adult Health in
the United States. American Journal of
Public Health. 107, 4: 571–578. https://
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28207335/.
89. Boudreaux, Michel, Andrew Fenelon,
Natalie Slopen, and Sandra J. Newman.
2020. ‘‘Association of Childhood Asthma
with Federal Rental Assistance.’’ JAMA
Pediatrics. 174, 6: 592–598. https://doi.org/
10.1001/jamapediatrics.2019.6242.
90. Slopen, Natalie, Andrew Fenelon, Sandra
Newman, and Michel Boudreaux. 2018.
‘‘Housing Assistance and Child Health: A
Systematic Review.’’ Pediatrics. 141, 6:
e20172742. https://doi.org/10.1542/
peds.2017-2742.
91. Alvarez, Thyria and Barry L. Steffen.
2021. Worst Case Housing Needs: 2021
Report to Congress. Washington, DC: U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, Office of Policy
Development and Research. https://
www.huduser.gov/portal/publications/
Worst-Case-Housing-Needs-2021.html.
92. Greenlee, Andrew J. 2014. More Than
Meets the Market? Landlord Agency in the
Illinois Housing Choice Voucher Program.
Housing Policy Debate, 24:3, 500–524, DOI:
10.1080/10511482.2014.913649. https://
doi.org/10.1080/10511482.2014.913649.
93. Varady, David P., Joseph Jaroscak, and
Reinout Kleinhans. 2017. How to Attract
More Landlords to the Housing Choice
Voucher Program: A Case study of
Landlord Outreach Efforts. Urban Research
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& Practice, 10:2, 143–155, DOI: 10.1080/
17535069.2016.1175741. https://doi.org/
10.1080/17535069.2016.1175741.
94. Garboden, Philip M.E., Eva Rosen,
Stefanie DeLuca, and Kathryn Edin. 2018.
Taking Stock: What Drives Landlord
Participation in the Housing Choice
Voucher Program. Housing Policy Debate.
28:6, 979–1003. https://doi.org/10.1080/
10511482.2018.1502202.
95. Greif, Meredith. 2018. Regulating
Landlords: Unintended Consequences for
Poor Tenants. City & Community, 17:3,
658–674. https://doi.org/10.1111/
cico.12321.
96. HUD. Revised Dust-Lead Action Levels for
Risk Assessment and Clearance; Clearance
of Porch Floors. Policy Guidance 2017–01
Rev 1. February 16, 2017. https://
www.hud.gov/sites/documents/
LEADDUSTLEVELS_REV1.pdf.
97. HUD. Guidelines for the Evaluation and
Control of Lead-Based Paint Hazards in
Housing. Second Edition, July 2012.
https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/
healthy_homes/lbp/hudguidelines.
98. EPA. Supporting Statement for an
Information Collection Request (ICR) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA);
Reconsideration of the Dust-Lead Hazard
Standards and Dust-Lead Post-Abatement
Clearance Levels; Proposed Rule (RIN
2070–AK91), (EPA ICR No. 2760.01). June
30, 2023.
99. Council of Large Public Housing
Authorities. Letter to EPA RE: Dust-Lead
Hazard Standards (DLHS) and Dust-Lead
Clearance Levels (DLCL) Reconsideration
Rulemaking. January 10, 2023.
100. EPA. EJ 2020 Action Agenda: The U.S.
EPA’s Environmental Justice Strategic Plan
for 2016–2020. October 2016. https://
www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2016-05/
documents/052216_ej_2020_strategic_
plan_final_0.pdf.
IX. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Additional information about these
statutes and Executive Orders can be
found at https://www.epa.gov/lawsregulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Orders 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and 14094:
Modernizing Regulatory Review
This action is a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ as defined under section 3(f)(1)
of Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993), as amended by
Executive Order 14094 (88 FR 21879,
April 11, 2023). Accordingly, EPA
submitted this action to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review under Executive Order 12866.
Documentation of any changes made in
response to the Executive Order 12866
review is available in the docket. The
Agency prepared an analysis of the
potential costs and benefits associated
with this action, this analysis (Ref. 14),
is available in the docket.
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B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
The information collection activities
in this proposed rule have been
submitted for review and approval to
OMB under the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et
seq. The Information Collection Request
(ICR) document that the EPA prepared
has been assigned EPA ICR No. 2760.01
(Ref. 98). You can find a copy of the ICR
in the docket for this rule, and it is
briefly summarized here.
The ICR addresses the incremental
changes to the existing reporting,
notification, and recordkeeping
programs that are currently approved
under OMB Control Nos. 2070–0151
and 2070–0195. As approved under
OMB Control No. 2070–0151 and
pursuant to 24 CFR part 35, subpart A,
and 40 CFR 745, subpart F, sellers and
lessors of target housing must already
provide purchasers or lessees any
available records or reports ‘‘pertaining
to’’ LBP and/or LBP hazards available to
the seller or lessor. Accordingly, a seller
or lessor must disclose any reports
showing dust-lead levels, regardless of
the value. A lower hazard standard may
prompt a different response on the
already required lead disclosure form,
i.e., that a lead-based paint hazard is
present rather than not, which would
occur when a dust-lead level is below
the current standard but at or above a
lower final standard. However, for
existing target housing, this action
would not result in additional
disclosures because the lead disclosure
form is required regardless of whether
dust-lead is present at or below the
hazard standard. Nevertheless, due to
the change in target housing definition,
EPA estimates an additional 967
disclosure events will occur annually,
which will affect 3,040 respondents at
an average burden and cost of 0.08
hours and $4.37 per respondent,
resulting in a total annual burden of 337
hours at a total annual cost of $13,272.
Next, as approved under OMB Control
No. 2070–0195, the ICR addresses the
information collection activities
associated with the reporting and
recordkeeping requirements for
individuals, firms and state and local
government entities conducting LBP
activities or renovations of target
housing and COFs; training providers;
and states/territories/Tribes/Alaska
Native villages. These information
collection activities include the
following:
• LBP activity firm pre-abatement
reports and occupant protection plans,
abatement activity notifications, postabatement reports and recordkeeping;
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• Applications for certification of
individuals performing LBP activities,
and related recordkeeping;
• LBP activities training provider
accreditation applications, training
notifications, and recordkeeping;
• LBP activity firm certification
applications and recordkeeping;
• Distribution of pre-renovation lead
hazard information pamphlet and postrenovation checklists documenting leadsafe work practices;
• RRP and LBP professionals
classroom training time related to
recordkeeping compliance;
• RRP training provider accreditation
applications, training notifications, and
recordkeeping;
• Private RRP firm and Governmentemployed RRP professional certification
applications and recordkeeping; and
• Submission of related fees.
Incremental abatement notifications
would be required when an abatement
occurs due to the revised DLHS/DLCL
and does not occur in the baseline; EPA
estimates that 1,618 to 2,404 such
notifications will incur average annual
paperwork-associated costs of $149.
Additional LBP workers may need to be
hired and subsequently trained and
certified to accommodate the additional
dust-lead remediation activities
triggered by the revised DLHS/DLCL.
EPA estimates that 2,237 to 3,971
respondents will incur average annual
paperwork-associated costs of $432.
Because the EA finds that the revised
DLHS/DLCL would increase the number
of new lead hazard reduction events by
no more than 5 per firm per year, EPA
assumes that existing LBP activity firms
would cover this new work and new
entrants are unlikely to emerge. As
such, EPA does not estimate any
paperwork costs associated with LBP
activity firm certification. Similarly, the
EA finds that there would be fewer than
1 incremental event per affected RRP
firm and therefore EPA assumes no new
RRP firms or employees will enter the
market in response to the DLHS/DLCL
revision. As such, EPA does not
estimate any paperwork costs associated
with RRP firm certification or RRP
training.
The revisions to the definition of
target housing will result in paperwork
costs in two dimensions. First,
abatement firms operating in newly
defined target housing are expected to
incur reporting and recordkeeping costs
for those additional events. EPA
estimates that 25 respondents will incur
an average annual cost of $89.21 for
these activities. Second, renovation
service firms performing renovation
activities in newly defined target
housing are required to perform
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disclosure activities. This will result in
recurring disclosure event,
recordkeeping, and materials costs. EPA
estimates that 1,977 respondents will
incur an average annual cost of $14.73.
In addition, EPA currently receives
approximately 90 percent of required
notifications as well as applications for
accreditation, certification, and recertification from training providers,
firms, and lead abatement individuals
through EPA’s Central Data Exchange
(CDX). The paperwork activities, related
burden and costs with CDX user
registration for those who elect to
exercise the electronic submission
option established under the Agency’s
Cross-media Electronic Reporting Rule
(CROMERR) (40 CFR 3) are described in
an ICR approved under OMB Control
No. 2025–0003. The amended
information collection activities
contained in this proposed rule are
designed to assist the Agency in meeting
its responsibility under TSCA to
receive, process, and review reports,
data, and other information.
Accordingly, this proposed rule would
require regulated parties to submit
notifications and applications through
CDX.
The ICR prepared for this proposed
rule addresses the incremental burden
changes related to the expected increase
in the number of responses to the
activities considered in the other
existing ICRs, as well as the changing
response obligation for the use of CDX
from voluntary to mandatory.
Respondents/affected entities:
Persons engaged in selling or leasing
certain residential dwellings built before
1978; persons who are engaged in leadbased paint activities and/or perform
renovations of target housing or childoccupied facilities for compensation,
dust sampling, or dust testing; persons
who perform lead-based paint
inspections, lead hazard screens, risk
assessments or abatements in target
housing or child-occupied facilities;
persons who provide training or operate
a training program for individuals who
perform any of these activities; state,
territorial or Tribal agencies that
administer lead-based paint activities
and/or renovation programs. See also
Unit I.A.
Respondent’s obligation to respond:
Mandatory (40 CFR part 745).
Estimated number of respondents:
8,897 to 11,417 (per year).
Frequency of response: On occasion.
Total estimated burden: 23,329 to
38,985 hours (per year). Burden is
defined at 5 CFR 1320.3(b).
Total estimated cost: $1.3 million to
$2.1 million (per year), includes no
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annualized capital or operation and
maintenance costs.
Under the PRA, an agency may not
conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, a collection of
information unless it displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
The OMB control numbers for certain
EPA’s regulations in 40 CFR are listed
in 40 CFR part 9, and on associated
collection instruments.
Submit your comments on the
Agency’s need for this information, the
accuracy of the provided burden
estimates and any suggested methods
for minimizing respondent burden to
the EPA using the docket identified at
the beginning of this rule. You may also
send your ICR-related comments to
OMB’s Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs using the interface at
www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain.
Find this particular information
collection by selecting ‘‘Currently under
Review—Open for Public Comments’’ or
by using the search function. EPA will
respond to ICR-related comments in the
context of the final rule.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the RFA, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. The
small entities subject to the
requirements of the revised DLHS and
DLCL are small businesses that are
landlords who may incur costs for lead
hazard reduction measures in
compliance with the HUD’s LSHR;
elementary and secondary schools or
child day care services (who make incur
costs associated with COFs); residential
remodelers (who may incur costs
associated with additional cleaning and
sealing in houses undergoing
rehabilitation or ongoing lead-based
paint maintenance subject to the HUD
LSHR); and abatement firms (who may
also incur costs associated with
additional cleaning and sealing under
the LSHR). The Agency has determined
that approximately 39,000 small
businesses would be directly affected by
the revised DLHS and DLCL, of which
87% to 91% have cost impacts less than
1% of revenues, 9% to 12% have
impacts between 1% and 3% of
revenues, and 1% have impacts greater
than 3% of revenues. The total
estimated costs to small businesses are
between $303.1 million and $414.4
million per year.
Additionally, the rule’s other
amendments may potentially affect four
types of small entities: property owners
that will incur recordkeeping and
material costs for real estate disclosures
in newly defined target housing;
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renovation firms that will incur
renovation disclosure costs and leadsafe work practice costs in newly
defined target housing; LBP activities
firms that will incur reporting and
recordkeeping costs for abatement
activities in newly defined target
housing; and EPA-certified training
providers that may incur costs for
submitting reports electronically. The
Agency has determined that
approximately 2,998 small businesses
would be directly affected by the
amendment to the target housing
definition, of which 100% have cost
impacts less than 1% of revenues. The
Agency has determined that
approximately 86 small businesses
would be directly affected by the
amendment to the electronic reporting
requirement, of which 100% have cost
impacts less than 1% of revenues. All
details of the analysis of potential costs
and benefits associated with this action
are presented in EPA’s EA, which is
available in the docket (Ref. 14).
The EA estimates potential costs from
the revised DLHS and DLCL for
activities in two types of target housing
and COFs—those subject to the HUD
LSHR and those where a child with a
blood lead level exceeding a Federal or
state threshold lives. Importantly, the
DLHS do not require the owners of
properties covered by this proposed rule
to evaluate their properties for the
presence of dust-lead hazards, or to act
if dust-lead hazards are identified.
Although the DLHS and DLCL do not
compel specific actions under the LBP
Activities Rule to address identified
LBP hazards, the DLHS and DLCL are
directly incorporated by reference into
certain requirements mandated by HUD
in the housing subject to the LSHR.
Aside from the HUD regulations, and,
perhaps some state or local regulations,
the DLHS and DLCL do not impose new
Federal requirements on small entities.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action contains a Federal
mandate under UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–
1538, that may result in expenditures of
$100 million or more for State, local,
and Tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or the private sector in any
one year. Accordingly, EPA has
prepared the written statement required
under section 202 of UMRA (Ref. 17).
The statement is included in the docket
for this action and is briefly summarized
here.
1. Authorizing Legislation
This rulemaking is issued under the
authority of TSCA sections 401, 402,
403, 404, and 406, 15 U.S.C. 2601 et
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seq., as amended by Title X of the
Housing and Community Development
Act of 1992 (also known as the
Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard
Reduction Act of 1992 or ‘‘Title X’’)
(Pub. L. 102–550) (Ref. 1) and section
237(c) of Title II of Division K of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017
(Pub. L. 115–31, 131 Stat. 789), as well
as sections 1004 and 1018 of Title X (42
U.S.C. 4851b, 4852d), as amended by
section 237(b) of Title II of Division K
of the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2017.
2. Cost-Benefit Analysis
The EA (Ref. 14) presents the costs of
the rule as well as various regulatory
options, and is summarized in Unit I.E.
The rule is estimated to result in total
compliance costs of $536 million to
$784 million per year. Thus, the annual
cost of the rule to the private sector (and
State, local, and Tribal governments) in
the aggregate exceeds the inflationadjusted $100 million UMRA threshold.
This rule will reduce exposures to
lead, resulting in benefits from avoided
adverse health effects. For the subset of
health effects where the results were
quantified, the estimated annualized
benefits are $1.069 billion to $4.684
billion per year using a 3% discount
rate and $231 million to $1.013 billion
per year using a 7% discount rate. There
are additional unquantified benefits due
to other avoided health effects.
Net benefits are the difference
between benefits and costs. The rule is
estimated to result in quantified net
benefits of $532 million to $3.899
billion per year using a 3% discount
rate and ¥$302 million to $231 million
per year using a 7% discount rate. EPA
considers unquantified health benefits
to be potentially important nonmonetized impacts that contribute to the
overall net benefits of this rule.
3. State, Local, and Tribal Government
Input
EPA sought input from State and local
government representatives early in the
rulemaking process during the joint
intergovernmental consultation initiated
in November 2022 and will continue to
engage these partners throughout the
rulemaking process. EPA’s experience
in administering the existing LBP
activities program under TSCA section
402 suggests that these governments
will play a critical role in the successful
implementation of the national program
to reduce exposures to LBP hazards.
This action is not subject to the
requirements of UMRA section 203
because it contains no regulatory
requirements that exceed the inflationadjusted cost significance threshold or
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uniquely affect small governments.
Additionally, although EPA does not
believe that this action would impose an
unfunded mandate on Tribal
governments or otherwise have
substantial direct effects on one or more
federally recognized Indian Tribes as
specified in Executive Order 13175, the
Agency is soliciting input from Tribal
officials during the public comment
period.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
EPA has concluded that this action
has federalism implications, as specified
in Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255,
August 10, 1999), because it imposes
substantial direct compliance costs on
public housing authorities that state or
local governments may be obligated to
offset, and while some HUD funding for
LBP projects exists, the Federal
Government may not provide the funds
necessary to pay the entirety of the
costs. These costs to public housing
authorities—estimated at $143 million
for the primary option—cover
additional lead hazard reduction
activities, cleaning, and dust-lead
testing to ensure that public housing
units are in compliance with the LSHR.
Public school districts that administer
COFs are also estimated to have annual
compliance costs of approximately $904
thousand. Additionally, states that have
authorized LBP Activities programs
must demonstrate that they have DLHS
and DLCL at least as protective as the
levels at 40 CFR 745.65 and 40 CFR
745.227. However, authorized states are
under no obligation to continue to
administer the LBP Activities program,
and if they do not wish to adopt the new
DLHS and DLCL they can relinquish
their authorization. In the absence of a
state authorization, EPA will administer
these requirements.
EPA provides the following
federalism summary impact statement.
EPA consulted with state and local
officials early in the process of
developing the proposed action to
permit them to have meaningful and
timely input into its development. EPA
invited the following national
organizations representing state and
local elected officials to a consultation
meeting on November 10, 2022:
National Governors’ Association,
National Conference of State
Legislatures, U.S. Conference of Mayors,
National League of Cities, Council of
State Governments, International City/
County Management Association,
National Association of Counties,
National Association of Towns and
Townships, County Executives of
America, and Environmental Council of
the States. Additionally, the agency
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invited professional organizations that
represent or have state and local
government members, such as Public
Housing Authorities Directors
Association, Council of Large Public
Housing Authorities, Association of
State and Territorial Health Officials,
American Public Works Association,
and other groups to participate in the
meeting.
During the consultation EPA
presented an overview on LBP
terminology, authorized programs and
background on the DLHS and the DLCL,
including the relevant statutory
authority and regulatory and litigation
history. EPA also discussed potentially
impacted entities, especially those
relevant to the organizations present, as
well as the three regulatory approaches
for DLHS (i.e., GTZ, numeric standard,
and the post-1977 background) and
what the Agency is considering while
revising the DLCL. EPA concluded the
consultation with a description of the
preliminary costs and benefits, an
update on target housing revisions, and
a series of targeted questions for
organizations’ consideration.
Throughout the presentation several
clarifying questions/comments were
posed and responded to about the
program requirements, triggers, and
impacted entities. One commenter
inquired whether cost estimates were
included for COFs. EPA responded that
the costs to COFs had not been
considered; these costs are now
included in the analysis. The Agency
has also added a request for comment
seeking additional data on COFs, see
Unit VII.
Additionally, two commenters
expressed concerns about having
adequate funding for public housing
authorities to meet their basic needs,
such as electricity, and the inability to
be proactive about issues such as lead,
due to those same financial concerns.
EPA appreciates those concerns being
highlighted and will note that according
to the 2021 Court Opinion the Agency
cannot take into account non-health
factors, such as costs, when revising the
DLHS. However, the Agency can
consider non-health factors when
revising the DLCL. In this proposal EPA
has a lower primary and higher
alternative DLCL, which the Agency is
requesting comment on. EPA has also
spoken to nine NLLAP laboratories and
has incorporated their feedback into the
discussion surrounding DLCL within
Unit IV.B. EPA is also requesting
comment on a phased approach for the
DLCL (i.e., lowering the DLCL to the
alternative and then the primary
options), and on whether this proposal
will have impacts on tenants or
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50477
landlords of public housing, including
the potential to impact availability of
federally assisted housing.
After the consultation was complete,
EPA provided the organizations and
officials an opportunity to provide
follow-up comments in writing. The
Agency received one comment from a
non-profit organization whose members
consist of over seventy large public
housing authorities (Ref. 99). The
commenter highlighted that a large
portion of public housing properties are
dated, resulting in many families and
children who are living in dated
housing units. They explained that
public housing authorities have unmet
financial needs and strongly encouraged
the Agency to consider costs when
revising the DLCL. The commenter
expressed concerns about the lower
DLCL resulting in a need to switch
laboratory technology to ICP, which
could require a larger surface area,
increase turnaround time and an
increase in costs. Feedback on all three
DLHS approaches was also provided,
notably that the post-1977 background
approach would incur the highest costs
and was ‘‘undesirable as currently
presented’’ and the commenter
emphasized the importance of
communication materials and clear
communication surrounding the GTZ
approach.
The Agency appreciates the feedback
provided to the EPA during the
consultation process. Regarding
concerns over the laboratories moving to
ICP, EPA conducted laboratory outreach
and included their feedback in this
proposed rule. EPA is proposing the
primary DLCL of 3/20/25 mg/ft2 and is
also proposing an alternative DLCL of 5/
40/100 mg/ft2 and requesting comment
on both options. As mentioned above,
EPA is also requesting comment on a
phased approach to lowering the DLCL,
as well as the proposal to extend the
compliance date by one year and
whether it should be shorter or longer
to allow laboratories adequate time to
adjust. Additionally, the Agency agrees
that communication surrounding the
GTZ approach may be an important
element of this rulemaking and has
added in an additional request for
comment in Unit VII.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This action does not have Tribal
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9,
2000), because it will not have
substantial direct effects on Tribal
governments, on the relationship
between the Federal Government and
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the Indian Tribes, or on the distribution
of power and responsibilities between
the Federal Government and Indian
Tribes. Federally recognized Tribes that
have authorized LBP Activities
programs must demonstrate that they
have DLHS and DLCL at least as
protective as the levels at 40 CFR 745.65
and 40 CFR 745.227. However, these
authorized Tribes are under no
obligation to continue to administer the
LBP Activities program, and if they do
not wish to adopt the new DLHS and
DLCL they can relinquish their
authorization. In the absence of a Tribal
authorization, EPA will administer
these requirements. This action does not
create an obligation for Tribes to
administer LBP Activities programs or
alter EPA’s authority to administer these
programs. For these reasons, Executive
Order 13175 does not apply to this
action. However, EPA still intends to
hold a Tribal consultation on this
rulemaking in order to solicit input from
Tribal officials from the four Indian
Tribes with authorized programs during
the public comment period. This
consultation will also be open to any
Tribal officials who would like to
participate. EPA will ensure that the
consultation materials are accessible to
Tribal officials so that they may view it
later as they consider submitting
feedback during the public comment
period. If a Tribal official is interested
in attending the consultation on behalf
of an Indian Tribe, please consult the
technical person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
Executive Order 13045 (62 FR 19885,
April 23, 1997) directs Federal agencies
that Federal health and safety standards
must include an evaluation of the health
and safety effects of the planned
regulation on children. This action is
subject to Executive Order 13045
because it is a significant regulatory
action under section 3(f)(1) of Executive
Order 12866, and EPA believes that the
environmental health or safety risk
addressed by this action has a
disproportionate effect on children as
they are more susceptible to the adverse
health effects of lead due to their
behavior and physiology. Accordingly,
we have evaluated the environmental
health or safety effects of dust-lead
exposure on children.
The results of this evaluation are
contained in Unit I.E. and in the EA and
TSD, where the health impacts of lead
exposure on children are discussed
more fully (Refs. 14 and 16). The
documents referenced above are
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available in the public docket for this
action.
The proposed DLHS aligns with the
current state of the science, which does
not support identifying a threshold of
dust-lead exposure below which there
would be no adverse human health
effects; while the proposed DLCL is
more health protective than the
alternative in that it results in the least
amount of dust-lead left on a surface
after the completion of an abatement.
EPA is proposing to revise the DLCL
given the statutory criteria of reliability,
effectiveness, and safety. Furthermore,
EPA’s Policy on Children’s Health also
applies to this action. Discussion about
how the Agency applied this policy is
presented in Unit I.E.6.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution or Use
This action is not a ‘‘significant
energy action’’ as defined in Executive
Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22,
2001), because it is not likely to have a
significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution or use of energy.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (NTTAA) and 1 CFR
Part 51
This action involves technical
standards under NTTAA section 12(d),
15 U.S.C. 272 note. ASTM E1728 and
ASTM E1792 are already cited in an
existing regulatory definition of ‘‘wipe
sample’’ at 40 CFR 745.63. EPA is
proposing to formally incorporate the
most current version of these standards
(i.e., ASTM E1728–20 and ASTM
E1792–20). Additional information
about these standards, including how to
access them, is provided in Unit IV.F.8.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629,
February 16, 1994) directs Federal
agencies, to the greatest extent
practicable and permitted by law, to
make environmental justice part of their
mission by identifying and addressing,
as appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects of their programs,
policies, and activities on minority
populations (people of color and/or
indigenous peoples) and low-income
populations.
EPA believes that the human health or
environmental conditions that exist
prior to this action result in or have the
potential to result in disproportionate
and adverse human health or
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environmental effects on people of
color, low-income populations and/or
Indigenous peoples. See discussion in
Section 8.6 of the EA concerning
existing disproportionate impacts of
lead pollution faced by children in lowincome households and households of
people of color and/or Indigenous
peoples, and the measured extent to
which this action particularly benefits
the health of children in low-income
households.
EPA believes that this action is likely
to reduce existing disproportionate and
adverse effects on communities with
environmental justice concerns. For
example, 49% of children who will
benefit from the rule are members of
households below the poverty line,
compared to 17% of children nationally
who live below the poverty line. An
estimated 44% of total monetized
benefits from this rule accrue to
children living in a household below
the poverty line. 22–27% of children
who will benefit from the rule are nonHispanic Black, compared to 12% of
children nationally who are nonHispanic Black. An estimated 23% of
total monetized benefits from this rule
accrue to non-Hispanic Black children.
There is some uncertainty, however,
regarding the environmental justice
implications of this rule on HUDassisted housing. If the rule
inadvertently limits the availability of
federally-assisted affordable housing, a
subset of low-income individuals or
families currently residing in assisted
housing may face higher housing costs
on the private market, disruptions
caused by an involuntary loss of
housing, and the potential for dust lead
levels that exceed those in their baseline
LSHR-regulated housing.
EPA additionally identified and
addressed environmental justice
concerns through public comment and
collaboration with state, Tribal, and
other co-regulatory bodies related to the
EJ2020 action agenda and the
development of the Lead Strategy.
Through the agency-wide Lead Strategy,
EPA has engaged with key stakeholders,
communities, and organizations with
vested interests in addressing lead
exposures. Disparities in lead pollution
are a national area of focus in the EJ2020
action agenda (Ref. 100), and this
rulemaking’s protective standards will
deliver demonstrative progress on
addressing childhood lead exposure and
health disparities to members of
overburdened communities.
The information supporting the
Executive Order 12898 review is
contained in the EA (Ref. 14) and Lead
Strategy (Ref. 10), both of which are
available in the docket.
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List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 745
§ 745.81
Environmental protection, Abatement,
Child-occupied facility, Clearance
levels, Hazardous substances, Lead,
Lead poisoning, Lead-based paint,
Target housing.
(a) * * *
(4) Work practices. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Renovation-specific pamphlet. On
or after December 22, 2008, renovators
or firms performing renovations in
States and Indian Tribal areas without
an authorized program must provide
owners and occupants the following
EPA pamphlet: Renovate Right:
Important Lead Hazard Information for
Families, Child Care Providers and
Schools.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. Amend § 745.83, by adding in
alphabetical order a definition for
‘‘Electronic’’ to read as follows:
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
Therefore, for the reasons set forth in
the preamble, it is proposed that 40 CFR
chapter I be amended as follows:
PART 745—LEAD-BASED PAINT
POISONING PREVENTION IN CERTAIN
RESIDENTIAL STRUCTURES
1. The authority citation for part 745
continues to read as follows:
■
§ 745.83
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2605, 2607, 2681–
2692 and 42 U.S.C. 4852d.
2. Amend § 745.63 by adding in
alphabetical order a definition for
‘‘Reportable level’’ to read as follows:
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Reportable level means the lowest
analyte concentration (or amount) that
does not contain a ‘‘less than’’ qualifier
and that is reported with confidence for
a specific method by a laboratory
recognized by EPA under TSCA section
405(b).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 745.65 by revising
paragraph (b) to read as follows:
§ 745.65
Lead-based paint hazards.
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*
*
*
*
*
(b) Dust-lead hazard. Before [DATE
12 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF
PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE
IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER], a dustlead hazard is surface dust in a
residential dwelling or child-occupied
facility that contains a mass-per-area
concentration of lead equal to or
exceeding 10 mg/ft2 for floors or 100 mg/
ft2 for interior window sills based on
wipe samples. On or after [DATE 12
MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF
PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE
IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER], a dustlead hazard is surface dust in a
residential dwelling or child-occupied
facility that contains a mass-per-area
concentration of any reportable level of
lead for floors or for interior window
sills based on wipe samples analyzed by
an NLLAP-recognized laboratory.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. Amend § 745.81 by:
■ a. Removing paragraph (a)(4)(i) and
redesignating paragraph (a)(4)(ii) as
paragraph (a)(4); and
■ b. Revising paragraph (b).
The revisions read as follows:
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Definitions.
*
■
§ 745.63
Effective dates.
*
*
*
*
Electronic means the submission of an
application, payment, or notification
using the Agency’s Central Data
Exchange (CDX), or successor platform.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 6. Amend § 745.89 by revising
paragraphs (a)(1), (b)(1), and (c)(1) to
read as follows:
§ 745.89
Firm certification.
(a) * * *
(1) Firms that perform renovations for
compensation must electronically apply
to EPA for certification to perform
renovations or dust sampling. To apply,
a firm must submit to EPA a completed
‘‘Application for Firms,’’ signed by an
authorized agent of the firm, and pay
electronically at least the correct
amount of fees. If a firm pays more than
the correct amount of fees, EPA will
reimburse the firm for the excess
amount.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) Timely and complete application.
To be re-certified, a firm must submit a
complete electronic application for recertification. A complete application for
re-certification includes a completed
‘‘Application for Firms’’ which contains
all of the information requested by the
form and is signed by an authorized
agent of the firm, noting on the form
that it is submitted as a re-certification.
A complete application must also
include at least the correct amount of
fees. If a firm pays more than the correct
amount of fees, EPA will reimburse the
firm for the excess amount.
(i) An application for re-certification
is timely if it is electronically submitted
90 days or more before the date the
firm’s current certification expires. If the
firm’s application is complete and
timely, the firm’s current certification
will remain in effect until its expiration
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date or until EPA has made a final
decision to approve or disapprove the
re-certification application, whichever
is later.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) To amend certification, a firm
must electronically submit a completed
‘‘Application for Firms,’’ signed by an
authorized agent of the firm, noting on
the form that it is submitted as an
amendment and indicating the
information that has changed. The firm
must also pay at least the correct
amount of fees.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Amend § 745.90 by revising
paragraphs (a)(3) and (4) to read as
follows:
§ 745.90 Renovator certification and dust
sampling technician certification.
(a) * * *
(3) Individuals who have successfully
completed an accredited lead-based
paint inspector or risk assessor course
before October 4, 2011, may take an
accredited refresher dust sampling
technician course in lieu of the initial
training to become a certified dust
sampling technician. Individuals who
are currently certified as lead-based
paint inspectors or risk assessors may
act as certified dust sampling
technicians without further training.
(4) To maintain renovator certification
or dust sampling technician
certification, an individual must
complete a renovator or dust sampling
technician refresher course accredited
by EPA under § 745.225 or by a State or
Tribal program that is authorized under
subpart Q of this part within 5 years of
the date the individual completed the
initial course described in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section. If the individual
does not complete a refresher course
within this time, the individual must retake the initial course to become
certified again. Individuals who take a
renovator refresher course that does not
include hands-on training will be
certified for 3 years from the date they
complete the training. Individuals who
take a refresher training course that
includes hands-on training will be
certified for 5 years. Individuals who
take the renovator refresher without
hands-on training must, for their next
refresher course, take a refresher course
that includes hands-on training to
maintain renovator certification.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. Amend § 745.92 by revising
paragraph (c)(2) to read as follows:
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training and the certification of renovation
firms.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) Submit the application and a
payment of $15 electronically in
accordance with the instructions
provided with the application package.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 9. Amend § 745.103 by revising the
definition for ‘‘Target housing’’ to read
as follows:
§ 745.103
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Target housing means any housing
constructed prior to 1978, except
housing for the elderly or persons with
disabilities or any 0-bedroom dwelling
(unless any child who is less than 6
years of age resides or is expected to
reside in such housing).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. Amend § 745.113 by revising
paragraphs (a)(4), (b)(1) and (4) to read
as follows:
§ 745.113 Certification and
acknowledgement of disclosure.
(a) * * *
(4) A statement by the purchaser
affirming receipt of the information set
out in paragraphs (a)(2) and (3) of this
section and the lead hazard information
pamphlet required under 15 U.S.C.
2686.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) A Lead Warning Statement with
the following language:
Housing built before 1978 may contain
lead-based paint. Lead from paint, paint
chips, and dust can pose health hazards if
not managed properly. Lead exposure is
especially harmful to young children and
pregnant women. Before renting pre-1978
housing, lessors must disclose the presence
of known lead-based paint and/or lead-based
paint hazards in the dwelling. Lessees must
also receive a federally approved pamphlet
on lead poisoning prevention.
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*
*
*
*
*
(4) A statement by the lessee affirming
receipt of the information set out in
paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of this section
and the lead hazard information
pamphlet required under 15 U.S.C.
2686.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 11. Amend § 745.223 by:
■ a. Revising the introductory text and
paragraphs (1), (3)(i) through (iii), and
(4) of the definition for ‘‘Abatement’’;
■ b. Revising the definition for ‘‘Childoccupied facility’’;
■ c. Adding in alphabetical order the
definitions for ‘‘Electronic’’ and
‘‘Housing for the elderly’’; and
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d. Revising the definitions for ‘‘Living
area’’ and ‘‘Target housing’’.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
§ 745.223
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Abatement means any measure or set
of measures designed to permanently
eliminate lead-based paint hazards, in
the case of dust-lead hazards to below
the clearance levels. Abatement
includes, but is not limited to:
(1) The removal of paint and dust (in
the case of dust-lead hazards to below
the clearance levels), the permanent
enclosure or encapsulation of leadbased paint, the replacement of painted
surfaces or fixtures, or the removal or
permanent covering of soil, when leadbased paint hazards are present in such
paint, dust or soil; and
*
*
*
*
*
(3) * * *
(i) * * *
(A) Shall result in the permanent
elimination of lead-based paint hazards,
in the case of dust-lead hazards to below
the clearance levels; or
(B) Are designed to permanently
eliminate lead-based paint hazards, in
the case of dust-lead hazards to below
the clearance levels, and are described
in paragraphs (1) and (2) of this
definition.
(ii) Projects resulting in the
permanent elimination of lead-based
paint hazards, in the case of dust-lead
hazards to below the clearance levels,
conducted by firms or individuals
certified in accordance with § 745.226,
unless such projects are covered by
paragraph (4) of this definition;
(iii) Projects resulting in the
permanent elimination of lead-based
paint hazards, in the case of dust-lead
hazards to below the clearance levels,
conducted by firms or individuals who,
through their company name or
promotional literature, represent,
advertise, or hold themselves out to be
in the business of performing lead-based
paint activities as identified and defined
by this section, unless such projects are
covered by paragraph (4) of this
definition; or
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Abatement does not include
renovation, remodeling, landscaping or
other activities, when such activities are
not designed to permanently eliminate
lead-based paint hazards, in the case of
dust-lead hazards to below the clearance
levels, but, instead, are designed to
repair, restore, or remodel a given
structure or dwelling, even though these
activities may incidentally result in a
reduction or elimination of lead-based
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paint hazards. Furthermore, abatement
does not include interim controls,
operations and maintenance activities,
or other measures and activities
designed to temporarily, but not
permanently, reduce lead-based paint
hazards, in the case of dust-lead hazards
to below the clearance levels.
*
*
*
*
*
Child-occupied facility means a
building, or portion of a building,
constructed prior to 1978, visited
regularly by the same child, under 6
years of age, on at least two different
days within any week (Sunday through
Saturday period), provided that each
day’s visit lasts at least 3 hours and the
combined weekly visit lasts at least 6
hours, and the combined annual visits
last at least 60 hours. Child-occupied
facilities may include, but are not
limited to, day-care centers, preschools
and kindergarten classrooms.
*
*
*
*
*
Electronic means the submission of an
application, payment, or notification
using the Agency’s Central Data
Exchange (CDX), or successor platform.
*
*
*
*
*
Housing for the elderly means
retirement communities or similar types
of housing reserved for households
composed of one or more persons 62
years of age or more at the time of initial
occupancy.
*
*
*
*
*
Living area means any area of a
residential dwelling used by one or
more children under age 6 including,
but not limited to, living rooms, kitchen
areas, dens, play rooms, and children’s
bedrooms.
*
*
*
*
*
Target housing means any housing
constructed prior to 1978, except
housing for the elderly or persons with
disabilities or any 0-bedroom dwelling
(unless any child who is less than 6
years of age resides or is expected to
reside in such housing).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 12. Amend § 745.225 by:
■ a. Revising the introductory text of
paragraph (b)(1), paragraphs (c)(13)(vi)
and (14)(iii), the introductory text of
paragraph (e)(5) and paragraph (f)(2);
■ b. Removing and reserving paragraph
(i)(2)(ii); and
■ c. Revising paragraph (j)(2).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 745.225 Accreditation of training
programs: target housing and childoccupied facilities.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) A training program seeking
accreditation shall submit an electronic
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following information:
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(13) * * *
(vi) Notification must be
accomplished electronically.
Instructions can be obtained online at
https://www.epa.gov/lead or from the
NLIC at 1–800–424–LEAD (5323).
Hearing- or speech-impaired persons
may reach the above telephone number
through TTY by calling the toll-free
Federal Communications Commission’s
Telecommunications Relay Service at
711.
*
*
*
*
*
(14) * * *
(iii) Notification must be
accomplished electronically.
Instructions can be obtained online at
https://www.epa.gov/lead or from the
NLIC at 1–800–424–LEAD (5323).
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(5) A training program seeking
accreditation to offer refresher training
courses only shall submit an electronic
application to EPA containing the
following information:
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(2) A training program seeking reaccreditation shall submit an electronic
application to EPA no later than 180
days before its accreditation expires. If
a training program does not submit its
application for re-accreditation by that
date, EPA cannot guarantee that the
program will be re-accredited before the
end of the accreditation period.
*
*
*
*
*
(i) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
(j) * * *
(2) To amend an accreditation, a
training program must electronically
submit a completed ‘‘Accreditation
Application for Training Providers,’’
signed by an authorized agent of the
training provider, noting on the form
that it is submitted as an amendment
and indicating the information that has
changed.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 13. Amend § 745.226 by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (a)(1),
introductory text of paragraph (e)(1),
paragraphs (e)(2), (f)(2) and (3);
■ b. Removing and reserving paragraph
(f)(5); and
■ c. Revising paragraph (h)(1)(iii).
The revisions read as follows:
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§ 745.226 Certification of individuals and
firms engaged in lead-based paint
activities: target housing and childoccupied facilities.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Submit to EPA an electronic
application demonstrating that they
meet the requirements established in
paragraphs (b) or (c) of this section for
the particular discipline for which
certification is sought; or
(ii) Submit to EPA an electronic
application attaching a valid lead-based
paint activities certification (or
equivalent) from a State or Tribal
program that has been authorized by
EPA pursuant to subpart Q of this part.
(2) [Reserved]
(3) Following the submission of an
electronic application demonstrating
that all the requirements of this section
have been meet, EPA shall certify an
applicant as an inspector, risk assessor,
supervisor, project designer, or
abatement worker, as appropriate.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(1) To maintain certification in a
particular discipline, a certified
individual shall apply electronically to
and be re-certified by EPA in that
discipline by EPA either:
*
*
*
*
*
(2) An individual shall be re-certified
if the individual successfully completes
the appropriate accredited refresher
training course and electronically
submits a valid copy of the appropriate
refresher course completion certificate.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(2) A firm seeking certification shall
electronically submit to EPA an
application attesting that the firm shall
only employ appropriately certified
employees to conduct lead-based paint
activities, and that the firm and its
employees shall follow the work
practice standards in § 745.227 for
conducting lead-based paint activities.
(3) From the date of receiving the
firm’s electronic application requesting
certification, EPA shall have 90 days to
approve or disapprove the firm’s request
for certification. Within that time, EPA
shall respond with either a certificate of
approval or a letter describing the
reasons for a disapproval.
*
*
*
*
*
(5) [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) Misrepresented facts in its
electronic application for certification to
EPA.
*
*
*
*
*
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50481
14. Amend § 745.227 by:
a. Revising paragraphs (c)(2)(i), (iv)
and (v), (d)(3), (5), (6)(ii) and (7),
(e)(4)(ii), (vii) and (8)(viii);
■ b. Adding paragraph (e)(10)(vii); and
■ c. Revising paragraph (h)(3).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
■
§ 745.227 Work practice standards for
conducting lead-based paint activities:
target housing and child-occupied facilities.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Background information regarding
the physical characteristics of the
residential dwelling or child-occupied
facility and occupant use patterns that
may cause lead-based paint exposure to
one or more children under age 6 shall
be collected.
*
*
*
*
*
(iv) In residential dwellings, two
composite dust samples shall be
collected, one from the floors and the
other from the windows, in rooms,
hallways or stairwells where one or
more children, under age 6, are most
likely to come in contact with dust.
(v) In multi-family dwellings and
child-occupied facilities, in addition to
the floor and window samples required
in paragraph (c)(1)(iii) of this section,
the risk assessor shall also collect
composite dust samples from common
areas where one or more children, under
age 6, are most likely to come into
contact with dust.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(3) Background information regarding
the physical characteristics of the
residential dwelling or child-occupied
facility and occupant use patterns that
may cause lead-based paint exposure to
one or more children under age 6 shall
be collected.
*
*
*
*
*
(5) In residential dwellings, dust
samples (either composite or singlesurface samples) from the interior
window sill(s) and floor shall be
collected and analyzed for lead
concentration in all living areas where
one or more children, under age 6, are
most likely to come into contact with
dust.
(6) * * *
(ii) Other common areas in the
building where the risk assessor
determines that one or more children,
under age 6, are likely to come into
contact with dust.
(7) For child-occupied facilities,
interior window sill and floor dust
samples (either composite or singlesurface samples) shall be collected and
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analyzed for lead concentration in each
room, hallway or stairwell utilized by
one or more children, under age 6, and
in other common areas in the childoccupied facility where one or more
children, under age 6, are likely to come
into contact with dust.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(4) * * *
(ii) Notification for lead-based paint
abatement activities required in
response to an elevated blood lead level
(EBL) determination, or Federal, State,
Tribal, or local emergency abatement
order should be received by EPA as
early as possible before, but must be
received no later than, the start date of
the lead-based paint abatement
activities. Should the start date and/or
location provided to EPA change, an
updated notification must be received
by EPA on or before the start date
provided to EPA. Documentation
showing evidence of an EBL
determination or a copy of the Federal/
State/Tribal/local emergency abatement
order must be included in the
notification to take advantage of this
abbreviated notification period.
*
*
*
*
*
(vii) Notification must be
accomplished electronically.
Instructions can be obtained online at
https://www.epa.gov/lead, or from the
NLIC at 1–800–424–LEAD (5323).
*
*
*
*
*
(8) * * *
(viii) Before [DATE 12 MONTHS
AFTER THE DATE OF PUBLICATION
OF THE FINAL RULE IN THE
FEDERAL REGISTER], the clearance
levels for lead in dust are 10 mg/ft2 for
floors, 100 mg/ft2 for interior window
sills, and 400 mg/ft2 for window troughs;
on or after [DATE 12 MONTHS AFTER
THE DATE OF PUBLICATION OF THE
FINAL RULE IN THE FEDERAL
REGISTER], the clearance levels for
lead in dust are 3 mg/ft2 for floors, 20 mg/
ft2 for interior window sills, and 25 mg/
ft2 for window troughs.
*
*
*
*
*
(10) * * *
(vii) On or after [DATE 12 MONTHS
AFTER THE DATE OF PUBLICATION
OF THE FINAL RULE IN THE
FEDERAL REGISTER], when dust-lead
clearance sampling results are below the
dust-lead clearance levels and at or
above the dust-lead hazard standards, a
dust-lead hazard statement with the
following language must be included:
Although the completed abatement project
achieved dust-lead levels below clearance,
some dust-lead hazards remain because any
reportable level of dust-lead is considered a
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20:41 Jul 31, 2023
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dust-lead hazard. In order for abatement
work to be considered complete, dust-lead
levels must be below clearance levels, which
are established based on reliability,
effectiveness and safety. To continue to
reduce lead exposure from dust, the EPA
pamphlet entitled Protect Your Family From
Lead in Your Home includes
recommendations such as: using a vacuum
with a high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA)
filter on furniture and other items returned
to the work area and regularly cleaning hard
surfaces with a damp cloth or sponge and a
general all-purpose cleaner. For more
information on how to continue to reduce
lead exposure see Protect Your Family From
Lead in Your Home.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(3) Dust-lead hazards and dust-lead
clearance levels are identified for
residential dwellings and childoccupied facilities as follows:
(i) Before [DATE 12 MONTHS AFTER
THE DATE OF PUBLICATION OF THE
FINAL RULE IN THE FEDERAL
REGISTER], a dust lead-hazard is
present in a residential dwelling on
floors and interior window sills when
the weighted arithmetic mean lead
loading for all single surface or
composite samples of floors and interior
window sills are equal to or greater than
10 mg/ft2 for floors and 100 mg/ft2 for
interior window sills, respectively; for
projects where clearance sampling is
required or otherwise performed, levels
of lead in dust must be below 10 mg/ft2
for floors, 100 mg/ft2 for interior window
sills, and 400 mg/ft2 for window troughs
for purposes of clearance; on or after
[DATE 12 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE
OF PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL
RULE IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER], a
dust lead-hazard is present in a
residential dwelling on floors and
interior window sills when the lead
loading for any single surface or
composite sample of floors and interior
window sills is equal to or greater than
any reportable level of dust-lead for
floors and for interior window sills; for
projects where clearance sampling is
required or otherwise performed, levels
of lead in dust must be below 3 mg/ft2
for floors, 20 mg/ft2 for interior window
sills, and 25 mg/ft2 for window troughs
for purposes of clearance;
(ii) A dust lead-hazard is present on
floors or interior window sills in an
unsampled residential dwelling in a
multi-family dwelling, if a dust-lead
hazard is present on floors or interior
window sills, respectively, in at least
one sampled residential unit on the
property (and, for projects where
clearance sampling is required or
otherwise performed, levels of lead in
dust must be below the applicable value
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from paragraph (h)(3)(i) of this section
for purposes of clearance); and
(iii) A dust lead-hazard is present on
floors or interior window sills in an
unsampled common area in a multifamily dwelling, if a dust-lead hazard is
present on floors or interior window
sills, respectively, in at least one
sampled common area in the same
common area group on the property
(and, for projects where clearance
sampling is required or otherwise
performed, levels of lead in dust must
be below the applicable value from
paragraph (h)(3)(i) of this section for
purposes of clearance).
*
*
*
*
*
■
15. Amend § 745.238 by:
■
a. Revising paragraphs (d)(1) and (2),
■
b. Removing paragraph (d)(3),
■
c. Revising paragraphs (e)(1) and (2).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 745.238 Fees for accreditation and
certification of lead-based paint activities.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) Certification and re-certification.
(i) Individuals. Submit a completed
application electronically (titled
‘‘Application for Individuals to Conduct
Lead-based Paint Activities’’), the
materials described at § 745.226, and the
application fee(s) described in
paragraph (c) of this section.
(ii) Firms. Submit a completed
application electronically (titled
‘‘Application for Firms’’), the materials
described at § 745.226, and the
application fee(s) described in
paragraph (c) of this section.
(2) Accreditation and re-accreditation.
Submit a completed application
electronically (titled ‘‘Accreditation
Application for Training Programs’’),
the materials described at § 745.225, and
the application fee described in
paragraph (c) of this section.
(e) * * *
(1) Parties seeking identification card
or certificate replacement shall
electronically complete the applicable
portions of the appropriate application
in accordance with the instructions
provided.
*
The appropriate applications are:
*
*
*
*
(2) Submit application and payment
electronically in the amount specified in
paragraph (c)(3) of this section in
accordance with the instructions.
*
*
*
*
*
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16. Amend § 745.325 by revising
paragraph (d)(3)(ii) to read as follows:
■
§ 745.325 Lead-based paint activities:
State and Tribal program requirements.
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*
*
*
(d) * * *
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*
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(3) * * *
(ii) Abatements permanently
eliminate lead-based paint hazards, in
the case of dust-lead hazards to below
the clearance levels, and are conducted
in a way that does not increase the
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hazards of lead-based paint to the
occupants of the dwelling or childoccupied facility.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2023–15073 Filed 7–31–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 146 (Tuesday, August 1, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 50444-50483]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-15073]
[[Page 50443]]
Vol. 88
Tuesday,
No. 146
August 1, 2023
Part III
Environmental Protection Agency
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
40 CFR Part 745
Reconsideration of the Dust-Lead Hazard Standards and Dust-Lead Post-
Abatement Clearance Levels; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 146 / Tuesday, August 1, 2023 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 50444]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 745
[EPA-HQ-OPPT-2023-0231; FRL-8524-01-OCSPP]
RIN 2070-AK91
Reconsideration of the Dust-Lead Hazard Standards and Dust-Lead
Post-Abatement Clearance Levels
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Addressing childhood lead exposure is a priority for the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). This rule addresses health
concerns for all affected communities, including children living in
communities with environmental justice concerns, who have significantly
higher blood lead levels (BLLs) than other children. As part of EPA's
efforts to reduce childhood lead exposure, and in accordance with a
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit 2021 opinion, EPA is
proposing to lower the dust-lead hazard standards (DLHS) from 10
micrograms per square foot ([micro]g/ft\2\) and 100 [micro]g/ft\2\ for
floors and window sills to any reportable level as analyzed by a
laboratory recognized by EPA's National Lead Laboratory Accreditation
Program. This is a non-numeric value that the Agency refers to as
greater than zero [micro]g/ft\2\ and may vary based on laboratory or
test. While EPA's DLHS do not compel property owners or occupants to
evaluate their property for lead-based paint (LBP) hazards nor take
control actions, if an LBP activity such as an abatement is performed,
then EPA's regulations set requirements for doing so. EPA is also
proposing to change the dust-lead clearance levels (DLCL), which are
the values used to determine when abatement work can be considered
complete, from 10 [micro]g/ft\2\, 100 [micro]g/ft\2\ and 400 [micro]g/
ft\2\ for floors, window sills, and window troughs to 3 [micro]g/ft\2\,
20 [micro]g/ft\2\, and 25 [micro]g/ft\2\, respectively. Under this
proposal, the DLHS for floors and window sills would not be the same as
the DLCL for floors and window sills (i.e., the DLHS and DLCL would be
decoupled). Accordingly, dust-lead hazards could remain after an
abatement due to the different statutory direction that Congress
provided EPA with respect to the DLCL. Additionally, EPA is proposing
to change the definition of abatement so that the recommendation for
action applies when dust-lead loadings are at or above the DLCL, as
well as several other amendments, including revising the definition of
target housing to conform with the statute.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before October 2, 2023. Under
the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), comments on the information
collection provisions are best assured of consideration if the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) receives a copy of your comments on or
before August 31, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by docket identification
(ID) number EPA-HQ-OPPT-2023-0231, through the Federal eRulemaking
Portal at https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the online instructions
for submitting comments. Do not submit electronically any information
you consider to be Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other
information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Additional
instructions on commenting and visiting the docket, along with more
information about dockets generally, is available at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
For technical information contact: Claire Brisse, Existing
Chemicals Risk Management Division, Office of Pollution Prevention and
Toxics, Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW,
Washington, DC 20460-0001; telephone number: (202) 564-9004; email
address: [email protected]. Hearing- or speech-impaired persons may
reach the telephone numbers for the contacts through TTY by calling the
toll-free Federal Communications Commission's Telecommunications Relay
Service at 711.
For general information contact: The TSCA Hotline, ABVI-Goodwill,
422 South Clinton Ave., Rochester, NY 14620; telephone number: (202)
554-1404; email address: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Executive Summary
A. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by this action if you conduct lead-
based paint (LBP) activities in accordance with 40 CFR 745.227; if you
operate a training program required to be accredited under 40 CFR
745.225; if you are a firm or individual who must be certified to
conduct LBP activities or renovations in accordance with 40 CFR
745.226; or if you own, manage, and/or conduct abatement,
rehabilitations or maintenance activities in most pre-1978 housing that
is covered by a Federal housing assistance program in accordance with
24 CFR part 35. You may also be affected by this action if you operate
a laboratory that is recognized by EPA's National Lead Laboratory
Accreditation Program (NLLAP) in accordance with 40 CFR 745.90,
745.223, 745.227, and 745.327. You may also be affected by this action,
in accordance with 40 CFR 745.107 and 24 CFR 35.88, as the seller or
lessor of target housing, which is most pre-1978 housing. See 40 CFR
745.103 and 24 CFR 35.86. You may also be affected by this action if
you are a resident of target housing, even if you would not be subject
to the proposed requirements of this action. Due to the change in the
definition of ``target housing,'' you may also be affected if you are a
firm or individual who must be certified to perform renovations in
target housing or child-occupied facilities (COFs) in accordance with
40 CFR part 745, subpart E.
The following list of North American Industrial Classification
System (NAICS) codes is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather
provides a guide to help readers determine whether this document
applies to them. Potentially affected entities may include:
Building construction (NAICS code 236), e.g., single-
family housing construction, multi-family housing construction,
residential remodelers.
Specialty trade contractors (NAICS code 238), e.g.,
plumbing, heating, and air-conditioning contractors, painting, and wall
covering contractors, electrical contractors, finish carpentry
contractors, drywall and insulation contractors, siding contractors,
tile and terrazzo contractors, glass, and glazing contractors.
Real estate (NAICS code 531), e.g., lessors of residential
buildings and dwellings, residential property managers, and property
owners, as well as those property owners that receive assistance
through Federal housing programs.
Child day care services (NAICS code 624410).
Elementary and secondary schools (NAICS code 611110),
e.g., elementary schools with kindergarten classrooms.
Other technical and trade schools (NAICS code 611519),
e.g., training providers.
Engineering services (NAICS code 541330) and building
inspection services (NAICS code 541350), e.g., dust sampling
technicians.
Lead abatement professionals (NAICS code 562910), e.g.,
firms and supervisors engaged in LBP activities.
[[Page 50445]]
Testing laboratories (NAICS code 541380) that analyze dust
wipe samples for lead.
Federal agencies that own residential property (NAICS code
92511, 92811).
B. What is the Agency's authority for taking this action?
EPA is proposing this rule under the authority of sections 401,
402, 403, 404, and 406 of the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA), 15
U.S.C. 2601 et seq., as amended by Title X of the Housing and Community
Development Act of 1992 (also known as the Residential Lead-Based Paint
Hazard Reduction Act of 1992 or ``Title X'') (Pub. L. 102-550) (Ref. 1)
and section 237(c) of Title II of Division K of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2017 (Pub. L. 115-31, 131 Stat. 789), as well as
sections 1004 and 1018 of Title X (42 U.S.C. 4851b, 4852d), as amended
by section 237(b) of Title II of Division K of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2017.
Regarding the dust-lead hazard standards (DLHS), TSCA section 403
(15 U.S.C. 2683) mandates EPA to identify LBP hazards for purposes of
administering Title X and TSCA Title IV. Under TSCA section 401, LBP
hazards are defined as conditions of LBP and lead-contaminated dust and
soil that ``would result in adverse human health effects,'' (15 U.S.C.
2681(10)) and lead-contaminated dust is defined as ``surface dust in
residential dwellings'' that contains lead in excess of levels
determined ``to pose a threat of adverse health effects . . .'' (15
U.S.C. 2681(11)).
As relevant to the dust-lead clearance levels (DLCL), TSCA section
402 (15 U.S.C. 2682) directs EPA to regulate LBP activities, which
include risk assessments, inspections, and abatements. TSCA section 401
(15 U.S.C. 2681) defines abatements as ``measures designed to
permanently eliminate lead-based paint hazards'' and the term includes
``all . . . cleanup . . . and post[-]abatement clearance testing
activities'' (15 U.S.C. 2681(1)). EPA's statutory authority for setting
the DLCL was laid out differently in Title X and TSCA Title IV than
those for the DLHS. As a result, distinct from the DLHS, EPA is further
directed, in promulgating the DLCL regulations, to ``tak[e] into
account reliability, effectiveness, and safety'' (15 U.S.C.
2682(a)(1)).
Pertaining to the other amendments presented in Unit IV.F. of this
preamble, TSCA section 406 (15 U.S.C. 2686) requires EPA, in
consultation with the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD) and with the Secretary of the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS) to ``publish, and from time to time
revise, a lead hazard information pamphlet to be used in connection
with this subchapter and section 4852d of title 42.'' TSCA section 406
(15 U.S.C. 2686) also requires EPA's regulations to require any person
performing for compensation a renovation of target housing to provide
the pamphlet to the owner and occupant prior to commencing the
renovation. Additionally, section 1018 of Title X (42 U.S.C. 4852d)
mandates that the Lead Warning Statement to be provided in contracts
for the purchase or sale of target housing include, among other
language, the following text: ``. . . The seller of any interest in
residential real property is required to provide the buyer with any
information on lead-based paint hazards from risk assessments or
inspections in the seller's possession and notify the buyer of any
known lead-based paint hazards'' (emphasis added). TSCA section 401 (15
U.S.C. 2681(17)) and section 1004 of Title X (42 U.S.C. 4851b), as
amended by section 237(b) and (c) of Title II of Division K of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017 (Pub. L. 115-31, 131 Stat. 789),
define target housing as ``any housing constructed prior to 1978,
except housing for the elderly or persons with disabilities or any 0-
bedroom dwelling (unless any child who is less than 6 years of age
resides or is expected to reside in such housing) . . . .'' In this
context, ``elderly'' refers to 62 years of age or more (40 CFR
745.103).
C. What action is the Agency taking?
In 2019, EPA promulgated a final rule to lower the DLHS to 10
[mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and 100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills (the 2019
DLHS Rule) (Ref. 2). In 2021, EPA promulgated a final rule to lower the
DLCL to 10 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and 100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills
(the 2021 DLCL Rule) (Ref. 3). The 2019 DLHS Rule and the 2021 DLCL
Rule continued a long-standing practice of setting the same levels for
the DLHS and the DLCL and basing those levels in part on consideration
of factors such as laboratory capacity and capabilities.
In keeping with an opinion issued by the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Ninth Circuit in 2021 (described in Unit I.D.) that instructed EPA
to consider only health factors when setting the DLHS, EPA is now
proposing to change the DLHS from 10 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and 100
[mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills, as established in the 2019 DLHS Rule, to
any reportable level of dust-lead analyzed by a NLLAP-recognized
laboratory. The Agency refers to this level as greater than zero (GTZ).
It is not a specific numeric level set by EPA but rather the
numerically reportable level as analyzed by a NLLAP-recognized
laboratory, which is sometimes referred to as a ``non-numeric'' value.
However, that term, as used in this document, refers only to the GTZ
level and should not be confused with non-numeric standards such as
work practice standards. EPA believes GTZ and the standard of ``any
reportable level'' is an appropriate DLHS based on health effects,
given there is no identified level of lead in blood that does not cause
adverse cognitive impacts in children, and this more protective
approach is consistent with the statutory language in TSCA Section 401
that defines what a ``LBP hazard'' is (i.e., as conditions of LBP and
lead-contaminated dust and soil that ``would result in adverse human
health effects''), and with the results from the Technical Support
Document (TSD). There is no evidence of a threshold below which there
are not harmful effects from lead exposure, including neurobehavioral
and cognitive effects on children (Refs. 4 and 5). The proposed GTZ
approach represents a shift in the LBP activities program to a more
inclusive DLHS, identifying dust-lead hazards in the context of TSCA
Title IV as any condition that causes exposure to lead from lead-
contaminated dust in target housing and child-occupied facilities. If
finalized as proposed, the GTZ approach will be inclusive of any
reportable level of dust-lead and will not distinguish between severe,
less severe, or negligible risks. Additional discussion on GTZ can be
found in Unit IV.A.1.
Additionally, EPA is proposing to revise the DLCL, set by the 2021
DLCL Rule, from 10 [mu]g/ft\2\ to 3 [mu]g/ft\2\ for dust-lead for
floors, from 100 [mu]g/ft\2\ to 20 [mu]g/ft\2\ dust-lead for window
sills and from 400 [mu]g/ft\2\ to 25 [mu]g/ft\2\ dust-lead for window
troughs, following a consideration of reliability, effectiveness, and
safety, including non-health factors such as laboratory capabilities/
capacity and achievability after an abatement. EPA is also requesting
comment on an alternative DLCL option of 5 [mu]g/ft\2\ dust-lead for
floors, 40 [mu]g/ft\2\ dust-lead for window sills, and 100 [mu]g/ft\2\
for window troughs. If finalized as proposed, the DLHS for floors and
window sills would not be the same as the DLCL for floors and window
sills (i.e., the DLHS and DLCL would be decoupled), acknowledging the
different statutory direction that Congress provided EPA with respect
to the DLCL. Although EPA has in the past promulgated rules setting the
DLHS and
[[Page 50446]]
DLCL to be the same values, an opinion by the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Ninth Circuit in May 2021 instructed EPA to consider only health
factors when setting the DLHS and affirmed that EPA could consider non-
health factors (e.g., laboratory capabilities/capacity, and
achievability after an abatement) when setting the DLCL.
The proposed DLCL would not impose retroactive requirements on
regulated entities that have previously performed post-abatement dust
wipe testing using the current DLCL of 10 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors, 100
[mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills, and 400 [mu]g/ft\2\ for troughs, or the
previous DLCL of 40 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors, 250 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window
sills, and 400 [mu]g/ft\2\ for troughs (Ref. 6). They would apply to
post-abatement clearance sampling and analysis conducted after the
compliance date for that portion of the regulations (i.e., one year
after publication of the final rule). Additionally, while EPA's DLHS do
not compel property owners or occupants to evaluate their property for
LBP hazards or take control actions (40 CFR 745.61(c)), if an LBP
activity such as an abatement is performed, then EPA's regulations set
requirements for doing so (40 CFR 745.220(d)). This rule, if finalized,
would change the LBP activities regulations' definition of abatement to
be any measure or set of measures designed to eliminate LBP hazards, in
the case of dust-lead hazards, to a level below the new proposed DLCL,
and would require an additional statement in the final abatement
reports that states that LBP hazards (particularly dust-lead hazards)
remain after an abatement if clearance testing has found that they do
remain.
EPA is also proposing several other amendments, including:
conforming changes to the definition of ``target housing;'' conforming
the age requirements throughout the LBP regulations to under six years
old; requiring that application payments, applications, and notices be
submitted electronically; updating the Disclosure Rule warning
statement (Ref. 7); as well as correcting an incorrect reference to the
lead-hazard control pamphlet; and deleting obsolete regulatory text
where language is out of date or no longer applicable. EPA is also
considering adding incorporations by reference of two voluntary
consensus standards already included in a relevant definition.
EPA is requesting comment on the changes described in this
proposal, in particular the reliability, effectiveness, and safety of
the primary and alternative DLCL options, and all other amendments
discussed in Unit IV.
D. Why is the Agency taking this action?
Lead exposure has the potential to impact individuals of all ages,
but it is especially harmful to young children because the developing
brain can be particularly sensitive to environmental contaminants
(Refs. 4 and 8). Because of this, reducing childhood lead exposure is a
priority for both EPA and the Federal Government. In December 2018, the
President's Task Force on Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
to Children released the Federal Action Plan to Reduce Childhood Lead
Exposures and Associated Health Impacts (Federal Lead Action Plan)
(Ref. 9) to enhance the Federal Government's efforts to identify and
reduce lead exposure while ensuring children impacted by such exposure
are getting the support and care they need to prevent or mitigate any
associated health effects. The Federal Lead Action Plan is helping
Federal agencies to work strategically and collaboratively to reduce
exposure to lead and improve children's health. On October 27, 2022,
EPA released the Strategy to Reduce Lead Exposures and Disparities in
U.S. Communities (Lead Strategy). The Lead Strategy lays out Agency and
government-wide approaches to strengthen public health protections,
address legacy lead contamination for communities with the greatest
exposures and promote environmental justice. It describes how the
Agency will utilize the full suite of EPA authorities, expertise, and
resources to continue to reduce lead exposure. This proposed rule,
which revises the DLHS and the DLCL (among other proposed regulatory
changes), is an action that EPA committed to undertake in the Lead
Strategy (Ref. 10).
In 2019, EPA re-evaluated the DLHS (Ref. 2). Based on that
evaluation, the final rule revised the DLHS from 40 [mu]g/ft\2\ and 250
[mu]g/ft\2\ to 10 [mu]g/ft\2\ and 100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and window
sills, respectively. However, public health advocates filed a lawsuit
in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (the Court) seeking
judicial review of the 2019 DLHS Rule as insufficiently protective. On
May 14, 2021, the Court issued its opinion on the 2019 DLHS Rule. The
Court held that ``the 2019 Rule lowers the lead hazard level but not to
a level sufficient to protect health as Congress has directed, because
the EPA has looked to factors in addition to health.'' A Cmty. Voice v.
U.S. Env't Prot. Agency, 997 F.3d 983, 992 (9th Cir. 2021). The remedy
the Court granted was a remand without vacatur (of the lowered DLHS),
and the Court instructed EPA to consider only health factors when
setting the DLHS (Ref. 11). This proposed rule is being issued to
reconsider the DLHS and DLCL in light of the 2021 Court Opinion, which
directed EPA to ``reconsider the DLHS . . . [and] the dust-lead
clearance levels . . . in the same proceeding'' and affirmed that EPA
could consider non-health factors when setting the DLCL. A Cmty. Voice,
997 F.3d at 995. This 2021 Court Opinion led EPA to undertake a major
shift from its approach in the 2019 and 2021 final rules to the
residential LBP hazard control and the LBP activities program because
the Opinion found that EPA did not have the authority, when setting the
DLHS, to consider non-health factors. Consistent with the 2021 Court
Opinion, EPA is proposing to revise the DLHS in this rulemaking based
on only health considerations. See Unit IV for more information on the
proposed revisions to the DLHS and DLCL.
Additionally, Executive Order 13990, entitled Protecting Public
Health and the Environment and Restoring Science to Tackle the Climate
Crisis, directed agencies to, among other things, review certain
regulations promulgated between January 20, 2017, and January 20, 2021
(Ref. 12). The 2019 DLHS and 2021 DLCL final rules were among those
specifically designated for review in accordance with Executive Order
13990 (Ref. 13). As a result, the Agency was tasked with immediately
considering whether the final rules were aligned with the identified
national objectives from Executive Order 13990, such as listening to
the science, improving public health and protecting our environment,
and limiting exposure to dangerous chemicals. As a result of its own
review in response to Executive Order 13990 and the 2021 Court Opinion,
EPA has reconsidered the 2019 DLHS and 2021 DLCL final rules. If
finalized as proposed, EPA believes this rule will result in a
reduction of exposure to dust-lead (beyond the 2019 and 2021 rules).
E. What are the estimated incremental impacts of this action?
EPA has prepared an Economic Analysis (EA), which is available in
the docket, of the potential incremental impacts associated with this
rulemaking (Ref. 14). The analysis focused specifically on the subset
of target housing and child-occupied facilities affected by this rule.
Although the DLHS and DLCL do not compel specific actions under the LBP
Activities Rule to address identified LBP hazards, the DLHS and DLCL
are directly incorporated by reference into certain requirements
mandated by HUD in the
[[Page 50447]]
housing subject to HUD's Lead Safe Housing Rule (LSHR). As such, the
analysis estimates incremental costs and benefits for two categories of
events: (1) where dust-wipe testing occurs to comply with HUD's Lead-
Safe Housing Rule and (2) where dust wipe testing occurs in response to
blood lead testing that detects a blood lead level (BLL) above state or
Federal action levels. The following is a brief outline of the
estimated incremental impacts of this rulemaking.
1. Benefits
This rule would result in reduced exposure to lead, yielding
benefits to residents of pre-1978 housing from avoided adverse health
effects. For the subset of adverse health effects that were quantified
(i.e., the effect of avoided IQ decreases on lifetime earnings as an
indicator of improved cognitive function), the estimated monetized and
annualized benefits are $1.069 billion to $4.684 billion per year using
a 3% discount rate, and $231 million to $1.013 billion per year using a
7% discount rate. These benefits calculations are sensitive to the
discount rate used and the range in the estimated number of lead hazard
reduction events triggered by children with tested BLLs above state or
Federal action levels. With respect to the latter, the wide range is
driven largely by uncertainty about the BLLs at which action might be
taken, since in many states the action level is currently higher than
the Federal blood lead reference value.
Additionally, there are unquantified benefits. These additional
benefits include avoided adverse health effects in children, including
decreased attention-related behavioral problems, decreased cognitive
performance, reduced post-natal growth, delayed puberty, and decreased
kidney function. These additional unquantified benefits also include
avoided adverse health effects in adults, including cardiovascular
mortality and impacts on reproductive function and outcomes.
2. Costs
This rule is estimated to result in quantified costs of $536
million to $784 million per year. These costs are expected to accrue to
landlords, owners and operators of child-occupied facilities,
residential remodelers, and abatement firms. Real estate agents and
brokers may incur negligible costs related to the target housing
definition amendment. The cost calculations are highly sensitive to the
range in the estimated number of lead hazard reduction events triggered
by children with elevated BLLs. In the events affected by this rule,
incremental costs can be incurred for specialized cleaning used to
reduce dust-lead loadings (i.e., quantity of lead per unit of surface
area) to below the clearance levels. In some instances, floors will
also be sealed, overlaid, or replaced, or window sills will be sealed
or repainted. Additional costs may result from the retesting of lead
dust levels. Because of the lower laboratory reporting limits necessary
for testing lead dust levels under this rule, incremental laboratory
test costs are likely to increase. Additional potential impacts to HUD
programs and their beneficiaries are discussed in Unit V.
3. Small Entity Impacts
This rule would directly impact approximately 39,000 small
businesses of which 87% to 91% have cost impacts less than 1% of
revenues, 9% to 12% have impacts between 1% and 3%, and 1% have impacts
greater than 3% of revenues. These small entities include landlords,
owners and operators of child-occupied facilities, residential
remodelers, abatement firms, and real estate agents and brokers.
4. Environmental Justice
EPA is proposing this rulemaking under TSCA Title IV, as explained
in Unit I.B. This rule would address lead exposure, as discussed
throughout this proposal. EPA prepared an Economic Impact Analysis for
this rulemaking that assessed whether there are disproportionate
effects to communities from lead exposure. EPA identified an existing
concern: children living in communities with environmental justice
concerns have significantly higher BLLs than other children (Ref. 15).
This rule addresses health concerns for all affected communities,
including those identified with environmental justice concerns. As
identified in EPA's Economic Impact Analysis, this rule would reduce
identified disproportionate impacts to communities with environmental
justice concerns. The primary and alternative regulatory options under
consideration are expected to affect housing units receiving Federal
assistance under HUD's LSHR and housing units with a child with a blood
lead level above a Federal, state, or local blood lead threshold.
Because, in general, only lower income households are eligible to
receive Federal housing assistance, the occupants of housing subject to
the LSHR (and thus benefitting from the proposed regulation) are
considered an overburdened community. Additional details on any
identified disproportionate impacts to communities with environmental
justice concerns are contained in Unit IX.J. of this preamble and
Section 8.6 of the economic impact analysis.
5. Children's Environmental Health
Consistent with Executive Order 13045, EPA evaluated the health and
safety effects of this action on children. Children are
disproportionately impacted by lead exposure. Children can have greater
exposures than adults because they crawl on floors and often put their
hands and other objects (that can have lead from dust on them) into
their mouths and are more susceptible than adults to adverse health
effects due to their rapid anatomical growth and physiological
differences in lead uptake and metabolism. This rule protects children
from these disproportionate environmental health risks.
This action is subject to EPA's Policy on Children's Health
(https://www.epa.gov/children/childrens-health-policy-and-plan) because
the rule has considerations for human health and early life exposures.
Accordingly, we have evaluated the environmental health or safety
effects of dust-lead exposure on children. The results of this
evaluation are contained in the EA and the TSD, where the health
impacts of lead exposure on children are discussed more fully (Refs. 14
and 16). The documents referenced above are available in the public
docket for this action.
The primary purpose of this rule is to reduce exposure to dust-lead
hazards in target housing where children reside and in child-occupied
facilities. EPA's analysis indicates that there will be approximately
217,432 to 436,642 children under age six per year affected by the rule
(Ref. 14). Proposing GTZ for the DLHS is a more protective approach,
supported by the modeled results from the TSD and that the current
state of the science does not support identifying a threshold of dust-
lead exposure below which there would be no adverse human health
effects. Additionally, the proposed DLCL of 3/20/25 [mu]g/ft\2\ for
floors, window sills and troughs respectively, is the lowest option
under consideration and according to the TSD it is estimated to be the
most protective of children's IQ when compared to the other options
evaluated for this proposed rulemaking.
6. Effects on State, Local, and Tribal Governments
EPA has concluded that this action has federalism implications
because it imposes substantial direct compliance costs on public
housing authorities that state or local governments may be
[[Page 50448]]
obligated to offset. These compliance costs result from application of
EPA's standards in HUD's LSHR. While some HUD funding for LBP projects
exists, the Federal Government may not provide the funds necessary to
pay the entirety of the costs. These costs to public housing
authorities--estimated at $143 million for the primary option--cover
additional lead hazard reduction activities, cleaning, and dust-lead
testing to ensure that public housing units are in compliance with the
LSHR. EPA also estimates annual compliance costs of approximately $904
thousand to public school districts that operate a child-occupied
facility built before 1978. Additionally, states that have authorized
LBP Activities programs must demonstrate that they have DLHS and DLCL
at least as protective as the levels at 40 CFR 745.65 and 40 CFR
745.227. However, authorized states are under no obligation to continue
to administer the LBP Activities program, and if they do not wish to
adopt the new DLHS and DLCL they can relinquish their authorization. In
the absence of a state authorization, EPA will administer these
requirements. EPA provides a preliminary federalism summary impact
statement, which is found in Unit IX.E.
Additionally, this action contains a Federal mandate under the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA), 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, that may
result in expenditures of $100 million or more for State, local, and
Tribal governments, in the aggregate, or the private sector in any one
year. Accordingly, EPA has prepared a written statement as required
under section 202 of UMRA, which is summarized in Unit IX.D. and
included in the public docket (Ref. 17). This action is not subject to
the requirements of section 203 of UMRA because it contains no
regulatory requirements that exceed the inflation-adjusted cost
significance threshold or uniquely affect small governments.
This action would not have substantial direct effects (as specified
in Executive Order 13175) on one or more federally recognized Indian
Tribes. This action neither creates an obligation for Tribes to
administer LBP Activities programs nor alters EPA's authority to
administer these programs. However, through a live consultation on this
rulemaking the Agency will solicit input from Tribal officials from the
four Indian Tribes currently with authorized programs during the public
comment period. EPA will ensure that the consultation materials are
accessible to Tribal officials so that they may view it later as they
consider submitting feedback during the public comment period. The
consultation will also be open to any Tribal officials who would like
to participate. If a Tribal official is interested in attending the
consultation on behalf of an Indian Tribe, please consult the technical
person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
Additionally, this rule would not have any significant or unique
effects on small governments. See Unit IX. for more information on the
Executive Orders.
II. Background
A. Health Effects of Lead
Lead exposure has the potential to impact individuals of all ages,
but it is especially harmful to young children because the developing
brain can be particularly sensitive to environmental contaminants
(Refs. 4, 5, and 8). Ingestion of lead-contaminated dust is a major
contributor to BLLs in children, particularly those who reside in homes
built prior to 1978 (Refs. 17 and 18). Throughout early childhood,
floor dust contamination is a source of lead exposure with the
potential to affect children's BLLs (Ref. 20). Infants, toddlers, and
young children are more highly exposed to lead through dust on floors
and other surfaces at home and in child-care facilities than older
children and adults because they crawl on floors and often put their
hands and other objects that can have lead from dust on them into their
mouths. This is the main pathway of childhood exposure to lead (Ref.
4).
Lead exposure in young children can cause neurocognitive
decrements, such as reduction in intelligence as measured by IQ.
Depending on the exposure and other factors, the effect may persist
into adolescence and adulthood (Refs. 4, 8 and 20). In children, lead
exposure can also cause adverse developmental, neurobehavioral,
hematological, and immunological effects, as well as sensory effects
such as hearing loss (Refs. 4, 5, and 8). In adults, lead exposure can
cause adverse cardiovascular, hematological, renal, neurocognitive,
neurobehavioral, immunological, and reproductive effects (Refs. 4, 5,
and 8). Lead is also classified as ''reasonably anticipated to be a
human carcinogen by the National Toxicology Program (NTP) (Ref. 21) and
the EPA has concluded that lead exposure has a ``likely causal
relationship'' with carcinogenesis (Ref. 4). In addition to the harmful
effects experienced by the mother, lead can be transferred to the fetus
during pregnancy and there is evidence that suggests adverse effects on
the developing fetus including inhibited fetal growth (Refs. 4 and 5).
Given young children's disproportionate exposure to dust-lead in target
housing, this rulemaking principally considers their exposure and
associated adverse health effects.
The best available science informs EPA's understanding of the
relationships between exposures to dust-lead, BLLs, and adverse human
health effects. These relationships are summarized in the Integrated
Science Assessment (ISA) for Lead, finalized in June 2013 (known as the
2013 Lead ISA) (Ref. 4), and the Agency for Toxic Substances and
Disease Registry (ATSDR) Toxicological Profile for Lead, which was
released by the Department of Health and Human Services in August 2020
(``ATSDR Tox Profile for Lead'') (Ref. 8). The 2013 Lead ISA is a
synthesis and evaluation of scientific information on the health and
environmental effects of lead, including cognitive function decrements
in children (Ref. 4). The 2013 Lead ISA, as well as NIEHS' 2012
National Toxicology Program (NTP) monograph on lead, summarize the
scientific evidence regarding potential health effects associated with
low-level lead exposure and acknowledge uncertainties in the data
(Refs. 4 and 5). Based on the epidemiological studies and the evidence
available at that time, the EPA stated in the 2013 ISA that harmful
effects on children's cognition as measured by IQ were observed in
groups with mean BLLs as low as 2 [micro]g/dL, and further that ``A
threshold for cognitive function decrements is not discernable from the
available evidence (i.e., examination of early childhood blood Pb or
concurrent blood Pb in the range of < 1 to 10 [mu]g/dL).'' (Ref. 4).
Additionally, the Federal Lead Action Plan, which was written by the
President's Task Force on Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
to Children, consisting of 17 Federal departments and offices, states
that ``Lead exposure to children can result from multiple sources and
can cause irreversible and life-long health effects. No safe blood lead
level in children has been identified.'' (Refs. 9 and 22).
For further information regarding lead and its health effects, see
the TSD for this rulemaking and the 2013 ISA for lead (Refs. 4 and 16).
B. Federal Actions To Reduce Lead Exposures
Title X of the Housing and Community Development Act (also known as
the Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act of 1992 or
``Title X''), codified primarily at 42
[[Page 50449]]
U.S.C. 4822 and 4851 et seq. (Ref. 1), was a Federal response to the
national crisis of childhood lead exposure and assigned
responsibilities to Federal agencies with the overall goal of
developing a ``national strategy to build the infrastructure necessary
to eliminate lead-based paint hazards in all housing as expeditiously
as possible'' (42 U.S.C. 4851(a)(1)). Subtitle B of Title X (106 Stat.
3912 through 3924), addressing lead exposure reduction, added Title IV
to TSCA (codified at 15 U.S.C. 2681 et seq.) (Ref. 23).
Since the establishment of Title X, EPA and HUD have promulgated
both joint and separate regulatory actions in an effort to eliminate
LBP hazards. Those actions include requirements for disclosure of known
LBP or any known LBP hazards (Ref. 7), training and certification
requirements for contractors performing LBP activities (Ref. 24), the
establishment of standards that identify lead-based paint hazards and
post-abatement clearance levels (i.e., the DLHS and DLCL) (Refs. 2, 3
and 6), regulations covering renovation or remodeling activities (Refs.
25, 26 and 27), provisions for interested states, territories, and
Tribes to apply for and receive authorization to administer their own
LBP Activities and renovation, repair and painting (RRP) programs, and
requirements to control LBP and LBP hazards in federally-assisted
target housing (Ref. 28). Additional description of and background on
Federal actions to reduce lead exposure to can be found in the 2021
DLCL rulemaking (Ref. 3).
In addition, EPA has developed a Lead Strategy to lay out an all-
of-EPA plan to strengthen public health protections and address legacy
lead contamination for communities with the greatest exposures and
promote environmental justice (https://www.epa.gov/lead/final-strategy-reduce-lead-exposures-and-disparities-us-communities). EPA plans to
continue its work to equally protect people of all races, ethnic
groups, income levels, disabilities, and life stages, including young
children and pregnant women, who are the most vulnerable to the toxic
effects of lead. The proposed actions in this notice are part of those
efforts, as dust-lead from lead-based paint remains one of the leading
causes of lead exposure in the United States (Ref. 10).
C. Applicability and Uses of DLHS and DLCL
The DLHS and DLCL reconsidered in this regulation support EPA's
lead-based paint (LBP) activities program (i.e., inspections, risk
assessments, and abatements) and disclosure program, both of which
apply to target housing (i.e., most pre-1978 housing) and COFs (pre-
1978 non-residential properties where under the current regulation,
children 6 years of age or under spend a significant amount of time
such as daycare centers and kindergartens) (codified at 40 CFR part
745, subpart L). The statutory definition of target housing was amended
by Congress in 2017, and EPA is planning to make the necessary
conforming regulatory changes, including changing the age to under six
years of age, within this rulemaking; see Unit IV.F.1. for more
information. Apart from COFs, no other public or commercial buildings
are covered by this proposal.
The DLHS and DLCL are incorporated into requirements for risk
assessment and post-abatement work. When conducted, LBP activities must
be performed by a certified individual or firm (40 CFR 745.220) in
accordance with the work practices outlined in the 1996 LBP Activities
Rule (40 CFR 745.227). EPA administers the LBP activities program only
where states (including the District of Columbia and the Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico), territories, or Tribes are not authorized by EPA to
operate their own lead abatement programs (see 40 CFR part 745, subpart
Q). Currently the states in which the LBP program is administered by
EPA are Alaska, Arizona, Florida, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico,
New York, South Carolina, South Dakota, and Wyoming. In addition, EPA
administers the LBP program in the territories of American Samoa, Guam,
Northern Marianas, and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as well as most Tribal
Lands. All other states have EPA-authorized LBP programs. Additionally,
the Cherokee Nation, Upper Sioux Community, Lower Sioux Indian
Community, and the Bois Forte Band of Chippewa have EPA-authorized LBP
programs.
To administer the disclosure program, EPA and HUD jointly developed
regulations (known as the Disclosure Rule under section 1018 of Title X
(42 U.S.C. 4852d)) requiring a seller or lessor of most pre-1978
housing to disclose the presence of any known LBP and/or LBP hazards,
such as soil-lead hazards or dust-lead hazards, to the purchaser or
lessee (24 CFR part 35, subpart A; 40 CFR part 745, subpart F). Under
these regulations, the seller or lessor also must provide the purchaser
or lessee any available records or reports ``pertaining to'' LBP and/or
LBP hazards (40 CFR 745.107(a)(4); 24 CFR 35.88(a)(4)). Leases of
target housing are exempt from disclosure requirements in limited
circumstances, such as where the housing has been found to be LBP free
by a certified inspector (24 CFR 35.82; 40 CFR 745.101). For more
information on how the DLHS and DLCL revisions impact various EPA and
HUD programs, see Unit V.A. and Unit V.B.
1. Dust-Lead Hazard Standards
The DLHS support and implement major provisions of TSCA Title IV
and provide the basis for risk assessors to determine whether dust-lead
hazards are present during a risk assessment or a lead hazard screen. A
risk assessment may be required by the LSHR where dust wipe testing
occurs to comply with the LSHR (e.g., for certain properties receiving
Federal assistance) or by other law or regulation where dust-lead
testing occurs in response to the discovery of a child with a BLL that
exceeds a Federal, state, or local threshold. Additional information on
the LSHR and the subparts which require risk evaluation is discussed in
the EA (Ref. 14). The objective of a risk assessment is to determine,
and then report the existence, nature, severity, and location of LBP
hazards in residential dwellings and COFs through an on-site
investigation, which includes both a visual assessment and a collection
of environmental samples. The environmental samples include, among
other things, dust wipe samples (taken using documented methodologies
as defined in 40 CFR 745.227(a)(3)) from floors and window sills. Those
samples are required to be analyzed by a laboratory that is recognized
under NLLAP, which is an EPA program that defines the minimum
requirements and abilities that laboratories must meet to attain EPA
recognition as an accredited testing laboratory (the standards for the
program are laid out in the Laboratory Quality System Requirements)
(Ref. 29). A risk assessor compares the results of the dust wipe
samples to the current DLHS. If the dust-lead loadings from the samples
are at or above the applicable DLHS, then a dust-lead hazard is present
(40 CFR 745.227(d)).
Ultimately, the risk assessor prepares a risk assessment report for
the property owner or manager, which lists any LBP hazards (including a
dust-lead hazard) that were found and includes any recommendations for
next steps, such as acceptable options for controlling the hazards via
interim controls and/or abatement. These options are intended to allow
the property owner to make an informed decision about what actions to
take to protect the health of current and future residents. Under EPA's
rule, a risk assessment/risk assessment report does not compel or
require action;
[[Page 50450]]
rather it simply provides property owners with recommendations as
appropriate (40 CFR 745.227(d)).
A lead hazard screen also includes a visual inspection and
collection of environmental samples, although it is not as
comprehensive as a risk assessment or conducted as often. A lead hazard
screen may be used to determine if a full risk assessment is necessary.
During a lead hazard screen, a risk assessor checks for deteriorated
LBP and collects two composite dust samples (in residential dwellings),
one from floors and one from window sills (more composite dust samples
are required in multi-family dwellings or COFs). Samples are taken
using documented methodologies. The risk assessor prepares a lead
hazard screen report but is not required to include determinations
about the LBP hazards or recommendations for interim controls and/or
abatement but could include information on whether a follow-up risk
assessment is warranted (40 CFR 745.227(c)).
Both risk assessments and lead hazard screens can only be performed
by risk assessors certified according to the procedures in 40 CFR
745.226.
2. Dust-Lead Clearance Levels
The DLCL are incorporated into the post-abatement work practices
outlined in the LBP Activities Rule and represent ``the amount of lead
in dust on a surface following completion of an abatement activity''
(40 CFR 745.227, 745.223) (Ref. 24). TSCA section 401 defines
abatements as, ``measures designed to permanently eliminate lead-based
paint hazards,'' (15 U.S.C. 2681(1)), while interim controls are
``designed to temporarily reduce human exposure or likely exposure to
lead-based paint hazards,'' (40 CFR 745.83 and 745.223). Abatement and/
or interim controls could be recommended in a risk assessment report to
inform the property owner about potential future action(s) they could
take. After an abatement is complete, a risk assessor or inspector
determines whether there are any ``visible amounts of dust, debris or
residue,'' which will need to be removed before clearance sampling
takes place (40 CFR 745.227(e)(8)). Once the area is free of visible
dust, debris, and residue, and one hour or more after final post-
abatement cleaning ceases, clearance sampling for dust-lead (via dust
wipe samples) can take place and will be conducted ``using documented
methodologies that incorporate adequate quality control procedures''
(40 CFR 745.227(e)(8)). Only a properly trained and certified risk
assessor or inspector can conduct clearance sampling. An NLLAP-
recognized laboratory must analyze the dust wipe samples and a risk
assessor or inspector must compare the results from window sills,
floors, and window troughs to the appropriate DLCL.
Every post-abatement sample must test below the DLCL in order to
fulfill the post-abatement work practices of the LBP Activities Rule.
If a single sample is equal to or greater than the corresponding DLCL,
then the abatement fails clearance and the components represented by
the failing sample must be recleaned and retested (40 CFR
745.227(e)(8)). After all dust wipe samples show dust-lead loadings
below the DLCL, an abatement report is prepared (in accordance with the
requirements in 40 CFR 745.227(e)(10)), copies of any reports required
under the LBP Activities Rule are provided to the building owner (and
to potential lessees and purchasers under the LBP Disclosure Rule by
those building owners or their agents), and all required records are
retained by the abatement firm or by the individuals who developed each
report for no fewer than three years (40 CFR 745.227(i)).
D. Limitations of DLHS and DLCL
The DLHS are intended to identify dust-lead hazards during risk
assessments, while the DLCL are part of post-abatement work practices,
ensuring that clearance is achieved. Both regulatory values have
several key limitations. Since the DLHS and DLCL were established and
revised for the purposes of Title X and TSCA Title IV only, they do not
apply to housing and COFs built during or after 1978, nor do they apply
to pre-1978 housing that does not meet the definition of target housing
(40 CFR 745.61 and 745.223). If one chooses to apply the DLHS or the
DLCL to situations beyond the scope of Title X and TSCA Title IV, care
must be taken to ensure that the action taken in such settings is
appropriate, and that the action is adequate to provide any necessary
protection for children or other individuals exposed.
These standards cannot be used to identify that housing is free
from all risks from exposure to lead including but not limited to dust-
lead, soil-lead, or lead in drinking water, as risks are dependent on
many factors. For instance, the physical condition of a property that
contains LBP may change over time, resulting in an increase in risk.
Plus, EPA's DLHS do not require the owners of properties covered by
this proposal to evaluate their properties for the presence of dust-
lead hazards, nor to take action if dust-lead hazards are identified
(although these standards can be incorporated into certain requirements
mandated by state, Tribal and local governments, as well as other
Federal agencies). Additionally, consistent with the 2021 Court Opinion
which instructed EPA to consider only health factors when setting the
DLHS and affirmed that EPA could consider other factors (i.e.,
reliability, effectiveness, and safety) when setting the DLCL, EPA is
proposing that the DLCL would be greater than the DLHS based on its
consideration of other factors (e.g., laboratory capabilities/capacity,
and achievability after an abatement). As a result, and given the
change in the definition of abatement discussed in Unit IV.D. of this
preamble, there may be dust-lead left behind that meets the definition
of an LBP hazard after an abatement is considered complete, due to
dust-lead levels that are reportable but are less than the proposed
DLCL. Also, as has been the case historically, achieving the DLCL after
an abatement does not mean that the home is free from all exposure to
lead, including from other media such as soil-lead or lead in drinking
water. EPA will continue coordinating with other Federal agencies to
encourage best practices for owners and occupants of post-abatement
properties to conduct ongoing maintenance that will help to continue to
lower dust-lead levels, as well as work collectively as an Agency to
reduce overall lead exposure through all pathways.
E. Litigation Overview
As previously discussed, EPA revised the DLHS to 10 [mu]g/ft\2\ for
floors and 100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills in a final rule in July
2019 (Ref. 2). Later that same year, multiple organizations, including
A Community Voice, California Communities Against Toxics, Healthy Homes
Collaborative, New Jersey Citizen Action, New York City Coalition to
End Lead Poisoning, Sierra Club, United Parents Against Lead National,
and We Act for Environmental Justice, petitioned the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit to review the 2019 DLHS Rule (Ref. 30).
In response to the Petition for Review, on May 14, 2021, the Court
remanded the 2019 DLHS Rule without vacatur and directed EPA to revisit
it in conjunction with a reconsideration of the DLCL (Ref. 11). In its
opinion accompanying the remand, the Court instructed EPA to consider
only health factors when setting the DLHS and affirmed that EPA could
continue to consider non-health factors when setting the DLCL.
Specifically, the 2021 Court Opinion held that EPA's 2019 DLHS Rule
``looked to other factors,
[[Page 50451]]
including feasibility and efficacy,'' when setting the DLHS, instead of
``set[ting] the hazard standards at the point at which the level [of]
dust-lead creates hazards to human health'' A Cmty. Voice, 997 F.3d at
989 and 990. The Court also held that ``TSCA [Title] IV gives the EPA
latitude to consider `reliability, effectiveness, and safety''' when
promulgating regulations ``[w]ith respect to implementation, including
abatement,'' thus enabling consideration of practicability when setting
the DLCL. Id. at 995. The Court explained that ``[t]his is in line with
the overall statutory scheme that differentiates between identification
of hazards and implementation of remedial measures.'' Id. The Court
also explained elsewhere in the 2021 Court Opinion that, if an agency
relies on uncertainty for regulatory action or inaction, the agency
must ``provide reasons why uncertainty justifies their actions'' Id. at
993. Consistent with the 2021 Court Opinion, EPA is proposing to revise
the DLHS in this rulemaking based only on health considerations.
In addition, the Court held that EPA violated TSCA Title IV by
leaving the soil-lead hazard standards (SLHS) at the values set in
2001, reasoning that EPA had an ongoing duty to update the standards.
The SLHS identify lead-contaminated soil at target housing and pre-1978
COFs that would result in adverse human health effects. Soils that
contain lead at levels determined to be hazardous to human health are
considered contaminated. Lead inspectors, risk assessors, and abatement
professionals use the SLHS to determine if soil-lead hazards are
present and to inform options for reducing risk. Due to resource
considerations and to act as expeditiously as possible to revise the
DLHS and DLCL, EPA will address the SLHS in a separate rulemaking. (For
more background on resource constraints under TSCA, please see
Congressional testimony from EPA leadership (Refs. 31 and 32)). EPA
listed this SLHS rulemaking in the Spring 2023 Unified Agenda of
Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions under RIN 2070-AL12 as a long-term
action, indicating the Agency's commitment to meet the statutory
requirement of addressing the SLHS revision but indicating that the
Agency does not expect to propose this action in the next 12 months
(Ref. 33). EPA has however, initiated work on the SLHS rulemaking and,
as this rulemaking on the DLHS and DLCL progresses and as resources
allow, EPA intends to work further on the technical analysis for SLHS
in preparation for the SLHS rulemaking. The Agency also intends to
build off of the technical analysis utilized for this rulemaking for
the SLHS rulemaking, mirroring where possible so as to reduce resource
constraints and considerations.
The Court also held that, to be consistent with its health-only
interpretation of an LBP hazard (i.e., soil, dust), the definition of
LBP must ``encompass all levels of lead in paint that lead to adverse
human health effects.'' A Cmty. Voice, 997 F.3d at 992. The Court
stated that ``EPA ha[d] not explained why uncertainty justifies its
decision to leave the definition of lead-paint as-is.'' Id. at 993. The
Court also noted that much knowledge has been gained since Congress
adopted the 1992 definition and that the U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission (CPSC) has adopted a regulation that bans the production of
paint with lead content of over 0.009 percent by weight. The CPSC
standard, however, applies to new paint while TSCA is concerned with
the hazards posed by existing paint in pre-1978 structures and
different information and considerations are relevant in that context.
The definition of LBP (1.0 milligrams per square centimeter or more
than 0.5 percent by weight) is incorporated throughout the LBP
regulations, and application of this definition is central to how the
LBP program functions. In the 2019 DLHS Rule, EPA discussed the
Agency's need for more information to establish a statistically valid
causal relationship between concentrations of lead at low levels in
paint and dust lead loadings that cause lead exposure. Additionally,
information is still needed to quantify the direct ingestion of paint
through consumption of paint chips or through teething on painted
surfaces. Finally, it is important to understand how capabilities among
various LBP testing technologies would be affected under a possible
revision to the definition, such as field portable X-ray fluorescent
devices which are the primary tools for lead inspections and risk
assessments. They are calibrated to the current definition of LBP, and
so EPA needs to fully understand the repercussions such a revision to
the definition may have on these portable field technologies to ensure
the technological feasibility.
EPA plans to sponsor a technical workshop to obtain additional
information needed to address data gaps related to the definition of
LBP that were outlined in the 2019 DLHS Rule. In preparation for the
LBP technical workshop, the Agency performed a literature review for
sources relevant to the definition of LBP, consulted other Federal
agencies, and refreshed materials done for the 2019 rulemaking. With
this information the data gaps have been refined to add further
specificity, which allows for a more targeted scope for both continued
investigation and for the technical workshop. The more specific data
gaps that EPA continues to investigate include empirical data on the
relationship between low levels of lead in paint and dust-lead, as well
as data on the common exposure scenarios that may inform this
relationship (for example, dust-lead generation during a renovation
scenario versus slowly deteriorating paint). Currently the available
empirical data and modeling approaches for estimating the relationship
between lead content in on-the-wall paint and lead in related
environmental media, including dust, are applicable at or above the
current LBP definition. EPA believes that to use the available
empirical data and modeling approaches to estimate dust-lead loadings
at low levels of lead in paint (particularly levels that are lower than
the current definition by an order of magnitude or more) will introduce
significant uncertainty to any estimations. Data and models applicable
to lower levels of lead in paint are needed to develop an approach to
estimate dust-lead from low levels of lead in paint, which will allow
EPA to estimate incremental blood lead changes and associated health
effect changes that may occur due to low levels of lead in paint. For
the ingestion exposure pathway, EPA is exploring possible modeling
solutions as well as seeking quantitative measures of ingestion and
exposure (such as data on duration and frequency of consumption, and
common paint chip characteristics). Studies on this subject have
documented this behavior as a risk factor for exposure to lead from
LBP, however the studies have not provided quantitative estimates of
paint ingestion, which are needed to quantify exposure. Lastly, EPA
continues to investigate constraints to the field measurement options
for low levels of lead in paint. Different technologies have different
limitations in accuracy, processing time, detection limits,
accessibility, and destructiveness among other factors. These practical
considerations are important to consider in understanding how a change
in the definition may affect the ability of the regulated community to
use certain technologies, potentially impacting the residents of target
housing and occupants of COFs. On top of these data gaps, EPA is
exploring the relationship between the two different units used in the
current definition (milligram per
[[Page 50452]]
square centimeter and percent by weight) to inform whether and how to
develop a conversion between the two. The search for relevant
information to develop the conversion and exploration of the
uncertainty involved with such a conversion is underway. EPA intends
the technical workshop to explore these issues and position the Agency
to reconsider the definition of LBP in light of the most current
scientific information. EPA will collaborate with HUD on the technical
workshop regarding these lead-based paint definition data needs.
Similar to the SLHS rulemaking, due to resource considerations and
EPA's interest in acting as expeditiously as possible to revise the
DLHS and DLCL and to hold the aforementioned LBP technical workshop,
EPA will address the definition of lead-based paint in a separate
rulemaking. EPA has listed this rulemaking on the definition of LBP in
the Spring 2023 Unified Agenda of Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions
under RIN 2070-AL11 as a long-term action, indicating the Agency's
commitment to meet the statutory requirement of addressing the
definition of LBP revision but that the Agency does not expect to
propose this action in the next 12 months (Ref. 33).
Rulemakings such as those necessary for revisions to SLHS and the
definition of LBP are complex, highly resource-intensive activities
that usually occur as part of options development and decision-making.
A rulemaking's development generally entails scientific, economic,
legal, and other technical analyses. For many rulemakings, this
includes research and data gathering, which itself can sometimes
necessitate exercising other information collection tools and following
appropriate procedural requirements (e.g., Paperwork Reduction Act). To
develop a rulemaking, EPA also often consults with governments and key
stakeholders. Federal law may require such consultations based on
anticipated regulatory impacts (e.g., the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
and the Regulatory Flexibility Act). Additionally, various executive
orders may also require the Agency to engage in such consultations.
A rulemaking package often requires the development of complex
supporting documents including an EA and a TSD, similar to those
included alongside this reconsideration rulemaking (Refs. 14 and 16). A
complete TSD includes several components which may require internal and
external stakeholder dialogue and scientific peer review, including
model and input data revisions, health and exposure metrics of
interest, environmental fate and exposure mechanisms for either soil or
the definition of LBP, characterization of uncertainties in modeling,
and literature reviews (which have not been done for soil since before
the 2001 LBP Rule was finalized). If existing models and analytical
methods are insufficient to conduct the analysis to support the
rulemaking, then they must be developed as part of the technical work
done in support of the rulemaking effort. Developing new models can
take a considerable length of time and novel analyses may require peer-
review, further extending the rulemaking timeline. The magnitude and
effort of an SLHS TSD would mirror previous DLHS and DLCL TSDs; see the
technical documents prepared in support of the 2019 DLHS Final Rule,
the 2021 DLCL Final Rule, or this reconsideration rulemaking (Refs. 16,
19, and 34).
An EA includes various components such as a description of the need
for Federal regulation; a profile of affected industries and
populations; an overview of existing Federal, state and local
regulations; a specification of the baseline state of the world and
estimate of the number of events affected by the regulation; thorough
analysis on the consequences of regulatory policy being considered and
how regulated entities will respond; quantification and monetization of
the regulation's costs, benefits, and net benefits; a description of
unquantified or qualitative benefit descriptions; and an assessment of
uncertainty surrounding estimates. An EA also includes various
additional analyses related to statutory compliance and Executive
orders, including but not limited to RFA/SBREFA (Small Business
Impacts), UMRA (Unfunded State, Local, or Tribal Mandates), PRA
(Paperwork Reduction), Executive Order 12898 (Environmental Justice),
Executive Order 13045 (Protection of Children), Executive Order 13132
(Federalism), Executive Order 13175 (Coordination with Tribal
Governments), and Executive Order 13211 (Energy Effects). A rulemaking
also involves preparing Federal Register documents to present,
generally, the preamble to and regulatory text of the proposed and
final rule. Such published documents reflect the culmination of the
development and review of the complex supporting documents and the
resulting decision-making, which includes internal steps at the Agency
to reach office wide agreement, as well as external to the Agency, such
as holding potential public consultations, completing interagency
review and convening a Small Business Advocacy Review (SBAR) Panel as
necessary. These processes can also take many months or years. The
proposed and final rules also present statutory and Executive Order
review analyses. The Agency may also need to publish Federal Register
documents to extend or reopen public comment periods--or even to
announce new public comment periods related to a Notice of Data
Availability or a supplemental Notice of Proposed Rulemaking--should
new information become available, or the Agency determine that it needs
to alter its proposal before taking final action.
The current rulemaking on the DLHS and DLCL is one more step toward
complete implementation of TSCA Title IV. Given existing resource
constraints and the additional complications for the SLHS and the
definition of LBP discussed earlier in this section, EPA does not
believe that either the SLHS or the definition of LBP could have been
reconsidered on this current rulemaking's timeline. Instead, EPA will
reconsider the SLHS and the definition of LBP as important next steps.
Courts ``have recognized that, under the `pragmatic' one-step-at-a-time
doctrine, `agencies have great discretion to treat a problem partially'
and `regulat[e] in a piecemeal fashion.' '' Transportation Div. of the
Int'l Ass'n of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail & Transportation Workers v. Fed.
R.R. Admin., 10 F.4th 869, 875 (D.C. Cir. 2021) (quoting Ctr. for
Biological Diversity v. EPA, 722 F.3d 401, 409-10 (D.C. Cir. 2013));
cf. Massachusetts v. EPA, 549 U.S. 497, 524 (2007) (recognizing that
``[a]gencies, like legislatures, do not generally resolve massive
problems in one fell regulatory swoop''). EPA intends to conduct
rulemakings on the SLHS and the definition of LBP, as identified in the
Spring 2023 Unified Agenda of Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions, to
address the issues identified by the Ninth Circuit in its May 2021
opinion (Refs. 11 and 33).
III. Technical Analyses
In its evaluation of options for reconsidering the DLHS and DLCL,
EPA estimated children's BLL and associated IQ decrements. Estimated
BLL and IQ decrements provide the means to quantify the effects that
long-term exposure to the analyzed dust-lead loading levels can have on
young children. The TSD (Ref. 16) and EA (Ref. 14) accompanying this
proposed rulemaking estimated the expected impacts of the candidate
DLHS and DLCL options on BLLs and associated IQ decrements of exposed
children in target housing. See Unit IV. on the
[[Page 50453]]
approaches for developing the options for DLHS and DLCL.
The TSD uses both mechanistic and empirical models to predict the
possible BLLs of children in target housing exposed to homogenous
candidate values for dust-lead levels (e.g., candidate options for the
DLHS) and characterizes the probabilistic variability due to biological
response and variation in other sources of lead exposure at each
possible candidate dust-lead level. The first approach used mechanistic
modeling that includes use of age-specific ingestion rates, activity
patterns, and background exposures. The second approach used empirical
data that includes co-reported dust-lead and BLL measurements in the
homes of children; these dust-lead and BLL data are used to develop an
empirical relationship to estimate BLLs for each candidate dust-lead
level. Both approaches (mechanistic and empirical) are compared to
increase our confidence in the estimates of the relationship between
dust-lead loadings and BLL (Section 6.3 of the TSD). The various
components of the model and input parameters used in this rulemaking
have been the subject of multiple Science Advisory Board Reviews,
workshops and publications in the peer reviewed literature focused on
dust-lead (Refs. 18, 35, 36, 37, 38, and 39). Specifically, the
mechanistic blood lead modeling for this rulemaking reflects the
application of an extensively peer-reviewed model by EPA (the
Stochastic Human Exposure and Dose Simulation--Integrated Exposure
Uptake Biokinetic model coded in R, referred to as R-SHEDS-IEUBK) using
updated data sources and tailored to the dust-lead target housing
scenario, described in depth in Appendix E of the TSD.
Detailed discussion of the limitations and uncertainties in blood
lead modeling at the low BLL and exposure levels considered for this
rulemaking can be found in Section 8 of the TSD (Ref. 16). In brief,
IEUBK, as a standalone biokinetic model, was evaluated for performance
in groups for which the geometric mean BLL is as low as 2.3 [micro]g/
dL. Some of the groups at the lowest levels of dust lead exposure
modeled for this rulemaking had mean estimated BLL lower than this
value (between 0.81 and 1.12 [micro]g/dL depending upon age), which are
outside the range for which the underlying biokinetic model (IEUBK) was
evaluated. In order to address this concern, EPA conducted an
evaluation of the R-SHEDS-IEUBK model used in this analysis with a
dataset for which the geometric mean BLL in children aged 1 to 2 years
old is 1.09 [micro]g/dL. This evaluation found that the R-SHEDS-IEUBK
model had good agreement with the reference dataset at low percentiles,
as well as at the median and at the 95th percentile. See Table 8-2 and
Appendix D in the TSD (Ref. 16).
In contrast to the TSD, which estimates the health risk and
exposure associated with dust-lead loading candidates for a
hypothetical subpopulation of children in target housing without
consideration to how many children are actually affected by the rule,
the EA estimates benefits that accrue to only the subpopulation which
would be impacted by the DLHS and DLCL revisions. Rather than assuming
all households living in target housing are impacted by the regulatory
change, the EA instead estimates benefits solely for instances when
dust-lead levels would be tested. These instances of dust wipe testing
are henceforth referred to as ``triggering events.'' For the
subpopulation of children who are affected by these events, the EA
estimates quantified benefits from avoided IQ losses. The EA uses real
world data to characterize (1) variability in the housing stock that is
affected, (2) how surface-by-surface dust-lead loadings change due to
the DLHS/DLCL, (3) the number of children living in affected housing
units, and (4) resultant changes in BLLs and IQ that are expected. In
modeling the relationships between dust-lead loadings and BLL/IQ, the
EA presents results based on both the empirical and mechanistic
approaches laid out in the TSD. EPA considered several methods to
impute the relationship between BLL and IQ below the lowest BLLs
observed in the underlying empirical data, and a range of IQ loss
results based on the methods considered are presented in the EA (see
TSD section 5 and EA section 6.4). The IQ loss estimates presented in
Unit IV. and in Section 7 of the TSD result from a linearization
method, which resulted in the most conservative estimates of IQ loss.
Both the TSD and the EA present probabilistic distributions of
estimated change in BLL or IQ decrement for young children up to the
age of six. However, these distributions represent subpopulations of
exposed children characterized in differing ways. The TSD presents the
expected response for a hypothetical exposure, accounting for varying
sources of background exposure (e.g., food, soil, water) and biological
variability. The EA estimates expected results from triggering events,
recognizing exposure to the hypothetical conditions in the TSD are rare
as dust-lead levels across target housing are generally quite low and
existing abatements/interim controls typically overshoot the clearance
levels considerably. Thus, the distributions of BLLs and IQ decrements
presented in the TSD represent the impact of children's exposures to
hypothetical dust-lead levels while the EA estimates distributions of
BLLs and IQ decrements across all children living in housing that would
be directly impacted by this proposed rule.
The analyses that EPA developed and presented in the TSD and EA for
this rule were specifically designed to estimate BLLs and associated
effects on IQ that might accrue to the subpopulation, i.e., children
living in pre-1978 housing. EPA notes that its different program
offices estimate exposures for different populations, different media,
and under different statutory requirements and thus different models or
parameters may be a better fit for their purposes. As such, the
approach and modeling parameters chosen for this rulemaking should not
necessarily be construed as appropriate for, or consistent with, those
of other EPA programs.
IV. Proposed Rule
As explained in Unit II.E., the 2021 Court Opinion of the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that EPA must reconsider
the DLHS in conjunction with the DLCL (Ref. 11). Accordingly, EPA is
proposing to change the DLHS from 10 [micro]g/ft\2\ and 100 [micro]g/
ft\2\ for floors and window sills to a non-numeric value called GTZ or
any reportable level of dust-lead analyzed by an NLLAP-recognized
laboratory. Lowering the DLHS (independent of the DLCL revisions)
provides the regulatory benefit of additional disclosure of LBP hazards
in target housing and COFs. This results in an estimated increase in
individuals who are aware of the presence of dust-lead and the various
actions that can be taken to minimize dust-lead hazards and take
actions to protect themselves from exposure. See Unit IV.A.1. for
additional information describing the proposed DLHS of ``any reportable
level.'' EPA is also proposing to revise the DLCL from 10 [micro]g/
ft\2\, 100 [micro]g/ft\2\ and 400 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors, window
sills, and troughs to 3 [micro]g/ft\2\, 20 [micro]g/ft\2\, and 25
[micro]g/ft\2\, and requesting comment on an alternative DLCL option of
5 [micro]g/ft\2\, 40 [micro]g/ft\2\, and 100 [micro]g/ft\2\.
A. Dust-Lead Hazard Standards Approach
In the 2001 LBP Hazards Rule EPA discussed the dilemma the Agency
faced when establishing a dust-lead hazard, especially the challenges
associated with choosing ``which [BLLs]
[[Page 50454]]
are truly hazardous'' and how to interpret the statutory criteria from
TSCA Section 401 (i.e., ``would result in adverse human health
effects'' (15 U.S.C. 2681(10)) given the uncertainties that existed
(Ref. 6). As a result, EPA took a pragmatic approach to setting the
DLHS and focused on the potential for risk reduction, cost-benefit
balancing and other relevant factors, establishing the standards at 40
[micro]g/ft\2\ and 250 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors and sills,
respectively. As an aside, at that time the Agency did not establish a
DLHS for troughs as it found that window sills and troughs were highly
correlated and concluded that testing both surfaces would not improve a
risk assessor's ability to characterize risk. Building off the
precedent established in 2001, the 2019 DLHS Rule ``evaluated the
relationship between dust-lead levels and children's health, and . . .
the application of those standards in lead risk reduction programs.''
In addition, when establishing the 2019 DLHS, EPA also assessed
laboratory capabilities, resources for addressing LBP hazards and
consistency across the Federal Government (Ref. 2). At that time EPA
reasonably believed it had the discretion to set the DLHS based on both
risk reduction and whether the standards were achievable, especially
given the existing programs in place to reduce LBP hazards and revised
the DLHS to 10 [micro]g/ft\2\ and 100 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors and
sills, respectively (Ref. 2).
Ultimately, the 2021 Court Opinion, which is discussed in Unit
II.E., led EPA to undertake a major shift in its approach to
residential LBP hazard control and the LBP activities program because
the Opinion found that EPA did not have the authority, when setting the
DLHS, to consider non-health factors (e.g., laboratory capabilities,
resources for addressing LBP hazards, consistency across the Federal
Government, or cost-benefit balancing). Consistent with the 2021 Court
Opinion, EPA is proposing to revise the DLHS in this rulemaking based
only on health considerations. EPA intends health-only considerations
in this DLHS context to refer to the effects of lead on health after
exposure to dust-lead loadings, considering the statutory definition's
focus on ``any condition that causes exposure to lead from lead-
contaminated dust . . . that would result in adverse human health
effects'' (15 U.S.C. 2681(10)). These health-only considerations do not
include broader public health concerns (such as health trade-offs and
policy impacts on public housing).
1. Rationale for Selecting the Proposed DLHS
EPA is proposing a non-numeric DLHS that is any reportable level of
dust-lead for floors and window sills as analyzed by an NLLAP-
recognized laboratory. Proposing a DLHS for floors and window sills
only, is consistent with current practice and regulatory history which
has not included a hazard standard specifically for troughs.
``Reportable level'' is not defined in EPA's 40 CFR 745 or EPA's
current guidance for NLLAP-recognized laboratories, titled Laboratory
Quality System Requirements (or LQSR 3.0). EPA is proposing to define
``reportable level'' in the regulations to mean the lowest analyte
concentration (or amount) that does not contain a ``less than''
qualifier and that is reported with confidence for a specific method by
an NLLAP-recognized laboratory. In other words, EPA interprets ``any
reportable level'' of dust-lead to be any level greater than or equal
to the lowest value a laboratory can reliably report to a client or the
regulated community (i.e., any reportable level of dust-lead in a
laboratory sample result report that does not contain a ``less than''
(``<'') qualifier).
Under the LQSR, an NLLAP-recognized laboratory must demonstrate it
can achieve a quantitation limit equal to or less than 50% of the
lowest action level for dust wipe samples (more discussion on the
``action level'' is found in Unit IV.A.1.c). In addition, a report of
zero concentration is not permitted and laboratories must establish a
method of limiting the lower reported values to a positive finite lead
level that is appropriate for the technology being used. Measured lead
levels below this positive finite value must be reported with a
qualifier ``less than'' (``<'') this positive finite value (Ref. 29).
Based on these current minimum standards for NLLAP-recognized
laboratories and previous laboratory stakeholder input, EPA expects
that the lowest reportable level will be equivalent to the laboratory's
quantitation limit in some cases, but could be lower depending on
laboratory capabilities. Ultimately, the proposed DLHS of ``any
reportable level'' is not dependent on the DLCL or quantitation limit,
but rather is based on the capabilities of individual laboratories. EPA
is requesting comment on the appropriateness of this interpretation and
of the proposed definition of ``reportable level.''
EPA refers to this non-numeric DLHS approach as GTZ. Given the
statutory language in TSCA Section 401 that defines what a ``LBP
hazard'' is (i.e., as conditions of LBP and lead-contaminated dust and
soil that ``would result in adverse human health effects''), EPA
believes that it cannot set the DLHS at zero because zero does not
identify a level of exposure to dust-lead loadings that would cause
adverse health effects. Rather EPA believes the proposed standard of
``any reportable level'' is an appropriate DLHS based on dust-lead
exposure related health factors only, and in accordance with the 2021
Court Opinion by taking into consideration the modeling data outlined
in TSD and the current state of the science on lead exposure and
children's BLL. The proposed GTZ approach represents a shift in the LBP
activities program to a more inclusive and protective DLHS, compared to
the current 2019 and 2021 levels. If finalized as proposed, the GTZ
approach will be inclusive of any reportable level of dust-lead and
will not distinguish between severe, less severe, or negligible risks.
As discussed further in Unit IV.A.2 Other DLHS Options EPA
Considered, two other approaches were also considered for revising the
DLHS, including a numeric standard based entirely on the modeling data
laid out in the TSD (summarized in TSD Table 2-2), and an approach that
would use the background dust-lead levels of housing built in or after
1978 (called post-1977 background). EPA seeks comment on its proposed
and potential alternative approaches to updating the DLHS.
a. GTZ Rationale: Modeled Discussion
The GTZ approach is primarily supported by the modeling results
provided in the TSD and discussed further in Unit IV.A.3. In the TSD
(which is introduced in Unit III) EPA estimated BLL and related changes
in IQ (a measure of cognitive function) in young children. The results
show that as dust-lead levels in housing decrease below the current
standard (i.e., 10 [micro]g/ft\2\ and 100 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors and
window sills), so do children's BLL and IQ decrement from lead
exposure. When modeling GTZ, EPA used estimated dust-lead loadings
ranging from 0.7 to 2.2 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors and 0.8 to 4.4
[micro]g/ft\2\ for window sills. These are assumed values for a GTZ
DLHS paired with the proposed or alternative DLCL, and account for the
lower reporting thresholds that EPA estimates laboratories will
realistically attain under this proposal. EPA collected information on
real-world laboratory reporting limits from stakeholder outreach
conversations as well as
[[Page 50455]]
publicly available sources. GTZ values listed above are based on the
average of reporting limits at laboratories that currently report
numeric dust wipe loadings at levels 50% below the proposed DLCL
options. For the details of these calculations, see Sections 4.1 and
2.4.6 of the EA (Ref. 14). EPA also used a hypothetical dust-lead
loading value of zero. Details about how the TSD results are
interpreted are described in Unit IV.A.2., and the modeled results
themselves, which are supportive of the GTZ approach, are described in
Unit IV.A.3.
b. GTZ Rationale: No Threshold Has Been Identified
According to TSCA Title IV, the DLHS should identify the level of
dust-lead exposure that ``would result in adverse human health
effects'' (15 U.S.C. 2681(10)). GTZ is a more protective approach
compared to the current regulatory landscape and all the options that
were considered for this rulemaking (except post-77 background). GTZ
also acknowledges that the current state of scientific evidence does
not identify a BLL threshold below which there is no association of
adverse effects on children's cognition. Depending on the exposure and
other factors, the effects on IQ associated with childhood lead
exposure may persist into adolescence and adulthood (Refs. 4 and 8).
EPA also favored such an approach for the DLHS under TSCA Title IV in
part because a more protective approach to DLHS, such as GTZ, aligns
with the Congressional purpose for disclosure elsewhere under Title X
(notably, as implemented in the Lead Disclosure Rule) and because
Congress used the word ``hazard'' in the ``lead-based paint hazard''
term, even though the definition uses more risk-like language by
introducing consideration of the level of exposure that would result in
adverse health effects.
EPA's 2013 Lead ISA stated that harmful effects on children's
cognition as measured by IQ were observed in groups with mean BLLs as
low as 2 [micro]g/dL, and further that despite there being some
uncertainty in epidemiological studies on lead exposure and BLLs
(especially for older children and adults) that ``A threshold for
cognitive function decrements is not discernable from the available
evidence (i.e., examination of early childhood blood Pb or concurrent
blood Pb in the range of <1 to 10 [mu]g/dL).'' (Ref. 4)). This
statement was based on a synthesis of the extensive literature
examining the relationship between BLL and cognitive function,
including a landmark pooled cohort study meta-analysis by Lanphear et
al. (Refs. 40 and 41), the results of which have been confirmed by
repeated re-analysis (Refs. 42 and 43). While the 2013 ISA went on to
state that ``the current evidence does not preclude the possibility of
a threshold for neurodevelopmental effects in children existing with
lower blood levels than those currently examined'', the Federal Lead
Action Plan articulated the U.S. Government position that ``no safe
blood lead level in children has been identified.'' (Ref. 9). Further,
the analysis that supports this rule examined the 95th percentile of
children's modeled BLLs and the associated IQ losses (Ref. 16), which
for all options considered is at or above the group mean BLLs for which
IQ loss is observed in the literature examined in the ISA (Ref. 4 and
16).
EPA understands the limitations of the epidemiological analyses,
the lack of scientific studies evaluating low BLLs and acknowledges
that a threshold could exist that is currently unidentified; but
ultimately in its assessment of the available scientific research
findings in the 2013 ISA for lead, the Agency observed that there is no
evidence of a threshold below which there are no harmful health effects
from lead exposure. EPA continues to acknowledge the aforementioned
uncertainties and notes that science is constantly evolving and, as
additional data become available (e.g., exposure and health impacts),
then EPA may undertake a new rulemaking to propose changing the
standards in the future to reflect any new data or information about an
acceptable threshold of effects on cognition in children.
Additionally, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
acknowledges that ``[s]cientific evidence suggests that there is no
known safe [BLL], because even small amounts of lead can be harmful to
a child's developing brain'' (Ref. 44). When the original DLHS and DLCL
were proposed and finalized in 1998 and 2001 the CDC had set a ``level
of concern'' for children's BLL at >=10 [micro]g/dL (Refs. 45 and 46).
In 1991, when that level was established as a level that should prompt
public health actions, the CDC concurrently recognized that a BLL of 10
[micro]g/dL did not define a threshold for the harmful effects of lead
(Ref. 45). One goal for the level was that ``all lead poisoning
prevention activities should be to reduce children's BLLs below 10
[micro]g/dL'' (Ref. 45). Accordingly, in the 1998 proposal EPA stated
that, ``[a]lthough the scientific community has not been able to
identify a threshold of exposure below which adverse health effects do
not occur, the evidence of health effects below 10 [micro]g/dL is not
sufficiently strong to warrant concern'' (Ref. 47). In the final rule
in 2001, EPA determined the lowest candidate DLHS by using a 1 to 5%
probability of an individual child developing a BLL of 10 [mu]g/dL
(Ref. 6).
In the 2019 DLHS Rule, EPA recognized that ``[a]lthough health
risks to young children decrease with decreasing dust-lead levels, no
non-zero lead level, including background levels, can be shown to
eliminate health risk entirely.'' At that time, EPA also recognized the
CDC's 2012 decision to discontinue its use of a 10 [micro]g/dL blood
lead ``level of concern'' and to introduce a population-based blood
lead reference value (BLRV) to identify children exposed to more lead
than most other children in the United States (Ref. 48). The BLRV
represents the 97.5th percentile of the U.S. population BLL
distribution in children ages 1 to 5 from the National Health and
Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES). This means that by definition
2.5 percent of children ages 1 to 5 in the NHANES survey have a BLL
greater than the BLRV. This metric was established in part because ``no
safe blood lead level in children ha[d] been identified,'' (Ref. 48).
In 2012 the BLRV was 5 [micro]g/dL, based on young children's BLL in
the 2007-2010 NHANES, and in 2021 it was lowered to 3.5 [micro]g/dL
based on the children's lower BLLs observed in the 2015-2018 NHANES
(Ref. 46). The BLRV is not based on a health endpoint, but rather is a
statistical point in the distribution of children's BLLs in the U.S.
used as a screening tool to identify children who have higher levels of
lead in their blood compared with most children.
Establishing a health-based only standard for dust-lead hazard, as
well as clearance levels that consider other factors (i.e., take into
account reliability, effectiveness, and safety), is similar to EPA's
implementation of some other programs governing lead exposure. For
example, under the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA), EPA is required to
establish a maximum contaminant level goal (MCLG) at a level at which,
in the Administrator's judgement, ``no known or anticipated adverse
effects on the health of persons occur and which allows an adequate
margin of safety.'' Section 1412(b)(4). EPA established a health-based
MCLG of zero for lead in drinking water. National Primary Drinking
Water Regulations include either an enforceable maximum contaminant
level (MCL) or treatment technique requirements, EPA can set a
treatment technique requirement in lieu
[[Page 50456]]
of an MCL if ``it is not economically or technologically feasible to
ascertain the level of the contaminant.'' SDWA Section 1412(b)(7)(A).
In addition to the MCLG, EPA established treatment technique
requirements for lead taking into account several factors (56 FR
26460). Unlike many other drinking water contaminants, lead is
generally not present in source water but enters drinking water from
corrosion of plumbing materials that contain lead including lead
service lines and premise plumbing. Occurrence of lead in drinking
water is variable within a system and across systems due to factors
such as amount of lead in any individual site's plumbing, physical and
chemical characteristics of the water, and consumer use patterns.
Additionally, sources of lead can be beyond the control of the water
system to replace, such as premise plumbing. Water systems can adjust
or add treatment to control the corrosivity of the water to reduce lead
leaching from lead pipes and premise plumbing. EPA is required to
consider technical feasibility and costs when establishing the
treatment technique, which is analogous to EPA's development of the
clearance levels that also include non-health-based factors. Under
EPA's treatment technique rule for lead in drinking water, EPA
established a non-health-based action level which, if exceeded,
requires water systems to take actions to reduce elevated levels of
lead in drinking water.
Because of the 2021 Court Opinion remanding the DLHS for
reconsideration based only on health factors, the results of the
analysis in the TSD, and the lack of a discernible threshold in the
evidence for the association of blood lead with harmful effects on
cognition in young children, EPA proposes to change the DLHS to any
reportable level of lead analyzed by an NLLAP-recognized laboratory.
c. LQSR Action Level
Given that GTZ is a non-numeric value, if finalized as proposed,
the DLCL, rather than the DLHS, would become the ``action level'' as
described in the Laboratory Quality System Requirements (LQSR 3.0), as
well as for when a risk assessor would recommend an abatement (see Unit
IV.D. for more information on EPA's proposed change to the definition
of abatement). According to the current LQSR, NLLAP-recognized
laboratories that analyze dust wipe samples for lead must show that
they can achieve a quantitation limit ``equal to or less than . . . 50%
of the lowest action level [i.e., regulatory limit] for dust wipe
samples'' (Ref. 29). The quantitation limit must also be ``at least 2
times but no greater than 10 times the method detection limit'' (Ref.
29). Therefore, due to the non-numeric nature of the proposed DLHS of
``any reportable level,'' these current testing requirements will rely
on the numerical DLCL to establish the quantitation limit that any
laboratory (that wishes to maintain or obtain NLLAP recognition) must
be able to demonstrate. Note however, that the proposed DLHS of ``any
reportable level'' is still considered distinct from the DLCL and the
quantitation limit.
2. Other DLHS Approaches EPA Considered
EPA considered two other approaches for revising the DLHS: a
numeric standard based on the probability of exceedance of one or more
IQ or BLL metrics as determined by the Agency, and an approach that
would use the background dust-lead levels of housing built in 1978 and
beyond as the DLHS (known as ``post-1977 background''). The three
approaches (i.e., GTZ, numeric standard, and post-1977 background) take
different analytical paths to revising the DLHS based only on health
considerations. EPA is proposing the GTZ approach, given the discussion
laid out in Unit IV.A.1. but welcomes comment on the other two
approaches outlined in both the preamble and in the TSD (Ref. 16).
a. Numeric Standard Approach
In addition to the GTZ approach, EPA also explored a ``numeric
standard'' approach, meaning that the Agency would propose a numerical
DLHS with a rationale based solely on the interpretation of the TSD
results. To do so, the Agency would need to establish a health or
exposure metric of interest (i.e., target BLL or IQ change) that would
be acceptably protective of human health. Estimated BLL and IQ
decrements in children exposed to hypothetical dust-lead loading values
are included in the TSD for every DLHS candidate considered for all
three approaches (i.e., GTZ, numeric standard and post-1977
background), as well as the primary and alternative DLCL options. These
values are estimated to help EPA analyze the impacts of this proposed
rulemaking on the health (i.e., IQ decrement) and dust-lead exposure of
the subpopulation in question (i.e., young children in pre-1978
buildings and COFs) and to inform a costs and benefits analysis in the
EA.
In 2001 and 2019, EPA expressed the challenges of meeting the
statutory criterion for defining an LBP hazard (15 U.S.C. 2681(10))
because it requires EPA to choose a cutoff for when unacceptable risk
exists. EPA noted in 2001, even if the science and environmental-lead
prevalence data were perfect, there would likely be no agreement on the
level, or certainty, of risk that is envisioned in the phrase ``would
result in adverse human health effects.'' Thus, EPA explained that it
``would not be appropriate to base a [LBP] hazard standard on any
specific probability of exceeding any specific [BLL].'' (Refs. 2 and
6). EPA continues to agree with the challenges highlighted in 2001 and
2019.
When choosing health or exposure metrics to evaluate the DLHS
approaches based on the TSD results, the Agency has considered three
factors: (1) the CDC's BLRV (which is a not a health-based end point
but rather is a statistical measure of relative exposure), (2)
responsiveness to feedback received previously from various scientific
bodies, and (3) Agency precedent. The TSD considers BLL and IQ changes
in two ways: relative to aggregate/total lead exposure (which includes
exposure from other media: soil, diet, water, and air in addition to
dust) and relative to incremental/dust-only lead exposure (Ref. 16).
For example, in 2001 the lowest DLHS candidate was identified by using
a 1 to 5% probability of an individual child developing a BLL of 10
[mu]g/dL (Ref. 6), which represented total BLL, inclusive of exposure
to lead through other media.
In the TSD analyses for this proposal, EPA compared BLL in young
children, with an emphasis on 2-year-old children because this is the
age of greatest modeled exposure, from aggregate or total exposure from
all media (i.e., dust, soil, diet, water, and air) to the CDC BLRV of
3.5 [mu]g/dL. This BLL value is not-health based and does not represent
a toxicity threshold (and is subject to change over time, since the CDC
BLRV changes as the BLLs in the population change); however, CDC
explains that it can still be used as a tool to `` (1) help determine
whether medical or environmental follow-up actions should be initiated
for an individual child and (2) prioritize communities with the most
need for primary prevention of exposure and evaluate the effectiveness
of prevention efforts'' (Ref. 46). Importantly, even at zero dust-lead,
children are already estimated to have a 5.7% probability of exceeding
the BLRV given the impact of background lead exposures from other media
(e.g., soil, diet, water, and air) (Ref. 16).
[[Page 50457]]
Table 1--Percent Exceedance Values for Zero, Age: 2 Yr Old (30 Months)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Probability
Floor ---------------------------------------------------------------
Approach ([micro]g/ Sill ([micro]g/ Dust only BLL
ft[sup2]) ft[sup2]) Total BLL >3.5 Total BLL >5 Dust only BLL >2.5 [micro]g/
[micro]g/dL [micro]g/dL >1 [micro]g/dL dL
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Zero \1\................................................ 0 0 5.7% 2.2% 0.0% 0.0%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The exceedance values for zero dust-lead are provided for comparison with the DLHS candidates; it is not a candidate value.
In 2011, EPA's Scientific Advisory Board (SAB) and in 2012 the
Children's Health Protection Advisory Committee (CHPAC) both expressed
support for an incremental BLL approach that focuses on dust-lead
exposure only. In 2011 SAB reviewed EPA's Approach for Developing Lead
Dust Hazard Standards for Residences (November 2010 Draft) and Approach
for Developing Lead Dust Hazard Standards for Public and Commercial
Buildings (November 2010 Draft) and provided feedback that there are
several key advantages to the incremental approach (e.g., reducing
uncertainty from estimating exposures from other media) and provided
that a change in BLL ``of 1 or 2 [mu]g/dL at the 90th percentile''
could be an example of a target risk level. Similarly, CHPAC expressed
support for using an incremental approach and preferred levels such
that an adverse change in BLL is ``no greater than 1 or 2.5 [micro]g/
dL'' (Ref. 49).
As a result, EPA also estimated what dust-lead levels (considering
only the dust-lead component in the multi-media exposure modeling)
would result in incremental BLL change ranging between 1 and 2.5 [mu]g/
dL based on exposure assumptions described in the TSD (Ref. 16).
For this reconsideration rulemaking the Agency considered the
estimated total/aggregate IQ change (i.e., the estimated total or
aggregate IQ change from modeled BLL including all modeled sources of
lead exposure) at age six and compared it to a threshold of 1 to 2
points. IQ changes due to background exposures to lead in other media
(e.g., soil, diet, water, and air) are estimated to already have a
48.7% probability to exceed 2 points for children in target housing
without also considering additional dust-lead exposure (Ref. 16).
Table 2--Percent Exceedance Values for Zero, Age: 6 Yr Old (72 Months)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Probability
Floor ([mu]g/ Sill ([mu]g/ft ---------------------------------------------------------------
Approach ft \2\) \2\) Dust only IQ Dust only IQ
Total IQ >1pt Total IQ >2pt >1pt >2pt
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Zero \1\................................................ 0 0 88.9% 48.7% 0.0% 0.0%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The exceedance values for zero dust-lead are provided for comparison with the DLHS candidates; it is not a candidate value.
In addition to total/aggregate IQ change, EPA determined BLLs that
were estimated to result in an incremental loss of 1 to 2 IQ points
from exposure to only dust-lead (i.e., exclusive of lead in other media
such as soil, diet, water, and air). This metric is explicitly health-
based, in that it is an estimated health effect. There is EPA
precedence for using the metric of an incremental change in IQ with a
range of values of 1 to 2 points to inform national standards
decisions. This includes the 2008 and 2016 decisions on the primary
national ambient air quality standard (NAAQS) for lead, which was
informed by consideration of air-related IQ decrement estimates based
on an evidence-based framework, with a focus on the at-risk
subpopulation of children living near sources who are likely to be most
highly exposed (Ref. 50). In their review of various technical
documents supporting both the 2008 and 2016 NAAQS reviews, the Clean
Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC) supported using an
incremental 1 to 2 point IQ decrement approach for consideration during
development of the air standard (Refs. 50 and 51).
As reported in the TSD, EPA evaluated several numeric DLHS
candidates that the Agency thought were appropriate given the health
and exposure metrics of interest, and the uncertainty of the model at
low loading values. The numeric DLHS candidates were 1/10 [mu]g/ft\2\
(i.e., 1 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and 10 [mu]g/ft\2\ for sills), 2/20
[mu]g/ft\2\, 3/30 [mu]g/ft\2\, and 5/40 [mu]g/ft\2\ and those values
were compared to the specified BLL and IQ metrics to estimate the
probability of exceeding the BLL or IQ targets. For example, a 2-year-
old living in pre-1978 housing exposed to 3 [mu]g/ft\2\ on floors and
30 [mu]g/ft\2\ on window sills would have a 4.8% probability of
exceeding, for example, 5 total [micro]g/dL BLL. Under this numeric
standard approach, EPA would plan to use the threshold of 5%
probability of exceedance for a child from the sub-population of
interest (i.e., young children living in pre-1978 housing and COFs).
This is similar to the 1 to 5% probability that was used in 2001 for
the lowest DLHS candidate (Ref. 6).
Due to the aforementioned complexities with identifying a cutoff of
risk or specific IQ/BLL metrics of interest that would be acceptable
for purposes of setting the DLHS, as well as the reasons for favoring
GTZ, EPA is not proposing the numeric standard approach for the DLHS as
the Agency's preferred option. For specific discussion on the modeled
numeric DLHS candidates and IQ/BLL metrics, see Unit IV.A.3. EPA
welcomes comment on this numeric standard approach including the IQ/BLL
metrics under consideration (i.e., the target values of interest) and
the use of a 5% probability of exceedance.
b. Post-1977 Background Approach
EPA also considered an approach to revise the DLHS that would align
target housing dust-lead levels with dust-lead levels in housing built
after lead-based paint was banned. This approach would result in
lowering the DLHS to the dust-lead background levels of housing built
after 1977 (known as ``post-1977 background''), which are presumably
not from LBP. In 1978, the CPSC banned lead in paint and similar
surface-coating materials for consumer use in excess of 0.06% and
revised the level in 2009 to 0.009% following the Consumer Product
Safety Improvement Act of
[[Page 50458]]
2008 (Pub. L. 110-314). As a result of CPSC's 1978 lead paint ban, the
focus of EPA's LBP activities program is target housing which includes
most pre-1978 housing and COFs.
Post-1977 background dust-lead values were calculated from a
weighted geometric mean of the dust-lead loadings from the American
Healthy Homes Survey II and were found to be 0.2 [micro]g/ft\2\ for
floors and 0.8 [micro]g/ft\2\ for window sills (Refs. 14 and 52).
Setting the DLHS at the post-1977 background dust-lead levels would
allow EPA to focus on dust-lead hazards above what is expected in
housing without LBP (i.e., after CPSC established a maximum level of
lead in paint for consumer products, including home paints).
Establishing DLHS for target housing and COFs in this way, using post-
1977 background dust-lead levels, would address disparities in the
dust-lead levels that children in target housing may be exposed to and
the corresponding disparate health risks. This approach would also
align with the focus of Title X on lead hazards in housing constructed
before 1978. Using this approach, DLHS would be established at 0.2
[mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and 0.8 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills as the
dust-lead levels that would result in adverse human health effects.
However, there are questions about whether the post-1977 background
approach would as directly address the 2021 Court Opinion as the GTZ
approach. Due to those concerns and the reasons for favoring GTZ, EPA
is not proposing the post-1977 background approach for the DLHS as the
Agency's preferred option.
As statistical points in a distribution of environmental data, the
calculation of the average background value is highly influenced by the
way in which data/measurements below the analytical detection limit are
treated. Further discussion on deriving these candidates can be found
in the TSD Section 2.3. The TSD models the health and exposure outcomes
based on these candidate DLHS of 0.2 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and 0.8
[mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills, as described in Unit IV.A.3. EPA welcomes
comment on this background approach, and its appropriateness given the
description above, 2021 Court Opinion and the statutory authority.
3. Modeled Results for All Three DLHS Approaches
The TSD that accompanies this proposal evaluated the DLHS
candidates of all three approaches (i.e., GTZ, numeric standard, and
post-1977 background). Estimates for BLLs of children exposed to the
DLHS dust-lead loadings were evaluated for children at each age up to
age six, including age two (generally, age two is the age of greatest
modeled exposure), and lead-related reduction in IQ at age six was
estimated from the lifetime average BLL (average of BLLs across the
period prior to age six). This approach is consistent with the study
from which the BLL concentration-IQ response function was drawn. This
study related IQ quantified at about six years of age to each child's
lifetime average BLLs (based on blood Pb measurements taken from six
months up to age of the IQ test (Refs. 40 and 41). In the following
discussion, both the model results for two-year BLL and the estimates
of IQ change at six-years, are represented, referring to them as the
results for ``young children'' for brevity. EPA considered numerous
dust-lead loadings, including: 0.7/0.8 [mu]g/ft\2\, (i.e., 0.7 [mu]g/
ft\2\ for floors and 0.8 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills) which is the GTZ
option partnered with the primary DLCL option (3/20/25 [mu]g/ft\2\ for
floors, window sills, and window troughs respectively) and 2.2/4.4
[mu]g/ft\2\, which is the GTZ partnered with the alternative DLCL
option (5/40/100 [mu]g/ft\2\). Other modeled dust-lead loadings are
0.2/0.8 [mu]g/ft\2\, which is the post-1977 background dust-lead level,
1/10 [mu]g/ft\2\, 2/20 [mu]g/ft\2\, 3/30 [mu]g/ft\2\, 5/40 [mu]g/ft\2\,
and 10/100 [mu]g/ft\2\, which is the 2019 DLHS. Zero was also provided
for comparison purposes with the DLHS candidates and is not itself a
candidate value. More information on the TSD and the health/exposure
metrics (i.e., IQ and BLL decrements) that were analyzed can be found
in Unit III. and Unit IV.A.2.a.
DLHS candidates associated with GTZ, post-1977 background, and the
numeric standard (1/10 [mu]g/ft\2\) approaches are associated with the
lowest BLLs when compared to the other numeric DLHS candidates (2/20
[mu]g/ft\2\, 3/30 [mu]g/ft\2\ and 5/40 [mu]g/ft\2\ and the current DLHS
of 10/100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and window sills). The TSD modeling
results for young children exposed to dust-lead associated with the
loading candidates from the GTZ approach (which range from 0.7 to 2.2
[micro]g/ft\2\ for floors and 0.8 to 4.4 [micro]g/ft\2\ for window
sills depending on which DLCL it is coupled with, see Unit IV.A.1.a.
for more information) show that young children would have a 0.0 to
10.6% probability of exceeding an incremental BLL of 1 to 2.5 [mu]g/dL
(Tables 7-2 and 7-3 in the TSD). However, the results for GTZ partnered
with the primary DLCL option (0.7/0.8 [mu]g/ft\2\), and post-1977
background (0.2/0.8 [mu]g/ft\2\) are the only two DLHS candidates that
keep both the percentage of exceedance of incremental BLL of 1 to 2.5
[mu]g/dL below 5% probability (which is the threshold of interest EPA
identified).
When comparing the three DLHS approaches to total BLL, the modeling
includes exposure from other media such as soil, diet, water, and air.
Importantly, even at zero dust-lead, children would still have a 5.7%
probability of exceeding the BLRV given the impact of these other
exposures. Thus, none of the considered DLHS candidates resulted in
less than 5% probability of exposed children's BLL exceeding the CDC
BLRV. However, the TSD modeling results did show that for young
children exposed to dust-lead loadings using the GTZ approach, the
post-1977 background approach or the numeric DLHS candidate of 1/10
[mu]g/ft\2\ would have approximately a 7.3 to 9.1% probability of
exceeding a total BLL of 3.5 [mu]g/dL, the CDC's BLRV. This is lower
than the 10.3 to 13.9% probability when exposed to other numeric DLHS
candidates (2/20 [mu]g/ft\2\, 3/30 [mu]g/ft\2\ and 5/40 [mu]g/ft\2\ for
floors and window sills) and the 18.0% probability when exposed to the
current DLHS of 10 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and 100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for
window sills. Therefore, while no DLHS option results in a less than
5.7% probability of exposed children's BLL exceeding the CDC BLRV given
their likely exposures to other sources of lead, the options with the
lowest levels (GTZ, post-1977 background, and 1/10 [mu]g/ft\2\) result
in exposed children experiencing about a two to three times less
likelihood of exceeding the CDC BLRV compared to the current DLHS.
Table 3--Percent Exceedance Values for DLHS Candidates, Age: 2 Yr Old (30 Months)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Probability
---------------------------------------------------------------
Approach Floor ([mu]g/ Sill ([mu]g/ Dust only BLL Dust only BLL
ft\2\) ft\2\) Total BLL >3.5 Total BLL >5 >1 [mu]g/dL >2.5 [mu]g/dL
[mu]g/dL (%) [mu]g/dL (%) (%) (%)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Zero \1\................................................ 0 0 5.7 2.2 0.0 0.0
[[Page 50459]]
Post-1977 Background.................................... 0.2 0.8 7.3 2.8 1.0 0.0
GTZ With 3/20 DLCL...................................... 0.7 0.8 8.2 3.0 3.7 0.1
Numeric................................................. 1 10 9.1 3.3 6.6 0.5
GTZ With 5/40 DLCL...................................... 2.2 4.4 10.1 3.9 10.6 1.0
Numeric................................................. 2 20 10.3 4.1 12.5 1.2
Numeric................................................. 3 30 11.8 4.8 17.2 2.0
Numeric................................................. 5 40 13.9 5.5 23.0 3.2
Current Standard........................................ 10 100 18.0 7.5 36.7 6.5
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The exceedance values for zero dust-lead are provided for comparison with the DLHS candidates; it is not a candidate value.
DLHS candidates associated with GTZ and post-1977 background are
also estimated to be associated with the lowest IQ decrements when
compared to the other DLHS candidates (GTZ partnered with the
alternative DLCL, 1/10 [mu]g/ft\2\, 2/20 [mu]g/ft\2\, 3/30 [mu]g/ft\2\
and 5/40 [mu]g/ft\2\, and the current DLHS of 10/100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for
floors and window sills). GTZ partnered with the primary DLCL option
(0.7/0.8 [mu]g/ft\2\), and post-1977 background (0.2/0.8 [mu]g/ft\2\)
are the only two DLHS candidates estimated to have a 0.6 to 2.5%
probability of exceeding 2 points of incremental IQ loss from dust-
exposure, keeping the percentage of exceedance of 2 points of IQ loss
below 5% probability.
Table 4--Percent Exceedance Values for DLHS Candidates, Age: 6 yr old (72 months)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Probability
Floor ([mu]g/ Sill ([mu]g/ ---------------------------------------------------------------
Approach ft\2\) ft\2\) Total IQ 1pt Total IQ >2pt Dust only IQ Dust only IQ
(%) (%) >1pt (%) >2pt (%)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Zero \1\................................................ 0 0 88.9 48.7 0.0 0.0
Post-1977 Background.................................... 0.2 0.8 94.7 63.1 6.2 0.6
GTZ With 3/20 DLCL...................................... 0.7 0.8 96.4 70.4 18.5 2.5
Numeric................................................. 1 10 97.0 74.5 30.2 5.2
GTZ With 5/40 DLCL...................................... 2.2 4.4 97.7 78.5 40.7 9.0
Numeric................................................. 2 20 97.9 80.0 44.6 11.0
Numeric................................................. 3 30 98.5 82.3 53.6 16.0
Numeric................................................. 5 40 98.8 85.1 62.7 22.4
Current Standard........................................ 10 100 99.4 90.3 75.8 37.9
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The exceedance values for zero dust-lead are provided for comparison with the DLHS candidates; it is not a candidate value.
B. Dust-Lead Clearance Levels Approach
TSCA Title IV granted EPA the authority to regulate LBP activities,
and to take into account reliability, effectiveness, and safety (15
U.S.C. 2682(a)(1)) when setting the DLCL. While considering those three
criteria, the 2001 LBP Hazards Rule modified the work practice
standards to include DLCL, which ``are used to evaluate the
effectiveness of cleaning following an abatement'' (Ref. 6). In both
the 2001 LBP Hazards Rule and the 2021 DLCL Rule, the DLCL were
finalized as the same value as the DLHS for floors and window sills.
When originally established, EPA considered the DLCL in the broader
context of Title X, and selected DLCL that were compatible with a
``workable framework for lead-based paint hazard evaluation and
reduction.'' EPA chose DLCL that were consistent with the DLHS in part
to ensure they were ``as easy as possible to understand and implement''
(Ref. 47). At that time EPA established the DLCL and the DLHS at 40
[mu]g/ft\2\ and 250 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and window sills, with a
separate DLCL of 400 [mu]g/ft\2\ for troughs.
In 2021 the DLCL set by EPA continued to mirror the DLHS as it had
done historically, as the Agency explained that it wanted to update the
DLCL to achievable levels that would demonstrate elimination of dust-
lead hazards under the 2019 DLHS of 10 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and 100
[mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills. The 2021 updates to the DLCL restored
consistency between the DLCL and DLHS, which had been lowered in 2019
without a corresponding amendment to the DLCL. Previous public comments
received on the 2018 DLHS proposal and 2020 DLCL proposal favored
lowering the DLCL to be consistent with the DLHS (Refs. 53 and 54). As
a result, in 2021 EPA finalized DLCL of 10 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and
100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills (the same levels as the DLHS), and
``EPA considered the achievability of these levels, how the lower dust-
lead loadings can be reliably detected by laboratories, the
effectiveness of these levels, and consistency with the revised 2019
standards and across the Federal Government'' (Ref. 3).
The 2021 Court Opinion affirmed that ``TSCA [Title] IV gives the
EPA latitude to consider `reliability, effectiveness, and safety'''
when promulgating regulations ``[w]ith respect to implementation,
including abatement.'' A Cmty. Voice, 997 F.3d at 995 (Ref. 11). This
would include the DLCL as they represent part of post-abatement work
practices. The Court continued by emphasizing that this gives EPA more
discretion when setting the DLCL because they are relevant to the
implementation of remedial measures, rather than the identification of
a hazard (i.e., DLHS). The Court analogized this dichotomy to other
environmental statutory schemes (see also Unit IV.A.1.b. for EPA's
discussion of the
[[Page 50460]]
SDWA). The Court also held that the DLCL and DLHS are directly related
and must be reconsidered together. Yet the Court recognized the
difference in statutory authority and considerations (see Unit IV.A.
for more information on DLHS).
In accordance with the 2021 Court Opinion, EPA is proposing to
revise the DLCL in the same proceeding as the reconsideration of the
2019 DLHS, and given the Court's direction for how to revise the DLHS
and DLCL, EPA is proposing clearance levels that are decoupled from the
DLHS (see Unit I.B and C. for more background on decoupling). EPA
evaluated the 2021 DLCL in accordance with the statute and is proposing
to revise the DLCL from 10 [mu]g/ft\2\, 100 [mu]g/ft\2\ and 400 [mu]g/
ft\2\ for floors, window sills, and troughs, respectively, to 3 [mu]g/
ft\2\, 20 [mu]g/ft\2\, and 25 [mu]g/ft\2\. EPA is proposing to revise
the DLCL in order to reduce exposure to dust-lead beyond the 2021
levels. Additionally, New York City (NYC) has lowered their clearance
levels since the 2021 DLCL final rule, which shows that levels below
EPA's 2021 DLCL are achievable. Discussion on NYC's clearance levels
can be found in Unit IV.B.2.d. Accordingly, EPA is also requesting
comment on an alternative DLCL of 5 [mu]g/ft\2\, 40 [mu]g/ft\2\, and
100 [mu]g/ft\2\, as well as whether another DLCL is appropriate given
reliability, effectiveness and safety and why, see Unit VII.
1. Selecting the Proposed DLCL
EPA is proposing to revise the DLCL given the statutory criteria of
reliability, effectiveness, and safety, based on consideration of HUD's
Lead Hazard Control Clearance Survey (LHCCS), the potential for risk
reduction by lowering exposure to dust-lead, and an evaluation of
laboratory capabilities and capacity.
a. Lead Hazard Control Clearance Survey
EPA collaborated with HUD to develop the 2015 LHCCS to examine
whether HUD's Office of Lead Hazard Control and Healthy Homes (OLHCHH)
Lead Hazard Control (LHC) grantees could achieve DLCL below the
standards at that time (40 [mu]g/ft\2\, 250 [mu]g/ft\2\ and 400 [mu]g/
ft\2\ for floors, window sills and troughs, respectively). LHC work
performed by the grantees must be conducted by LBP certified
individuals. Since most of the LHC grantees use commercial firms in
their area, HUD OLHCHH believes that the grantees are conducting a
large percentage of these activities and are therefore representative
of the regulated community.
At that time, 98 LHC grantees completed the survey, giving HUD
information from housing units in which lead hazard control activities
took place from 2010 through 2012, for a total dataset of 1,552 housing
units including 7,211 floor samples and 4,893 window sill samples (Ref.
55). The data were analyzed to determine the percentage of samples
cleared at or below specific values. Numerical modeling was performed
to estimate loadings that fell below laboratory detection limits. For
more information on how that analysis was conducted please see Appendix
D of the EA (Ref. 14). Since the 2015 LHCCS report was published, to
the Agency's knowledge, there has not been any data or source of
information of this magnitude in terms of DLCL samples alongside the
details of the clearance process, including the number of tests
performed (with results) and the type of additional work or cleaning
performed. EPA found this 2015 LHCCS report still relevant and recent
enough to provide meaningful input to inform this reconsideration
rulemaking.
In terms of the primary DLCL option EPA is proposing, 64% of the
2010 to 2012 samples showed dust-lead levels at or below 3 [mu]g/ft\2\
for floors, 64% were at or below 20 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills, and
64% were at or below 25 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window troughs. As a result,
approximately 64% of samples from the LHCCS data had dust-lead levels
at or below the primary DLCL option of 3 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors, 20
[mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills and 25 [mu]g/ft\2\ for troughs, which EPA
believes is achievable, especially since the survey respondents were
only required to achieve clearance below the 2001 DLCL at that time
(40/250/400 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors, window sills and troughs,
respectively). It is possible that the percentage of samples achieving
clearance may be even higher today, due to the 2021 revision of the
DLCL to 10/100 [mu]g/ft\2\, meaning clearance has had to be achieved at
these lower levels or below, since that time. Given lead-hazard control
work has been subject to the current DLCL of 10/100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for
some time, EPA is requesting comment from the regulated community
regarding their ability to clear to 3/20/25 [mu]g/ft\2\ after various
lead hazard control activities and given any additional cleaning
necessary to make sure the dust-lead levels fall below the DLCL. See
Unit IV.B.2.a. for more information on the LHCCS results for the
alternative DLCL of 5/40/100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors, window sills and
troughs, respectively.
b. Primary DLCL Modeling Results
EPA must understand the estimated health impacts of dust-lead
exposure when selecting a DLCL that is reliable, effective, and safe,
and in order to inform the EA. The TSD that accompanies this proposal
includes evaluation of the 2021 DLCL (10/100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and
window sills), and the primary DLCL (3/20 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors/window
sills) and alternative DLCL (5/40 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors/window sills)
options. The unique dust-lead contribution to exposure from window
troughs cannot be distinguished from window sills given the strong
correlation between dust-lead loadings on the two surface types, the
lack of data on access to window troughs versus window sills by
children, and the paired impacts in window sills and window troughs
from intervention studies addressing lead paint in window trim and
casings. Further discussion on exposure to window troughs can be found
in the TSD in Appendix C. As a result, exposure to window trough dust-
lead and resultant benefits from a lowered DLCL for troughs is not
calculated separately for this rulemaking.
The TSD also describes modeling of dust-lead exposures at the
specific DLCL options for window sills and floors only and estimates of
both BLLs that were evaluated for children at each age up to age six,
including age two (generally, this is the age of greatest modeled
exposure), and lead-related reduction in IQ at age six was estimated
from the lifetime average BLL (average of BLLs across the period prior
to age six). More information on estimated potential impacts from dust-
lead exposures analyzed in the TSD, can be found in Unit III. Technical
Analyses and Unit IV.A.2.a. Modeled Approach.
Compared to the alternative DLCL option, the primary option (3/20/
25 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors, window sills and troughs) is expected to be
more health protective in that it results in the least amount of dust-
lead left on a surface after the completion of an abatement. The
modeling results provided in the TSD show that young children in pre-
1978 housing exposed to dust-lead loadings of 3 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors
and 20 [mu]g/ft\2\ for sills would have a 11.3% probability of
exceeding a total BLL of 3.5 [mu]g/dL (CDC's BLRV). This is lower than
the 18.0% probability when exposed to the current DLCL of 10 [mu]g/
ft\2\ for floors and 100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills and the 13.9%
probability when exposed to the alternative DLCL. Total BLL includes
exposure from other media such as soil, diet, water, and air; even at
zero dust-
[[Page 50461]]
lead, children would still have a 5.7% probability of exceeding the
CDC's BLRV from these other sources. When considering dust-lead
exposure only, the primary option for DLCL (3/20/25 [mu]g/ft\2\), is
estimated to result in 1.6 to 16.0% probability of young children's BLL
exceeding 1 to 2.5 [mu]g/dL, compared to 3.2 to 23.0% probability for
the alternative DLCL (5/40/100 [mu]g/ft\2\). The primary DLCL is also
estimated to have a 14.6% probability of exceeding 2 IQ points
decrement from dust exposure, while the alternative DLCL is estimated
to result in a 22.4% probability of exceeding 2 IQ points decrement
from dust exposure. Ultimately, the primary DLCL option is expected to
result in a higher reduction of dust-lead exposure than the alternative
DLCL.
Table 5--Percent Exceedance Values for DLHS Candidates, Age: 2 Yr Old (30 Months)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Probability
Floor ([mu]g/ -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Approach ft\2\) Sill ([mu]g/ft\2\) Total BLL >3.5 Total BLL >5 Dust only BLL >1 Dust only BLL >2.5
[mu]g/dL (%) [mu]g/dL (%) [mu]g/dL (%) [mu]g/dL (%)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Zero \1\........................ 0................. 0................. 5.7............... 2.2............... 0.0............... 0.0
3/20 DLCL....................... 3................. 20................ 11.3.............. 4.5............... 16.0.............. 1.6
5/40 DLCL....................... 5................. 40................ 13.9.............. 5.5............... 23.0.............. 3.2
Current Standard................ 10................ 100............... 18.0.............. 7.5............... 36.7.............. 6.5
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The exceedance values for zero dust-lead are provided for comparison with the DLHS candidates; it is not a candidate value.
Table 6--Percent Exceedance Values for DLHS Candidates, Age: 6 Yr Old (72 Months)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Probability
Floor ([mu]g/ Sill ([mu]g/ ---------------------------------------------------------------
Approach ft\2\) ft\2\) Total IQ >1pt Total IQ >2pt Dust only IQ Dust only IQ
(%) (%) >1pt (%) >2pt (%)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Zero \1\................................................ 0 0 88.9% 48.7% 0.0% 0.0%
3/20 DLCL............................................... 3 20 98.2% 81.8% 51.4% 14.6%
5/40 DLCL............................................... 5 40 98.8% 85.1% 62.7% 22.4%
Current Standard........................................ 10 100 99.4% 90.3% 75.8% 37.9%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The exceedance values for zero dust-lead are provided for comparison with the DLHS candidates; it is not a candidate value.
c. Laboratory Capabilities for Primary DLCL
To better understand current laboratory capabilities for specific
equipment types, and the impact that the primary and alternative DLCL
options, especially given that a non-numeric DLHS would shift the LQSR
``action level'' to the DLCL, EPA spoke with nine NLLAP-recognized
laboratories about their dust wipe testing programs (Refs. 56, 57, 58,
59, 60, 61, 62, 63 and 64). EPA was interested in information from
laboratories who had high dust wipe testing capacity and laboratories
that had both a flame atomic absorption spectroscopy (FAAS) and the
more sensitive laboratory instruments such as inductively coupled
plasma atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES) or an inductively coupled
plasma mass spectroscopy (ICP-MS). The Agency wanted additional
background on ICP instruments and their use for dust wipe testing in
general. Among the laboratories EPA spoke to, six were accredited to
use FAAS, five were accredited to use ICP-AES, and two were accredited
to use ICP-MS to analyze dust wipe samples for lead. Eight of the nine
laboratories provide commercial testing services, four of which are the
largest U.S. lead laboratories by dust wipe test volume.
The information received from stakeholder outreach indicates that
laboratories using ICP-AES equipment for dust wipe testing have a
reporting limit of <=3 [mu]g/wipe. The five laboratories with ICP-AES
capabilities have current reporting limits ranging from 0.5 [mu]g/wipe
to 3 [mu]g/wipe. EPA believes that laboratories with more up-to-date
instruments and optimized methods should be able to satisfy the LQSR
dust wipe recommendations and the regulatory limit of the primary DLCL
option of 3/20/25 [mu]g/ft\2\ and the quantitation limit of equal to or
less than 50% of that level (i.e., 1.5/10/12.5 [mu]g/ft\2\). If
finalized as proposed, EPA believes that ICP-AES would likely become
the instrument standard for dust wipe testing for lead at the NLLAP
laboratories, as other technologies were not reported to consistently
meet the quantitation limit described above. For more information on
the on how the alternative DLCL compares or the impact it could have on
NLLAP-recognized laboratories, see Unit IV.B.2.c.
FAAS has been the most popular choice for lead dust wipe testing
because it has a lower purchase price and operating cost, is fast and
easy to use, and was sensitive enough for the 2019 and 2021 rules' DLHS
and DLCL of 10 [mu]g/ft\2\ on floors and 100 [mu]g/ft\2\ on window
sills. As shown in the table below, Table 2-9 of the EA, over two-
thirds of laboratories recognized under the NLLAP for lead dust wipe
testing currently use FAAS, and over half of these NLLAP laboratories
rely solely on FAAS (Ref. 14). EPA seeks information on whether and the
extent to which labs that do not have any or have only limited ICP
capabilities would adopt ICP technology for dust wipe testing if it
were to effectively become the standard for dust wipe testing for lead.
In addition, EPA requests comment on the timing, benefits, and
challenges associated with ICP adoption.
[[Page 50462]]
Table 7--Analytical Equipment Used for Lead Dust Wipe Testing by
Laboratories Recognized Under NLLAP Program
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total number
of Commercial
Equipment laboratories laboratories
accredited accredited
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FAAS.................................... 56 54
ICP-AES................................. 27 19
ICP-MS.................................. 5 1
FAAS and ICP-AES........................ 10 10
FAAS and ICP-MS......................... 2 2
ICP-AES and ICP-MS...................... 1 1
-------------------------------
Total............................... 101 87
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sources: Methods described in accreditation certificates for NLLAP
laboratories, and descriptions on laboratory websites.
Several concerns about switching to ICP instruments were raised by
laboratories, such as, a reduction in the throughput rate, need for
additional equipment and staff due to the complexity of the machines
(compared to FAAS), higher prices, delayed turnaround, and concerns
over maintaining the current sample volume and ultimately whether to
continue keeping dust wipe testing for lead in their portfolio/
revisiting their business model. Based on the outreach conducted,
laboratories indicated that the throughput rate on ICP-AES machines is
roughly seven to 12 times slower than FAAS throughput. One major
laboratory EPA spoke to estimated that they would have to purchase
three to six new instruments, hire several highly qualified
technicians, and run the laboratory on shifts over 24 hours to meet
current demand for dust wipe tests conducted solely by ICP. This shift
in instrumentation is estimated to increase both cost per sample as
well as turnaround time. Laboratories mentioned that for clearance a
substantial portion of their dust wipe testing clients request same-day
or next-day turnaround on samples so that residents can quickly
reoccupy their homes. Several laboratories doubted the technical
feasibility of providing same-day or next-day turnarounds at sufficient
volume should they switch to ICP technology thereby, potentially
delaying homeowners from quickly reoccupying their homes and renters
from quickly beginning occupancy or from quickly reoccupying their
rental housing. Dust wipe testing by ICP-AES is also estimated to be
about 125% more expensive per sample than testing by FAAS, and
laboratories expressed concerned that less overall dust wipe testing
will occur because state and local municipalities often have a fixed
budget for their housing and health programs. See the EA for more
specific information on the breakdown of the cost estimates of dust
wipe testing. EPA also seeks information on the potential geographic
impacts of the proposal on laboratory testing for lead dust wipes.
Finally, EPA found that several high-volume laboratories forecast
that dust wipe test volumes will continue to grow over the next decade
(Refs. 60 and 61). First, a growing proportion of laboratories' dust
wipe testing business comes from landlords who need to comply with
municipal housing regulations set by states or localities. Laboratories
expect similar regulations to be enacted in the coming years,
increasing demand for dust wipe testing for clearance (Ref. 61).
Second, in recent years laboratories have received an increased volume
of test samples generated by disaster recovery programs. When there is
a natural disaster (such as a major flood) that requires clean-up and
re-construction of pre-1978 housing, laboratories can receive an
unexpected spike in dust wipe tests. Laboratories pointed out that the
increasing rate of disaster-related demand spikes may overwhelm their
capacity if only ICP can be used for dust wipe testing. If finalized as
proposed, this rulemaking will also likely increase the amount of dust
wipe testing required given the proposed regulatory levels. EPA seeks
comment on the extent to which laboratories would be able to
accommodate increased or emergency demand for dust wipe testing if this
proposal is finalized.
The Agency is proposing 3/20/25 [mu]g/ft\2\ as the primary DLCL
option due to the potential for risk reduction as discussed in Unit
IV.B.1.b. Given information gathered via EPA's outreach to
laboratories, EPA is concerned that setting clearance levels too low
may deter participation in lead-hazard control programs and activities
that require dust wipe testing or cause a market failure that does not
allow the current volume of testing to continue. As a result, EPA is
requesting comment on the reliability, effectiveness, and safety of the
primary DLCL of 3/20/25 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors, window sills, and
troughs, including specifically the impact on laboratory capability as
well as the accuracy of the information presented. See Unit VII.
Request for Comments for more information.
2. Alternative DLCL
EPA is requesting comment on an alternative option to revise the
DLCL for floors, window sills, and troughs from 10 [mu]g/ft\2\, 100
[mu]g/ft\2\ and 400 [mu]g/ft\2\, respectively to 5 [mu]g/ft\2\, 40
[mu]g/ft\2\, and 100 [mu]g/ft\2\, respectively. EPA chose 5/40/100
[mu]g/ft\2\ as the alternate DLCL based on consideration of HUD's
LHCCS, potential for risk reduction, an evaluation of laboratory
capabilities as well as high confidence that these standards can be
successfully implemented, as shown by the use of these clearance levels
currently in NYC. Another consideration supporting the alternative DLCL
option is to avoid potentially spreading the resources for LBP hazard
mitigation so broadly that they may be diverted from scenarios that
present the greatest risk. EPA notes that the EA indicates that the
alternative DLCL option is estimated to have positive net benefits. See
EA, Table ES-11.
a. Lead Hazard Control Clearance Survey
The LHCCS indicates that 73% of samples from 2010 to 2012 showed
dust-lead levels at or below 5 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors, 89% were at or
below 40 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills, and 94% were at or below 100
[mu]g/ft\2\ for window troughs. As such, overall more than 72% of
samples had dust-lead levels at or below the alternative DLCL option of
5/40/100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors, window sills and window troughs. This
is compared to 64% of samples clearing at or below the primary DLCL
option of 3/20/25 [mu]g/ft\2\. As a result, EPA has high confidence
that the alternative DLCL option is
[[Page 50463]]
achievable, while considering reliability and effectiveness. EPA is
requesting comment on whether the LHCCS data support the reliability
and effectiveness of the alternative DLCL option, and whether the
regulated community can clear to 5/40/100 [mu]g/ft\2\ after various
lead hazard control activities and specialized cleaning.
b. Alternative DLCL Modeling Results
The alternative (5/40/100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors, window sills and
troughs) represents a 50% or more reduction of dust-lead left on a
surface following the completion of an abatement, when compared to the
current DLCL (10/100/400 [mu]g/ft\2\). This alternative DLCL option
would be beneficial to maintaining lower children's BLLs and protecting
against associated health outcomes such as decreased IQ. The modeling
results provided in the TSD show that young children in pre-1978
housing exposed to dust-lead loadings of 5 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and
40 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills would have an estimated 13.9%
probability of exceeding a total BLL of 3.5 [mu]g/dL (CDC's BLRV); this
is compared to the primary DLCL option (3/20/25 [mu]g/ft\2\) which
would result in a 11.3% probability of exceedance (a difference of 2.6%
between the primary and alternative DLCL options). Ultimately, both
options are lower than the 18.0% probability of exceedance of the BLRV
when exposed to the current DLCL of 10 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors and 100
[mu]g/ft\2\ on window sills.
When considering dust-lead exposure only, young children in pre-
1978 housing exposed to the alternative DLCL would have a 3.2 to 23.0%
probability of exceeding a BLL of 1 to 2.5 [mu]g/dL based on the
modeled results, compared to 1.6 to 16.0% probability for the primary
DLCL (3/20/25 [mu]g/ft\2\). The alternative DLCL is also estimated to
have a 22.4% probability of exceeding 2 points of IQ loss. As with
total BLL, this is a considerable reduction from the 37.9% chance of
exceeding 2 points of IQ loss for young children living in target
housing who are exposed the current DLCL, but still higher than the
primary DLCL estimate of 14.6%. EPA must understand the impact on
health effects when selecting a DLCL that is reliable, effective, and
safe, and to inform the EA. Overall, the modeling within the TSD
indicated that the alternative DLCL (5/40/100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors,
window sills and troughs) represents a reduction in risk from the
current clearance levels of 10/100/400 [mu]g/ft\2\, but that risk is
still higher than the estimated results for the primary DLCL. For a
table representation of these modeling results, please see Unit
IV.B.1.b. (Tables 5 and 6).
c. Laboratory Capabilities for Alternative DLCL
EPA spoke with nine NLLAP-recognized laboratories about their dust
wipe testing programs. For additional details about the laboratory
outreach see Unit IV.B.1.c. Laboratory Capabilities and the EA (Ref.
14). Based on EPA's laboratory outreach, EPA has increased confidence
relative to the proposed DLCL (i.e., 3/20/25 [mu]g/ft\2\), that
laboratories can numerically quantify dust-lead levels of 5 [mu]g/wipe
with FAAS technology and attain a quantitation limit of equal to or
less than 50% of that level (i.e., 2.5/20/50 [mu]g/ft\2\). Three major
laboratories EPA spoke with already report at this level with FAAS, and
the remaining three laboratories using FAAS that EPA talked to
expressed no concern about attaining this level in the future if they
ask their customers to wipe 2 ft\2\ instead of 1 ft\2\ (Refs. 57, 60
and 64). EPA is requesting comment on whether the alternative DLCL
option (i.e., 5/40/100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for floors, window sills and
troughs) would allow NLLAP-recognized laboratories to continue using
FAAS technology, if it would mitigate any unintended reductions in dust
wipe capacity (due to throughput time, cost, labor, etc.) and avoid any
negative impacts on other programs that require specific testing using
ICP-AES or FAAS.
Should EPA finalize the DLCL at 5/40/100 [micro]g/ft\2\ and given
no changes to the LQSR, EPA's laboratory outreach suggests that a
handful of smaller laboratories with dated FAAS equipment may elect to
discontinue their dust wipe programs for lead. Due to the expected
continuing participation of other smaller as well as large-volume
laboratories, EPA believes that these limited discontinuations are
unlikely to impact the nationwide availability or market pricing of
tests (see the EA for a breakdown of cost estimates). Additionally, EPA
does not foresee any concerns reporting to 40 [micro]g/ft\2\ on window
sill or 100 [micro]g/ft\2\ on troughs (even with the small surface
areas) if laboratories successfully attain a regulatory limit of 5
[micro]g/ft\2\.
EPA also received feedback that the alternative DLCL option (5/40/
100 [mu]g/ft\2\) could better mitigate any negative impacts on other
programs that require specific testing using ICP-AES or FAAS equipment.
Laboratories currently use their ICP-AES machines for a variety of
purposes. Most notably, this equipment is regularly used for the
characterization of metals in hazardous waste and measuring lead in
drinking water. Under the primary DLCL option 3/20/25 [micro]g/ft\2\,
laboratories would face a significant increase in demand for use of
their ICP machines, which could result in substantial downstream
effects on the availability and price of testing for other lead and
non-lead programs. Additionally, some laboratories mentioned they might
eliminate use of their FAAS machines to streamline laboratory
functionality. This may have downstream effects on testing for lead in
soil, paint chips, and air; laboratories currently test these matrices
by FAAS with some frequency. If laboratories decide maintaining FAAS is
no longer viable for their primary line of business (dust wipes), all
lead matrices could be added to ICP queue, which would worsen
availability issues and increase prices.
The Agency is requesting comment on whether reliability,
effectiveness and safety support the DLCL alternative option of 5/40/
100 [micro]g/ft\2\. EPA is interested in setting a DLCL that has a high
potential for risk reduction; however, the Agency also wants to
finalize an option that is achievable and encourages (not deters)
participation in lead-hazard control programs and activities that
require dust wipe testing. As a result, EPA is requesting comment on
the alternative DLCL option of 5/40/100 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors,
window sills, and troughs (compared to the primary DLCL option), the
impact that level could have on laboratories, and the accuracy of the
information presented. See Unit VII. Request for Comments for more
details.
d. New York City
Between 2019 and 2021 NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
lowered their lead dust clearance and lead dust hazard risk assessment
testing standards twice. NYC lowered their standards for floors, window
sills and window wells (i.e., troughs), respectively, from 40 [micro]g/
ft\2\, 250 [micro]g/ft\2\, and 400 [micro]g/ft\2\ to 10 [micro]g/ft\2\,
50 [micro]g/ft\2\, and 100 [micro]g/ft\2\ in 2019 (effective June 12,
2019) and again to 5 [micro]g/ft\2\, 40 [micro]g/ft\2\, 100 [micro]g/
ft\2\ in 2021 (effective June 1, 2021) (Refs. 65 and 66). The Agency
spoke to the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and
received feedback that although there was a transitionary period that
lasted several months and had various challenges, overall, the
regulated community was able to adjust and comply with the new lower
standards (Ref. 67). Based on NYC's experience, EPA believes that the
alternative DLCL option (i.e., 5 [micro]g/ft\2\, 40 [micro]g/ft\2\, 100
[micro]g/ft\2\ for floors, window sills and window troughs) can be
considered effective and reliable.
[[Page 50464]]
C. Cross Reference With HUD Regulations
EPA is proposing to modify 40 CFR 745.227(h) to clarify that the
proposed DLCL would differ from the DLHS, that the Agency does not
intend to compel clearance down to the DLHS, and to alleviate potential
regulatory confusion surrounding clearance. HUD's LSHR's clearance
regulations at 24 CFR 35.1340(d), which apply to both abatement and
non-abatement activities, currently refer to 24 CFR 35.1320(b)(2),
which in turn cross-references EPA's regulations at 40 CFR 745.227(h),
which currently discusses EPA's DLHS but not EPA's DLCL. See Unit
III.A.3.f the 2019 DLHS Rule for additional background on this topic
(Ref. 2). As explained earlier in this preamble, prompted by analysis
conducted following the 2021 Court Opinion, EPA is proposing a DLHS
that is no longer the same value as the DLCL. As a result, EPA is
proposing to clarify the language at 40 CFR 745.227(h), so it is clear,
including when referenced by the LSHR, that EPA does not intend to
compel clearance to the DLHS, whether in federally assisted housing or
not.
D. Definition of Abatement
EPA is proposing to amend the definition of abatement in EPA's LBP
activities regulations and thus modify the trigger for when EPA
recommends an abatement. This change is intended to align with the
proposed decoupling of the DLHS and DLCL and to focus impacted entity
resources (e.g., HUD, city, state) on the situations that present the
most risk. TSCA Section 401(1) defines an abatement as ``any set of
measures designed to permanently eliminate lead-based paint hazards . .
.'' and includes ``the removal of lead-based paint and lead-
contaminated dust, the permanent containment or encapsulation of lead-
based paint . . . and all preparation, cleanup, disposal, and
postabatement clearance testing activities associated with such
measures.'' EPA included a definition of abatement, which closely
resembles the statutory language, within the LBP activities regulations
at 40 CFR 745.223. An abatement under the LBP activities regulations is
described as ``any measure or set of measures designed to permanently
eliminate lead-based paint hazards'' and specifically includes
``projects resulting in permanent elimination of lead-based paint
hazards . . .''
The 2021 Court Opinion stated that ``TSCA [Title] IV gives the EPA
latitude to consider `reliability, effectiveness, and safety''' when
promulgating regulations ``[w]ith respect to implementation, including
abatement'' (Ref. 11). Hence, in considering revising the DLCL, EPA
must and has considered whether reliability, effectiveness and safety
support changing the regulatory definition of abatement. Given that
under this statutory scheme EPA only intends to compel post-abatement
clearance to the proposed DLCL, the Agency is proposing to change the
regulatory definition of abatement so that the recommendation for
action applies when dust-lead loadings are at or above the DLCL (which
continues to incorporate non-health-based factors such as reliability),
rather than at or above the DLHS as has been the case historically (but
which, going forward in accordance with the 2021 Court Opinion, can no
longer incorporate non-health-based factors such as reliability). This
is deemed necessary due to the decoupling of the DLHS from the DLCL,
and EPA's desire to avoid situations where abatements are designed to
eliminate dust-lead levels to the DLHS and are unable to do so in a
reliable and effective manner. Otherwise, EPA would be recommending an
abatement if dust-lead levels are between the DLHS and the DLCL, even
though such an abatement would only need to pass clearance below the
DLCL. Also, where an abatement is conducted, a cyclical pattern could
result, where an abatement successfully passes clearance below the DLCL
but an abatement is still recommended by EPA if dust-lead levels are at
or above the DLHS. Thus, EPA is proposing to change the regulatory
definition to require that abatements eliminate dust-lead hazards to
below the DLCL to ensure that successful abatements can be considered
complete. Relatedly, as explained in Unit IV.E, EPA is proposing
amendments to the abatement report to help protect from exposure even
after the abatement is complete.
An additional benefit to modifying the trigger for when EPA
recommends an abatement is that it allows the regulated community to
focus resources on situations that present more risk. As discussed in
the 2001 and 2019 final rules, an important concern for EPA is having
the resources for LBP hazard mitigation distributed so broadly that
they may be diverted from situations that present the greatest risk. As
a result, EPA is proposing to change the regulatory definition of
abatement to permanently eliminate dust-lead hazards to below the DLCL
and requesting public comment on this proposal. EPA believes that this
proposed amendment to the regulatory definition appropriately applies
the statutory definition in the context of this rule, where the statute
requires EPA to consider reliability, effectiveness, and safety for
purposes of EPA's TSCA section 402 DLCL regulations. Furthermore, the
statutory definition of abatement in TSCA section 401 states that the
set of measures covered by the term are to be ``in accordance with the
standards established by the Administrator'' under TSCA Title IV, which
refers to the ``standards for performing [LBP] activities'' as what
EPA's TSCA section 402 regulations shall contain. Note that nothing in
this rulemaking changes the fact that owners of properties covered by
the LBP Activities Rule are not compelled to evaluate their properties
for the presence of dust-lead hazards, nor compelled by EPA to take
action (such as an abatement) if dust-lead hazards are identified at or
above the DLCL, although HUD and some state or local governments may
require action.
E. Abatement Report
As explained in Units IV.A. and B., EPA is proposing to lower the
current DLHS to any reportable level analyzed by an NLLAP-recognized
laboratory, and the DLCL to 3 [micro]g/ft\2\, 20 [micro]g/ft\2\, and 25
[micro]g/ft\2\ for floors, window sills and troughs, respectively. The
DLHS identify when pre-1978 housing or a COF has a dust-lead hazard
present. If finalized as proposed, it is likely that once a project
passes clearance and the abatement can be considered complete, there
could still be dust-lead hazards present due to the DLHS being any
reportable level. The Agency realizes the challenge this creates for
the regulated community and to keep dust-lead levels down and mitigate
exposure, EPA is proposing to amend the requirements for what needs to
be included in an abatement report.
After the completion of an abatement, a report is required to be
developed by a certified supervisor or project designer. The list of
what needs to be included in the abatement report is described at 40
CFR 745.227(e)(10), and consists of elements such as the start and
completion dates of the abatement, information about the risk assessor
or inspector conducting the sampling, any clearance testing and soil
analyses, etc. EPA is proposing to modify 40 CFR 745.227(e)(10) to
include a requirement to add specific language into each abatement
report, when dust-lead levels are between the DLHS and the DLCL. That
language refers the public to a useful reference titled ``Protect Your
Family From Lead in Your Home'' and acknowledges that LBP hazards
[[Page 50465]]
(particularly dust-lead hazards) could remain after an abatement. The
goal of including this language in an abatement report is to ensure
that occupants are provided information and tools available to them to
minimize dust-lead hazards and take actions to protect themselves from
exposure even after the abatement is complete.
The certified firm (or individual who prepared the report) must
keep the abatement reports for at least 3 years and must provide a copy
to the individual or entity who ``contracted for its services'' (40 CFR
745.227(i)). EPA is requesting comment on the proposed language to be
added to the abatement report.
F. Other Amendments
In order to conform the regulations to a statutory change, make
several other amendments to improve efficiency of the program and make
several regulatory text corrections, EPA is proposing to amend 40 CFR
part 745, subparts E (Residential Property Renovation), F (Disclosure
of Known Lead-Based Paint and/or Lead-Based Paint Hazards Upon Sale or
Lease of Residential Property), and L (Lead-Based Paint Activities).
1. Definition of Target Housing
EPA is proposing to update the definition of target housing in 40
CFR 745.103 and 40 CFR 745.223 to align with the statutory changes made
in 2017, and to make conforming edits to language in 40 CFR 745.223 and
40 CFR 745.227. Target housing defines which housing is subject to
EPA's LBP rules. Within section 237(a) through (c) of Title II of
Division K of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017 (Pub. L. 115-
31, 131 Stat. 788 and 789), Congress amended HUD and EPA's statutory
definitions of target housing to include 0-bedroom dwellings if a child
less than 6 years of age resides or is expected to reside in such
housing (42 U.S.C. 4822(e); 42 U.S.C. 4851(b)(27); 15 U.S.C. 2681(17)).
The proposed change to the definition of target housing in 40 CFR
745.103 and 40 CFR 745.223 would conform to the statutory language by
defining target housing as any housing constructed prior to 1978,
except housing for older adults or persons with disabilities or any 0-
bedroom dwelling (unless any child who is less than 6 years of age
resides or is expected to reside in such housing). For consistency, EPA
is also proposing to revise the definition of living area in 40 CFR
745.223 to change the age from 6 and under to less than 6 years of age.
Similarly, language describing the age of children in 40 CFR
745.227(c)(2)(i), (c)(2)(iv), (c)(2)(v), (d)(3), (d)(5), and (d)(6)(ii)
would be updated from 6 years of age and under to under age 6 to
conform to the statutory language as amended.
2. Definition of Child-Occupied Facility (COF) and Living Areas
EPA is proposing to revise the definition of COF in 40 CFR 745.223
and related regulatory language in 40 CFR 745.227 to establish
consistency throughout the LBP regulations. The LBP Activities
regulations define COFs as buildings or portions of buildings,
constructed prior to 1978, in which the same child regularly visits on
at least two different days within any given week, with their visits
lasting at least 3 hours with combined visits of at least 6 hours, and
combined annual visits lasting at least 60 hours. COFs may include, but
are not limited to, day-care centers, preschools and kindergarten
classrooms. Living areas define any area of a residential dwelling used
by one or more children which include, but are not limited to, living
rooms, kitchen areas, dens, play rooms, and children's bedrooms.
Currently, the definition of COF at 40 CFR 745.223 identifies children
impacted by the LBP Activities regulations as age 6 and under, while
the definition of COF in the RRP regulations at 40 CFR 745.83
identifies children impacted by the RRP regulations as under 6 years of
age. In order to establish consistency in age throughout the LBP
regulations, including with the definition of target housing and the
RRP regulations' definition of COF, EPA is proposing to change the
language in the definition of COF in 40 CFR 745.223 to less than 6
years of age. Language describing the age of children in 40 CFR
745.227(d)(7) would also be updated from 6 years of age and under to
under age 6 to conform.
3. Electronic Submissions
EPA is proposing to require submissions for application payments,
applications, and notices to be done electronically. Under this
proposal, this rule would specifically define ``electronic'' in 40 CFR
745.83 and 40 CFR 745.223 to mean ``the submission of an application,
payment, or notice using the Agency's Central Data Exchange (CDX), or a
successor platform.'' In 2016, the U.S. Treasury Department changed
their process so that paper checks would no longer be allowed for
payment of fees associated with RRP or abatement programs. Since that
time, applications that require payment, such as individual and firm
certifications as well as training provider accreditation applications,
have been submitted electronically via CDX. Therefore, EPA is proposing
to amend 40 CFR 745.89 (a)(1), 40 CFR 745.92(c)(2), and 40 CFR
745.238(e)(2) to conform to the 2016 U.S. Treasury Department process
and require payments to be made only electronically via CDX or a
successor platform.
Currently there's no specific submission method defining how to
submit applications in EPA's LBP regulations. This ambiguity allows for
the potential of written applications to be submitted which requires
time consuming activities such as data entry and accrues administrative
costs. Therefore, EPA is proposing to amend 40 CFR 745.89 (a)(1),
(b)(1), (b)(1)(i), and (c)(1); 40 CFR 745.225(b)(1), (e)(5), (f)(2),
and (j)(2); 40 CFR 745.226(a), (e), (f), and (h)(1)(iii); 40 CFR
745.227(e)(4)(vii) and 40 CFR 745.238(d), and (e) to reflect the
proposed requirement of submitting applications electronically via CDX
or a successor platform. This will add further clarification and
uniformity to this process.
Additionally, EPA is proposing to require that abatement and
training notifications be submitted electronically via CDX or a
successor platform. Requiring electronic submissions and eliminating
fax submissions would remove the need for fax machine maintenance and
would also reduce phone service costs. Therefore, EPA is proposing to
amend 40 CFR 745.225(c)(13)(vi) and (14)(iii) to require submission of
abatement and training notifications to occur electronically via CDX or
a successor platform.
4. Disclosure Rule Warning Statement
EPA is proposing to update the Disclosure Rule's Lead Warning
Statement in 40 CFR 745.113(b)(1) to address a drafting error. Both the
preamble of the Disclosure Rule (required by Section 1018 of Title X),
and the relevant public sample form include the following language:
``Before renting pre-1978 housing, lessors must disclose the presence
of known lead-based paint and/or lead-based paint hazards in the
dwelling,'' which is consistent with EPA and HUD's adaptation to
leasing contracts of the statutory language in Section 1018 (Ref. 7).
However, the Lead Warning Statement in 40 CFR 745.113(b)(1) does not
include the word ``known.'' To conform this regulatory text with the
statutory and preamble language, EPA is proposing to amend the Lead
Warning Statement to include the word ``known'' when discussing lessors
disclosing the presence of LBP and/or LBP hazards in the dwelling.
[[Page 50466]]
5. Disclosure Rule Reference
EPA is proposing to amend the Disclosure Rule at 40 CFR
745.113(a)(4) and 40 CFR 745.113(b)(4) to include the correct lead
hazard information pamphlet reference, 15 U.S.C. 2686. This reference
further discusses the requirements for the lead hazard information
pamphlet and is the basis for its statutory authority. The current
reference of 15 U.S.C. 2696 does not exist and was a drafting error.
6. Definition of Housing for the Elderly
EPA is proposing to add the definition of ``housing for the
elderly'' to 40 CFR 745.223 in order to clarify the term ``elderly''
used in the definition of ``target housing,'' also in 40 CFR 745.223.
EPA already defines ``housing for the elderly'' in 40 CFR 745.103 as
``retirement communities or similar types of housing reserved for
households composed of one or more persons 62 years of age or more at
the time of initial occupancy'' under Subpart F, ``Disclosure of Known
Lead-Based Paint and/or Lead-Based Paint Hazards Upon Sale or Lease of
Residential Property.'' The proposal to include the same definition in
Subpart L, ``Lead-Based Paint Activities'' would add clarity and
consistency throughout the LBP program.
7. Obsolete Regulatory Text
EPA is proposing to revise and delete obsolete regulatory text
where language is out of date or no longer applicable in 40 CFR
745.81(a)(4)(i) and (b); 40 CFR 745.90(a)(3), and (4); 40 CFR
745.225(i)(2); and 40 CFR 745.226(f)(5). For example, 40 CFR 745.81(b)
currently reads: ``Before December 22, 2008, renovators or firms
performing renovations in State and Indian Tribal areas without an
authorized program may provide owners and occupants with either of the
following EPA pamphlets: Protect Your Family From Lead in Your Home or
Renovate Right: Important Lead Hazard Information for Families, Child
Care Providers and Schools. After that date, Renovate Right: Important
Lead Hazard Information for Families, Child Care Providers and Schools
must be used exclusively.'' This information is outdated; therefore,
EPA is proposing to update and consolidate this section to read:
``After December 22, 2008, renovators or firms performing renovations
in States and Indian Tribal areas without an authorized program must
provide owners and occupants the following EPA pamphlet: Renovate
Right: Important Lead Hazard Information for Families, Child Care
Providers and Schools.''
8. Incorporation by Reference
EPA is also considering adding incorporations by reference for two
voluntary consensus standards, each of which is already included in the
definition of ``wipe sample'' at 40 CFR 745.63: American Society for
Testing and Materials (ASTM) E1728 and ASTM E1792. EPA intends to
incorporate by reference the most recent version of each standard
(i.e., ASTM E1728-20 and ASTM E1792-20). Copies of these materials may
be obtained from ASTM International, 100 Barr Harbor Dr., P.O. Box
C700, West Conshohocken, PA 19428-2959, or by calling (877) 909-ASTM,
or at https://www.astm.org. ASTM standards referenced in this rule are
also available for public review in read-only format in the ASTM
Reading Room at https://www.astm.org/epa.htm only for the duration of
the public comment period.
If you have a disability and the format of these materials intended
for incorporation by reference interferes with your ability to access
the information, please contact EPA's Rehabilitation Act Section 508
(29 U.S.C. 794d) Program at https://www.epa.gov/accessibility/forms/contact-us-about-section-508-accessibility or via email at
[email protected]. To enable us to respond in a manner most helpful to
you, please indicate the nature of the accessibility issue, the web
address of the requested material, your preferred format in which you
want to receive the material (electronic format (ASCII, etc.), standard
print, large print, etc.), and your contact information.
V. Implications of Proposed Rule for Existing HUD and EPA Programs
A. HUD Programs
1. Lead-Safe Housing Rule
HUD has specific authority to control LBP and LBP hazards in
certain federally owned and federally-assisted target housing (Ref.
28). HUD's regulations at 24 CFR 35.1320(b)(2) cross-reference EPA's
regulations at 40 CFR 745.227(h), which currently discusses EPA's DLHS
but not EPA's DLCL. Due to the current cross-reference, the HUD
regulations have been read as requiring entities receiving government
funding currently to conduct post-abatement clearance until the levels
are below EPA's DLHS, which at the time this cross-reference was made,
were the same values as EPA's DLCL. Due to the 2021 Court Opinion, EPA
is now proposing approaches for these standards that would result in
decoupling the DLHS and DLCL as explained in Unit IV. EPA is proposing
modifications to 40 CFR 745.227(h) to clarify that the Agency does not
intend to compel clearance down to the DLHS and to alleviate potential
regulatory confusion surrounding clearance (as discussed in Unit IV.C
of this notice).
Other impacts of EPA's proposal could include a possible decrease
in the number of landlords participating in certain HUD programs, as
well as families potentially shifting from assisted housing to
unassisted housing, which has been shown to be associated with a higher
prevalence of LBP hazards (Refs. 68 and 69) and higher BLLs (Ref. 70).
As discussed in Unit II.A., lead exposure, even in small amounts, can
cause substantial and long-lasting health problems, particularly
through its effects on children's development. Access to secure housing
is also an important social determinant of health (Ref. 71). Research
finds negative health effects resulting from three key mechanisms of
housing insecurity: lack of housing affordability leading to stress and
material deprivation (Refs. 72, 73, 74 and 75), lack of housing
stability (Refs. 76, 77, 78, 79 and 80), and lack of safe and adequate
housing (Refs. 81, 82, 83, 84 and 85). HUD's housing assistance
programs play a critical role in helping nearly 5 million households
(Ref. 86) avoid housing insecurity and its harmful effects on physical
and mental health (Refs. 70, 87, 88, 89, and 90). Despite such Federal
assistance, the nation faces a critical shortage of affordable rental
housing affecting about 8 million very low-income households (Ref. 91).
EPA considered the proposed changes to the DLHS and DLCL and the
potential impacts on HUD's housing programs within the EA (see Section
10.2 for this discussion) (Ref. 14). Existing research on landlord
participation in the Housing Choice Voucher program (Refs. 92, 93, 94
and 95) suggests that more stringent standards or uncertainty as to how
to meet those standards could be a disincentive for private target
housing providers to participate in HUD's rental assistance programs
including the Housing Choice Voucher program (tenant-based rental
assistance program) and the project-based assistance programs, which
could in turn reduce access to affordable and stable housing associated
with a relatively lower prevalence of LBP hazards than unassisted
housing. As a result, EPA is requesting information and comment on
whether adoption of the proposed DLHS and DLCL or alternative
regulatory options under consideration would lead to an increase in
housing insecurity or
[[Page 50467]]
lead exposures. If so, EPA is requesting comment on whether there would
be any adverse health effects due to this potential increase in housing
insecurity alongside the health benefits of reduced lead exposure, as
well as whether there are changes that EPA could make to the rule that
maintain landlord participation in rental assistance programs while
achieving the objectives of the statute.
EPA expects relatively limited impacts on housing supply due to
this rulemaking for some housing types subject to HUD's LSHR. Subpart F
of the LSHR covers HUD-owned single family housing properties for sale
that are sold under a HUD mortgage program. HUD (i.e. the Federal
Government) would be responsible for all costs associated with
compliance to a stricter DLHS/DLCL before selling the property. While
modest delays may occur in closing on sale transactions for these
properties, a reduction in housing supply covered under this subpart is
unlikely. Subpart G of the LSHR covers multi-family housing where
either HUD is the owner of a mortgage or the owner of a property
receives mortgage insurance under a program run by HUD. Housing covered
under this subpart of the LSHR has risk assessment, interim control,
and LBP maintenance requirements, but private landlords for these
properties directly seek out Federal funds, and even if some of the
federally-provided money is spent complying with a stricter DLHS/DLCL
to comply with the LSHR, participating grantees should typically have a
positive net return. To ensure all potential impacts of the rule are
considered, EPA is requesting comment on impacts to housing covered
under these other LSHR subparts as well as additional factors that
should be considered as part of the EA.
2. Grantee Programs
On February 16, 2017, HUD issued policy guidance to establish new
and more protective requirements for dust-lead action levels for its
Lead-Based Paint Hazard Control (LBPHC) and Lead Hazard Reduction
Demonstration (LHRD) grantees (the requirements also apply to related
HUD grants authorized by Title X, section 1011 (42 U.S.C. 4852), under
similar names, including Lead Hazard Reduction grants and their High
Impact Neighborhoods and Highest Lead-Based Paint Abatement Needs grant
categories) (Ref. 96). The guidance adopted dust-lead action levels of
10 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors and 100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills,
respectively, for initiating lead hazard control activities under these
grant programs, and lead clearance action levels of 10 [mu]g/ft\2\ for
floors, and 100 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills and troughs, respectively,
for clearing such lead hazard control activities. If the proposed
changes to the DLCL discussed in Unit IV are finalized, LBPHC and LHRD
grantees would be required by EPA's regulations to clear lead abatement
projects to the updated DLCL of 3 [micro]g/ft\2\, 20 [micro]g/ft\2\,
and 25 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors, window sills, and troughs
respectively. If EPA finalizes the proposed changes to the DLHS and
DLCL, HUD has informed the Agency that it would likely issue new policy
guidance on initiating lead hazard control activities and on clearing
lead abatement projects under these grant programs, and that it would
consider issuing new policy guidance on clearing interim control
projects under these grant programs.
3. EPA-HUD Disclosure Rule
Under the Disclosure Rule (Ref. 7), prospective sellers and lessors
of target housing, which is most pre-1978 housing, must provide
purchasers and renters with a federally approved lead hazard
information pamphlet and disclose known LBP and/or LBP hazards, and any
available records, reports, and additional information pertaining to
LBP and/or LBP hazards. The information disclosure activities are
required before a purchaser or renter is obligated under a contract to
purchase or lease target housing. The records or reports pertaining to
LBP and/or LBP hazards include, among other things, results from risk
assessments, regardless of whether the levels of dust-lead are above or
below the dust-lead hazard standards, and from post-abatement dust wipe
testing, above or below the clearance levels. Because disclosure is
required in target housing regardless of whether dust levels are above
or below the DLHS or DLCL, finalizing the GTZ approach for the dust-
lead hazard standards and lowering the dust-lead clearance levels would
not result in more disclosures; rather it would result in more
disclosures indicating that a lead-based paint hazard is present (since
the proposed GTZ is lower than the current DLHS from 2019). EPA is also
proposing changes to the definition of ``target housing'' (40 CFR
745.223) which expands the universe of housing subject to the
Disclosure Rule requirements. This is reflective of a change to the
statutory definition (Pub. L. 115-37, Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2017, Division K, Title II, section 237(c)). This proposed conforming
change to the regulatory definition of target housing to include 0-
bedroom dwellings where a child resides may slightly increase the
number of disclosures issued.
4. HUD Guidelines
The HUD Guidelines for the Evaluation and Control of Lead-Based
Paint Hazards in Housing (https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/healthy_homes/lbp/hudguidelines) were developed in 1995 under section
1017 of Title X. The Guidelines provide detailed, comprehensive, and
technical information on how to identify LBP hazards in residential
housing and COFs, and how to control such hazards safely and
efficiently. The Guidelines were revised in 2012 to incorporate new
information, technological advances, and new Federal regulations,
including EPA's LBP hazard standards. If EPA finalizes changes to the
DLHS and DLCL as proposed, HUD has informed the Agency that it would
likely revise Chapter 5 of the Guidelines on risk assessment and
reevaluation, Chapter 12 on abatement, and Chapter 15 on clearance, and
make conforming changes elsewhere as needed (Ref. 97).
B. EPA LBP Programs
1. LBP Activities Rule
LBP activities include risk assessments, inspections, and
abatements. If this rule is finalized as proposed, it will have impacts
to LBP activities, including: the definition of abatement, what is
considered a DLHS, the DLCL used to determine whether an abatement can
be considered complete, and the definition of target housing.
As stated earlier in this preamble, EPA's risk assessment work
practice standards provide the basis for risk assessors to determine
whether LBP hazards are present in target housing and COFs. As part of
a risk assessment, dust samples are taken from floors and window sills
to determine if dust-lead levels exceed the DLHS. The results of the
sampling, among other things, are documented in a risk assessment
report which is required under the LBP Activities Rule (Ref. 24). In
addition to the sampling results, the report must describe the location
and severity of any dust-lead hazards found and describe interim
controls or abatement measures needed to address the hazards.
Under this proposed rule, sampling results reporting any level of
lead analyzed by an NLLAP-recognized laboratory will indicate that a
dust-lead hazard is present on the surfaces tested. EPA expects that
the proposed DLHS will result in more hazards being identified in a
portion of target housing and COFs that undergo risk assessments. This
proposed rule does
[[Page 50468]]
not change any other risk assessment requirements; however, it does
recommend changes to the definition of abatement, which is discussed in
the following paragraph.
Abatements are currently defined as any measures or set of measures
designed to permanently eliminate lead-based paint hazards and include
activities such as the removal of paint and dust, the permanent
enclosure or encapsulation of lead-based paint, the replacement of
painted surfaces or fixtures, and all preparation, cleanup, disposal,
and post-abatement dust wipe testing activities associated with such
measures. The proposed change to the definition of abatement would
shift the recommendation for an abatement to when the dust-lead
loadings are at or above the DLCL. Because the proposed DLCL are lower
than the 2019 DLHS, more recommendations for abatement are expected.
However, not every circumstance where dust-lead hazards are identified
will result in an EPA recommendation for abatement, i.e., when dust-
lead loadings are at or above the DLHS, but below the DLCL. Similarly,
EPA recommends interim controls only in circumstances when dust-lead
loadings are at or above the DLCL, rather than the DLHS, for the
reasons explained above.
After LBP abatements are conducted, EPA's regulations require a
certified inspector or risk assessor to conduct post-abatement dust
wipe testing of the abated area. If the dust wipe sample results show
dust-lead loadings equal to or exceeding the applicable DLCL, ``the
components represented by the failed sample shall be recleaned and
retested.'' See 40 CFR part 745.227(e)(8)(vii). In other words, the
abatement is not cleared until the dust wipe samples in the work area
are below the DLCL. If this rule is finalized as proposed, inspectors
and risk assessors would compare dust wipe sampling results for floors,
window sills and troughs to the revised DLCL of 3 [mu]g/ft\2\, 20
[mu]g/ft\2\, and 25 [mu]g/ft\2\, respectively. Dust wipe sampling
results at or above the DLCL would indicate that the components
represented by the sample must be recleaned and retested.
Lastly, as described in Unit IV.F.1, this proposed rule conforms
the regulatory definition of target housing with the statute to include
any 0-bedroom dwellings constructed prior to 1978 if a child less than
6 years of age, resides or is expected to reside in such housing, which
could increase the number of homes covered by this regulation. In
addition, EPA is proposing regulatory changes to adjust the age
requirements from 6 years of age and under, to under age 6 for the
definition of target housing, COFs and living area, which could reduce
the number of homes and COFs covered by this regulation; see Units
IV.F.1. and 2. for more information.
2. Previous LBP-Related Activities
Since the DLHS do not compel specific EPA actions, revisions to the
DLHS would not in and of themselves compel any actions under the LBP
Activities Rule, retroactively or otherwise, but actions would be
compelled under other laws or regulations, including HUD's LSHR and
possibly those of some state, local, Tribal or territorial governments.
Inspection reports and risk assessments describe conditions at a
specific time. A report that indicates no presence of LBP and/or an LBP
hazard should not imply the absence of those conditions in perpetuity.
Additionally, the DLHS may be incorporated into requirements mandated
by state, Federal, Tribal, and other programs that may require actions
based on the revised DLHS. Those other authorities may want to consider
guidance or other communications with their regulated communities, so
those entities understand how to comply with the various programs that
reference the DLHS.
The DLCL however, are used to evaluate the effectiveness of a
cleaning following an abatement. After the dust wipe samples show dust-
lead loadings below the DLCL, an abatement report is prepared, copies
of any reports required under the LBP Activities Rule are provided to
the building owner (and to potential lessees and purchasers under the
LBP Disclosure Rule by those building owners or their agents), and all
required records are also retained by the abatement firm or by the
individuals who developed each report. The proposed DLCL of 3 [mu]g/
ft\2\ for floors, 20 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills, and 25 [mu]g/ft\2\
for troughs would not impose retroactive requirements on regulated
entities that have previously performed post-abatement clearance. These
updated DLCL would only apply to post-abatement clearance sampling and
analysis conducted after the compliance date for that portion of the
final rule (i.e., one year after publication of the final rule).
In addition, this rulemaking does not impose retroactive
requirements to regulated entities that have previously complied with
the Disclosure Rule. In accordance with 40 CFR 745.107, a seller or
lessor generally must properly disclose any available records or
reports pertaining to LBP and/or LBP hazards before the purchaser or
lessee is obligated under any contract to purchase or lease target
housing. The seller or lessor is not required to disclose reports or
records that may be created in the future, after the close of that
transaction. Additionally, any LBP-free certification that was issued
by a certified inspector, and was issued before the effective date of
this rulemaking, is still valid going forward and may continue to be
used for exemption to the Disclosure Rule.
3. Renovation, Repair, and Painting Rule
The proposed DLHS and DLCL would not trigger new requirements under
the existing RRP Rule (40 CFR part 745, subpart E). The existing RRP
work practices are required where LBP is present (or assumed to be
present) and are not predicated by dust-lead loadings exceeding the
DLHS. The existing RRP regulations do not require dust-lead sampling
prior to or at the conclusion of a renovation and are not affected by a
change to the DLHS or DLCL. Therefore, RRP regulations will not be
directly affected by the proposed revisions to the DLHS or the DLCL.
The RRP Rule does require specific post-renovation cleaning
verification under 40 CFR 745.85(b), but the rule does not require dust
wipe sampling and analysis using the DLCL. However, although optional
under the RRP Rule, dust wipe sampling for clearance using the DLCL in
accordance with the LBP Activities Rule (40 CFR 745.227(e)(8)) may be
required by contract or by another Federal, state, territorial, Tribal,
or local law or regulation. At this time, other than HUD's Lead Safe
Housing Rule, for renovations of assisted target housing, EPA is not
aware of other laws and regulations that require clearance testing
using EPA's DLCL. EPA seeks information on this point and welcomes
public comments.
4. Laboratory Quality System Requirements
As discussed previously in Unit II.C., NLLAP is an EPA program
under which an accrediting organization assesses whether a paint chip,
dust, or soil testing laboratory meets minimum standards for laboratory
analysis to attain EPA recognition as an accredited lead testing
laboratory (https://www.epa.gov/lead/national-lead-laboratory-accreditation-program-nllap). Laboratories and other testing firms
recognized under NLLAP follow the LQSR. This rulemaking does not modify
the minimum standards outlined in the latest LQSR version 3.0. However,
changes to the action level (i.e., the proposed DLCL) would impact the
quantitation limit that NLLAP-
[[Page 50469]]
recognized laboratories would attain to participate in the NLLAP, as
that must be equal to or less than 50% of the lowest action level for
dust wipe samples per specific surface area (i.e., floors, window
sills, window troughs) (Ref. 29). If finalized as proposed, the lowest
action level for dust wipe samples would be the DLCL of 3 [micro]g/
ft\2\ for floors, 20 [micro]g/ft\2\ for window sills and 25 [micro]g/
ft\2\ for troughs. As a result, the quantitation limit for NLLAP-
recognized labs would be equal to or less than 1.5 [micro]g/ft\2\ for
floors, 10 [micro]g/ft\2\ for window sills and 12.5 [micro]g/ft\2\ for
troughs.
C. Authorized Programs
Pursuant to TSCA section 404 and EPA's regulations at 40 CFR part
745, subpart Q, interested states, territories, and federally
recognized Tribes may apply for and receive authorization to administer
their own LBP Activities programs (as briefly described in Unit II.C.),
as long as their programs are at least as protective of human health
and the environment as EPA's program, and provide adequate enforcement.
As part of the authorization process, states, territories, and
federally recognized Tribes must demonstrate to EPA that they meet the
requirements of the LBP Activities Rule. A state, territory, or
federally recognized Tribe must demonstrate that it meets any new
requirements imposed by this rulemaking upon finalization in its
application for authorization or, if already authorized, in a report
submitted under 40 CFR 745.324(h) no later than two years after the
effective date of the new requirements. If an application for
authorization has been submitted but not yet approved, the state,
territory, or federally recognized Tribe must demonstrate that it meets
the proposed requirements either by amending its application, or in a
report it submits under 40 CFR 745.324(h) no later than two years after
the effective date of the new requirements (40 CFR 745.325(e)).
VI. Proposed Effective and Compliance Dates
EPA is proposing that the final rule would become effective on the
date that is 60 days after publication in the Federal Register. The
Agency is proposing an extended compliance date of one year for the
DLHS, the DLCL, and the change to the abatement report requirements (40
CFR 745.65 definition ``dust-lead hazard''; 40 CFR 227(h)(3)(i); 40 CFR
745.227(e)(8)(viii) and (10)(vii)). EPA seeks comment on the
appropriate compliance date, including whether the compliance date
should be six months, eighteen months, two years or another longer
timeframe, as well as the justification for the change.
EPA has considered the impacts of the proposed DLHS and DLCL on
NLLAP-recognized laboratories and is proposing a subsequent compliance
date of one year after publication of the final rule in Federal
Register for certain provisions under this rulemaking. The proposed
compliance date is intended to provide a reasonable amount of time for
NLLAP-recognized laboratories to take actions to meet the lower LQSR
quantitation limit (50% of the lowest action level for dust wipe
samples) so they can continue providing dust wipe testing services to
the regulated community and in emergent situations by the compliance
date for the revised standards.
To obtain a better understanding of laboratories' capability and
capacity for dust wipe testing, EPA conducted teleconferences with nine
NLLAP-recognized laboratories (Refs. 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63 and
64). As explained in Unit IV.B., based on the information EPA received
from this outreach, EPA believes that laboratories with more up to date
ICP-AES instruments and optimized methods should be able to satisfy the
LQSR dust wipe testing procedures and the regulatory limit of the
primary DLCL option of 3 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors, 20 [micro]g/ft\2\
for window sills and 25 [micro]g/ft\2\ for troughs (quantitation limit
of 1.5 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors, 10 [micro]g/ft\2\ for window sills
and 12.5 [micro]g/ft\2\ for troughs). However, FAAS is the most
ubiquitous equipment used, and EPA is estimating that accredited
laboratories may buy new equipment to meet the lower LQSR limits. Based
on the outreach performed, laboratories may need as little as six
months but as much as 18 months to finance and obtain new equipment
(such as ICP-AES), hire and train staff, and potentially receive new
NLLAP accreditation (Refs. 56, 57 and 62). Two laboratories said it
could take as much as two years to adjust to hypothetical regulatory
changes such as the ones being proposed (Refs. 58 and 59).
EPA therefore believes that the proposed compliance date provides
the needed flexibility for laboratories while ensuring that the revised
DLHS and DLCL become effective in a timely manner. However, in
consideration of the feedback received from NLLAP-recognized
laboratories during the Agency's outreach efforts, EPA is requesting
comment on the proposed compliance date, whether six-months is
appropriate for the primary DLCL option (i.e., 3/20/25 [micro]g/ft\2\)
or if 12 months, 18 months, or some other amount of time is necessary,
and why the extra time is needed.
Additionally, if the alternative DLCL is finalized (i.e., 5/40/100
[micro]g/ft\2\), based on the laboratory outreach, EPA has increased
confidence that laboratories can numerically quantify dust-lead levels
of 5 [micro]g/wipe and attain a quantitation limit of equal to or less
than 50% of that level (i.e., 2.5/20/50 [mu]g/ft\2\) with FAAS
technology, especially if the area tested is doubled from one square
foot to two. EPA is also requesting comment on whether NLLAP-recognized
laboratories would still need a six-month compliance date if the Agency
finalized the alternative DLCL, or if 12-months, 18-months, or some
other amount of time would be necessary to provide the flexibility that
laboratories need in that scenario and why.
EPA is also proposing a six-month compliance date for the DLHS
along with the DLCL and is interested in revising both standards at the
same time to reduce any confusion and avoid any concerns within the
regulated community that may be caused by staggering the DLHS and the
DLCL compliance dates. EPA believes that since the DLHS are non-numeric
which is different than they have been historically, and as the program
is shifting to the DLCL becoming the ``action level'' for the LQSR, it
is important to allow ample time for the regulated community to adapt
to the revised DLHS and DLCL. Additionally, if the DLHS compliance date
occurred before the DLCL compliance date, EPA is concerned it may
trigger unnecessary confusion for laboratories. EPA is requesting
comment on the appropriateness of the DLHS and the DLCL having the same
compliance date.
VII. Request for Comments
A. Proposed Dust-Lead Hazard Standards
EPA is seeking input on its proposal to lower the DLHS to any
reportable level of dust-lead analyzed by an NLLAP-recognized
laboratory, and the two alternative approaches to revising the DLHS--
the numeric standard approach and the post-1977 background approach.
EPA is requesting feedback not only on all the approaches considered
but also on all the DLHS options themselves outlined in the preamble
and within the TSD. EPA is requesting comment on the appropriateness of
EPA's interpretation of ``any reportable level.'' EPA is also
requesting comment on whether laboratories believe there are potential
inconsistencies with the lowest reportable level within any one
laboratory or across the industry, the
[[Page 50470]]
extent of these inconsistencies, and if laboratories foresee this
causing any concern for their clients. EPA is also requesting comment
on the effects of not setting the DLHS at a fixed numeric value, and
whether any potential inconsistencies with individual laboratory
reporting levels (when interpreting dust-lead results in relation to
the hazard standards), would cause challenges for the regulated
community or other stakeholders, e.g., building owners or residents.
EPA is also seeking any information or data for a level of dust-
lead exposure that would not result in adverse health effects, and any
information on how much exposure in terms of BLL or change in IQ
decrement would be the most scientifically appropriate to compare to
the modeled results or as a rationale to set the DLHS, including the
appropriate threshold of probability of exceedance for a child from the
sub-population of interest.
B. Proposed Dust-Lead Clearance Levels and Alternatives
EPA is requesting comment on its proposal to lower the DLCL to 3
[mu]g/ft\2\ for floors, 20 [mu]g/ft\2\ for window sills, and 25 [mu]g/
ft\2\ for troughs. EPA is requesting comment on NLLAP-recognized
laboratories' ability to test to these clearance levels, especially
given that, if finalized as proposed, the quantitation limit would be
50% of the DLCL (i.e., 1.5/10/12.5 [mu]g/ft\2\) for laboratories that
remain in NLLAP. EPA is also requesting comment on whether LBP
professionals can clean/achieve clearance at these levels. EPA is also
interested in feedback on whether the primary or alternative DLCL
option is preferred and if they appropriately take into account
reliability, effectiveness, and safety. Also, in some cases, window
sills and troughs may have a small surface area, and therefore, EPA is
requesting comment on the ability to collect a sufficient amount of
dust-lead to meet all laboratories' quantitation limits with their
existing analytical equipment or any other equipment that might be
necessary for the DLCL primary and secondary options presented. EPA is
also requesting comment on whether there is any data or information on
whether window sills and window troughs should have the same clearance
values, and why or why not. EPA is interested in both feedback and
justification for whether a higher trough value such as 100 [mu]g/ft\2\
or if another DLCL combination (for floors, window sills and window
troughs) besides the primary and alternative options considered is
appropriate given the statutory criteria of reliability, effectiveness,
and safety. Lastly, EPA requests comment on whether or not the proposed
DLCL would discourage initiation of elective dust-lead remediation
altogether.
Additionally, EPA is seeking input on a phased approach of
establishing the alternative, higher DLCL first (5/40/100 [mu]g/ft\2\)
and then in a specific amount of time, e.g., three years, lowering it
to the primary DLCL value (3/20/25 [mu]g/ft\2\). This phased approach
would give laboratories with FAAS equipment time to purchase the more
sensitive equipment needed to achieve the lower levels, hire new
employees, become accredited with the new equipment, etc. EPA requests
feedback on whether this is an approach that should be considered and,
if so, what would be an appropriate amount of time between the first
and second lowering of the DLCL.
C. Other Amendments
EPA is seeking comment on whether the changes to the definition of
abatement make it clear that abatements should only be recommended when
the dust-lead loadings are at or above the DLCL, rather than at or
above the DLHS as it has been historically. EPA is also interested in
receiving feedback on its proposed changes to 40 CFR 745.227(h) (to
alleviate potential regulatory confusion surrounding clearance); as
well as the additional language being added to the abatement report
requirements, including whether EPA should make similar modifications
to the risk assessment report requirements to add specific language
explaining that abatements should only be recommended when the dust-
lead loadings are at or above DLCL. EPA is also requesting comment on
the effectiveness of the proposed language in the abatement report
requirements to educate the public on remaining dust-lead hazards,
promote behavior change, and point them to educational materials such
as Protect Your Family. In those circumstances where the additional
language would be added to abatement reports, EPA is also interested in
feedback on whether the Protect Your Family materials themselves should
be included alongside the abatement report and why Protect Your Family
should be included. Separately, due to feedback received during the
UMRA/federalism consultation: EPA is also interested in feedback on
whether additional communication materials would be beneficial for
public housing authorities to have access to in order to provide to
residents living in homes with dust-lead hazards. If so, EPA is
requesting information on what type of materials, for what DLHS and
DLCL options, and for which type of stakeholder/end user (if there are
any besides public housing authorities) would be helpful.
EPA is seeking comment on all other amendments including the
conforming change to the definition of target housing to provide
consistency with the statutory change to the definition, as well as the
conforming edits to children's age (i.e., under six) to provide
consistency within the LBP regulations. EPA is requesting comment on
how long after final rule publication the compliance date should be.
EPA is proposing to establish a compliance date for the DLHS and DLCL
that would occur on the date that is one year after the publication
date of the final rule in the Federal Register. The Agency invites
public comment on the adequacy of the proposed compliance date. EPA is
also seeking feedback from states, territories, or Tribes that are
authorized by EPA to operate their own LBP activities programs, on the
impact of this proposed rule and if it will have substantial direct
effects on the states, territories, or Tribes, on the relationship
between the U.S. government and the states, territories, or Tribes, or
on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various
levels of government or between the Federal Government and Indian
Tribes, such as whether states, territories, or Tribes may relinquish
their programs back to EPA.
D. Methods, Models and Data
EPA is also requesting comment on the methods, models and data used
in the EA and the TSD that accompany this proposal. In particular, EPA
requests comment on the EA's use of the lifetime IQ concentration-
response function to calculate IQ loss for ages for young children,
particularly at low exposure levels (see section 6.4 in the EA).
Additionally, EPA solicits comment and peer reviewed information on
evidence relevant to quantifying and monetizing the incremental
contribution of blood lead concentrations to other health and/or
behavioral endpoints, including adult cardiovascular mortality.
EPA is proposing to update its regulatory definition of target
housing to conform to the 2017 revised statutory language (see Unit
IV.F.1.). EPA estimates that there are 10,850 pre-1978 dwellings that
would be affected because they have zero bedrooms and a child under the
age of 6 resides in them. EPA's EA for this action (Ref. 14) estimates
that the total annual cost (including complying with existing lead-
based paint program requirements for disclosure for real estate
transactions, disclosure for renovation
[[Page 50471]]
activities, abatement, and the renovation, repair and painting rule) in
newly defined target housing would be $0.2 million. EPA's analysis also
estimates that the annual benefits of these requirements would be $3.7
million using a 3% discount rate and $0.8 million using a 7% discount
rate. EPA requests comment on its estimate of the number of affected
housing units, and on the methods and assumptions it used to estimate
the costs and benefits resulting from aligning its regulatory
definition with the revised statutory definition.
EPA is proposing to require submissions for applications,
application payments, and abatement and training notifications notices
for the lead paint program be made electronically, instead of through
mail, fax, or hand delivery (see Unit IV.F.3.). Based on its EA for
this action (Ref. 14), EPA expects that this automation would save
firms switching to electronic reporting an average of 5 hours per firm
in labor, and that across all affected firms the change would result in
total annual savings of approximately $20,000 using a 3% discount rate
and $10,000 using a 7% discount rate. EPA solicits comment on the
benefits and costs of requiring such electronic reporting.
Certain provisions of the HUD LSHR require lead hazard reduction
activities when dust-lead levels exceed the DLHS. Given the nature of
the proposed GTZ approach, in order to account for these activities in
its EA (Ref. 14), EPA estimated what the reportable levels would be
under the GTZ options, based on the analytical equipment that
laboratories would likely use under these options. According to the
LQSR, NLLAP-recognized laboratories must be able to demonstrate a
quantitation limit less than or equal to half of the action level in
order to maintain or obtain NLLAP recognition. Since the action level
under the GTZ options would be the DLCL, the floor and window sill
reporting levels estimated for analytical purposes for the GTZ options
vary depending on the DLCL levels that the GTZ is paired with. Because
some types of laboratory equipment have quantitation levels well below
half of the DLCL options, EPA estimated the reporting limits for the
mix of analytical instruments likely to be used under the GTZ options
in order for the quantitation limits to be at least half of the DLCL.
EPA solicits data on the distribution of quantitation limits for
different types of analytical instruments in order to allow the Agency
to refine its estimates of the reportable levels under the GTZ/DLCL
options that the Agency is considering. EPA also requests data on the
false positive and false negative rates for testing lead in dust using
different types of analytical equipment (e.g., FAAS, ICP-AES, and ICP-
MS).
EPA requests data on costs for dust-lead testing that the Agency
can use to refine its EA for the final rule. EPA also solicits
information and comments related to any other data, assumptions, or
methodology that EPA used to estimate the costs of the proposed rule,
or on any costs that EPA did not quantify. EPA also requests comment on
potential changes to the proposed rule that would reduce impacts on
small entities while being consistent with statutory requirements and
still achieving the rule's objectives.
Also, due to feedback from the UMRA/federalism consultation EPA is
interested in any comments that can provide information on COFs,
particularly any information that could help inform an EA, such as data
on the number and cost of abatements partnered with recent dust-lead
loading results, how many children under six were present in the COF at
the time, etc. Based on the information available to it at the time of
the proposal, EPA was unable to quantify benefits to children visiting
COFs that would be affected by this rule. Since the data EPA used were
only associated with the abatements in states, territories and tribes
where the Agency administers the lead-based paint activities program,
EPA specifically requests data on COF abatements in the jurisdictions
that are authorized to administer their own lead abatement programs.
EPA also requests information on the typical practices of environmental
investigations at child-occupied facilities, and whether or how these
practices may differ by type of COF (e.g., public school, private
school, daycare center). EPA is interested in whether state/local
requirements ever require routine dust wipe testing at COFs in the
absence of a child with a blood lead level above a state or Federal
action level, or how often COFs proactively have their dust-lead levels
voluntarily tested. EPA would also welcome information on whether, in
real-world practice, COFs always undergo dust wipe testing when a child
who frequents the facility has a BLL above state or Federal action
levels, or whether COFs are only tested if an investigation of the
affected child's home reports no LBP, and if there are other
circumstances that might lead to dust wipe testing at a COF.
Based on the information available to it at the time of the
proposal, EPA was unable to quantify benefits to children visiting COFs
that would be affected by this rule. EPA requests information that
would allow it to estimate such benefits for the final rule. EPA
requests comment on data sources for parameterizing the R-SHEDS-IEUBK
model used in the TSD and EA to estimate changes in blood lead levels
for COFs (given that children's activity and exposure patterns may
differ between housing and COFs, and the model is not calibrated or
validated for predicting blood lead level changes in COFs), as well as
how to avoid double-counting benefits between activities in target
housing and COFs. EPA requests comment on sources of data including:
children's activity patterns while attending COFs, physical parameters
of COFs including area covered by different flooring material types,
number and type of windows, and information on frequency of maintenance
and cleaning. EPA also requests information on the range of baseline
blood lead levels or lead exposures across the population of children
that visit a COF where an abatement occurs.
EPA also requests information and data on the potential economic
and health impacts to current residents and landlords of housing that
is subsidized by tenant-based rental or project assistance programs run
by HUD or USDA. EPA also requests comment on whether there are other
types of assisted housing programs where there is a significant risk of
landlords withdrawing from the program due to this rulemaking; specific
factors that determine whether landlords would stop participating in
Federal assistance programs; and estimates of the cost elasticity of
landlord participation in such programs. EPA also welcomes comment and/
or data that provides evidence for direct or indirect health impacts
associated with relatively higher potential lead exposures in regard to
housing insecurity attributable to housing quality standards (both
generally and specific to lead-related standards).
EPA is requesting comment on research, studies, modeling, data, and
any other information on the effects of the availability of target
housing units for low-income families, including assisted target
housing units, due to housing quality standards. Furthermore, EPA
requests comment on potential impacts to the non-federally-assisted
rental housing market, particularly naturally-occurring low-income
housing, due to housing quality standards, including quantitative
evidence of housing instability or differential housing outcomes or
lead
[[Page 50472]]
exposures for families with young children that have resulted from
local, state, or Federal lead paint regulations.
E. Other Requests for Comment
Finally, EPA is requesting comment on the impacts on NLLAP-
recognized dust-lead laboratories, through considerations such as:
added turnaround time for testing analysis (affecting re-occupancy,
including temporary housing costs adding to overall project costs);
added laboratory costs and the possibility of increasing project costs;
and possible loss to NLLAP-recognized laboratories that cannot or do
not want to make the investment and/or reduce their throughput at the
proposed lower DLHS and DLCL. EPA is also interested in information
about possible solutions for any unintended consequences of the lower
DLHS and DLCL (which are consistent with the 2021 Court Opinion that
instructed EPA to consider only health factors when setting the DLHS
and affirmed that EPA could consider other factors i.e., reliability,
effectiveness, and safety, when setting the DLCL).
In addition to the areas which EPA has specifically requested
comment, EPA requests comment on all other aspects of this proposed
rule.
VIII. References
The following is a list of the documents that are specifically
referenced in this document. The docket includes these documents and
other information considered by EPA, including documents that are
referenced within the documents that are included in the docket, even
if the referenced document is not physically located in the docket. For
assistance in locating these other documents, please consult the
technical person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
1. Public Law 102-550, Title X--Housing and Community Development
Act, enacted October 28, 1992 (also known as the Residential Lead-
Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act of 1992 or ``Title X'') (42 U.S.C.
4822 and 4851 et seq.). https://www.epa.gov/lead/residential-lead-based-paint-hazard-reduction-act-1992-title-x.
2. EPA. Review of the Dust-Lead Hazard Standards and the Definition
of Lead-Based Paint; Final Rule. RIN 2070-AJ82. Federal Register (84
FR 32632, July 9, 2019) (FRL-9995-49). https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2019-07-09/pdf/2019-14024.pdf.
3. EPA. Review of Dust-Lead Post Abatement Clearance Levels; Final
Rule. RIN 2070-AK50. Federal Register (86 FR 983, January 7, 2021)
(FRL-10018-61). https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2021-01-07/pdf/2020-28565.pdf.
4. EPA. Integrated Science Assessment (ISA) for Lead (Final Report,
June 2013). U.S. EPA, Washington, DC, EPA/600/R-10/075F, 2013.
https://www.epa.gov/isa/integrated-science-assessment-isa-lead.
5. HHS, National Toxicology Program. NTP Monograph on Health Effects
of Low-Level Lead. National Institute of Environmental Health
Sciences, Research Triangle Park, NC. NIH Pub. No. 12-5996. ISSN
2330-1279. June 13, 2012. https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/ntp/ohat/lead/final/monographhealtheffectslowlevellead_newissn_508.pdf.
6. EPA. Lead; Identification of Dangerous Levels of Lead; Final
Rule. RIN 2070-AC63. Federal Register (66 FR 1206, January 5, 2001)
(FRL-6763-5). https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2001-01-05/pdf/01-84.pdf.
7. HUD, EPA. Lead; Requirements for Disclosure of Known Lead-Based
Paint and/or Lead-Based Paint Hazards in Housing; Final Rule. RIN
2070-AC75. Federal Register (61 FR 9064, March 6, 1996) (FRL-5347-
9). https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-1996-03-06/pdf/96-5243.pdf.
8. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, HHS.
Toxicological Profile for Lead. August 2020. https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp13.pdf.
9. President's Task Force on Environmental Health Risks and Safety
Risks to Children. Federal Action Plan to Reduce Childhood Lead
Exposures and Associated Health Impacts. December 2018. https://www.epa.gov/lead/federal-action-plan-reduce-childhood-lead-exposure.
10. EPA. EPA Strategy to Reduce Exposures and Disparities in U.S.
Communities. October 27, 2022. https://www.epa.gov/system/files/documents/2022-11/Lead%20Strategy_1.pdf.
11. U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. A Community Voice
v. EPA, No. 19-71930, Opinion. May 14, 2021. https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2021/05/14/19-71930.pdf.
12. Executive Order 13990. Protecting Public Health and the
Environment and Restoring Science to Tackle the Climate Crisis.
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13. The White House. Fact Sheet: List of Agency Actions for Review.
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14. EPA. Economic Analysis of the Proposed Reconsideration of the
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18. Zartarian, V., Xue, J., Tornero-Velez, R., & Brown, J.
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47. EPA. Lead; Identification of Dangerous Levels of Lead; Proposed
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48. CDC. CDC Response to Advisory Committee on Childhood Lead
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49. Children's Health Protection Advisory Committee. RE: Childhood
Lead Poisoning Prevention. Letter to Lisa P. Jackson, EPA
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50. EPA. Review of the National Ambient Air Quality Standards for
Lead. Federal Register (81 FR 71906, October 18, 2016) (FRL-9952-
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51. EPA. National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Lead. Federal
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52. HUD. Lead Hazards in U.S. Housing: American Healthy Homes Survey
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53. EPA. Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics. Review of the
Dust-lead Hazard Standards and the Definition of Lead-Based Paint.
Response to Public Comments. June 2019. https://www.regulations.gov/document/EPA-HQ-OPPT-2018-0166-0571.
54. EPA. Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics. Review of the
Dust-Lead Post-Abatement Clearance Levels. Response to Public
Comments. December 2020. https://www.regulations.gov/document/EPA-HQ-OPPT-2020-0063-0397.
55. HUD, Office of Lead Hazard Control and Healthy Homes. Lead
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56. EPA. Summary of discussion between EPA and Stat Analysis
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57. EPA. Summary of discussion between EPA and HIH Laboratory, Inc.
June 14, 2022.
58. EPA. Summary of discussion between EPA and Batta Environmental.
June 14, 2022.
59. EPA. Summary of discussion between EPA and EMSL Analytical, Inc.
June 15, 2022.
60. EPA. Summary of discussion between EPA and Environmental Hazard
Services, LLC. June 21, 2022.
61. EPA. Summary of discussion between EPA and Accurate Analytical
Testing, LLC. June 22, 2022.
62. EPA. Summary of discussion between EPA and Schneider
Laboratories, Inc. June 30, 2022.
63. EPA. Summary of discussion between EPA and Marion County Health
Department. July 11, 2022.
64. EPA. Summary of discussion between EPA and GPI. July 12, 2022.
65. NYC. New Lead in Dust Standards for New York City. June 2019.
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66. NYC. New Lead in Dust Standards for New York City. June 2021.
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67. EPA. Summary of discussion between EPA and New York City
Department of Health and Mental Hygiene; Healthy Homes Program.
March 21, 2022.
68. David E Jacobs, et al. The Prevalence of Lead-based Paint
Hazards in U.S. Housing. October 1, 2002. https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.021100599.
69. HUD. Office of Lead Hazard Control and Healthy Homes. American
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70. Ahrens, Katherine A., Barbara A. Haley, Lauren M. Rossen,
Patricia C. Lloyd, and Yutaka Aoki. 2016. ``Housing Assistance and
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71. Bess, K.D., A.L. Miller, and R. Mehdipanah. 2022. The Effects of
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72. Lee, C.Y., Zhao, X., Reesor-Oyer, L., Cepni, A.B., & Hernandez,
D.C. (2021). Bidirectional Relationship Between Food Insecurity and
Housing Instability. Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and
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73. Baker, Emma, Laurence Lester, Kate Mason, and Rebecca Bentley.
2020. Mental Health and Prolonged Exposure to Unaffordable Housing:
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74. Chung, Roger Yat-Nork et al. 2020. Housing Affordability Effects
on Physical and Mental Health: Household Survey in a Population with
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75. Jenkins Morales, M., & Robert, S.A. 2022. Housing Cost Burden
and Health Decline Among Low- and Moderate-Income Older Renters. The
Journals of Gerontology. Series B, Psychological Sciences and Social
Sciences, 77(4), 815-826. https://doi.org/10.1093/geronb/gbab184.
76. Jelleyman, T., and N. Spencer. 2008. Residential Mobility in
Childhood and Health Outcomes: A Systematic Review. Journal of
Epidemiology and Community Health. 62: 584-592. https://doi.org/10.1136/jech.2007.060103.
77. Burgard, Sarah A., Kristin S. Seefeldt and Sarah Zelner. 2012.
Housing Instability and Health: Findings from the Michigan Recession
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78. Desmond, Matthew, and Rachel Tolbert Kimbro. 2020. Eviction's
Fallout: Housing, Hardship, and Health. Social Forces. 94, 1: 295-
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79. DiTosto, Julia D., et al. 2021. Housing Instability and Adverse
Perinatal Outcomes: A Systematic Review. American Journal of
Obstetrics & Gynecology MFM. 3, 6: 100477. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajogmf.2021.100477.
80. Collinson, Robert, John Eric Humphries, Nicholas S. Mader, Davin
K. Reed, Daniel I. Tannenbaum, and Winnie van Dijk. 2022. Eviction
and Poverty in American Cities. NBER Working Paper No. 30382.
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81. Cutts, Diana Becker, et al. 2011. US Housing Insecurity and the
Health of Very Young Children. American Journal of Public Health.
101, 8: 1508-1514. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2011.300139.
82. Solari, Claudia D. and Robert D Mare. 2012. ``Housing Crowding
Effects on Children's Wellbeing.'' Social Science Research. 41, 2:
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83. Ahmad, Khansa, Sebhat Erqou, Nishant Shah, Umair Nazir, Alan R.
Morrison, Gaurav Choudhary, Wen-Chih. 2020. ``Association of Poor
Housing Conditions with COVID-19 Incidence and Mortality Across US
Counties.'' PLoS ONE. 15, 11: e0241327. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0241327.
84. Marmot Review Team. 2011. The Health Impacts of Cold Homes and
Fuel Poverty. London: Friends of the Earth and the Marmot Review
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85. ASHRAE Multidisciplinary Task Group. 2020. Damp Buildings, Human
Health, and HVAC Design. Atlanta, GA: ASHRAE. https://www.techstreet.com/ashrae/standards/damp-buildings-human-health-and-hvac-design?product_id=2110372.
86. HUD. Data compiled from HUD's Picture of Subsidized Households
dataset, available at https://www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/assthsg.html.
87. Fenelon, Andrew, Natalie Slopen, Michel Boudreaux, and Sandra J.
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Health of Children in the United States.'' Journal of Health and
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88. Fenelon, Andrew, et al. 2017. Housing Assistance Programs and
Adult Health in the United States. American Journal of Public
Health. 107, 4: 571-578. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28207335/.
89. Boudreaux, Michel, Andrew Fenelon, Natalie Slopen, and Sandra J.
Newman. 2020. ``Association of Childhood Asthma with Federal Rental
Assistance.'' JAMA Pediatrics. 174, 6: 592-598. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamapediatrics.2019.6242.
90. Slopen, Natalie, Andrew Fenelon, Sandra Newman, and Michel
Boudreaux. 2018. ``Housing Assistance and Child Health: A Systematic
Review.'' Pediatrics. 141, 6: e20172742. https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2017-2742.
91. Alvarez, Thyria and Barry L. Steffen. 2021. Worst Case Housing
Needs: 2021 Report to Congress. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development, Office of Policy Development and
Research. https://www.huduser.gov/portal/publications/Worst-Case-Housing-Needs-2021.html.
92. Greenlee, Andrew J. 2014. More Than Meets the Market? Landlord
Agency in the Illinois Housing Choice Voucher Program. Housing
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https://doi.org/10.1080/10511482.2014.913649.
93. Varady, David P., Joseph Jaroscak, and Reinout Kleinhans. 2017.
How to Attract More Landlords to the Housing Choice Voucher Program:
A Case study of Landlord Outreach Efforts. Urban Research &
Practice, 10:2, 143-155, DOI: 10.1080/17535069.2016.1175741. https://doi.org/10.1080/17535069.2016.1175741.
94. Garboden, Philip M.E., Eva Rosen, Stefanie DeLuca, and Kathryn
Edin. 2018. Taking Stock: What Drives Landlord Participation in the
Housing Choice Voucher Program. Housing Policy Debate. 28:6, 979-
1003. https://doi.org/10.1080/10511482.2018.1502202.
95. Greif, Meredith. 2018. Regulating Landlords: Unintended
Consequences for Poor Tenants. City & Community, 17:3, 658-674.
https://doi.org/10.1111/cico.12321.
96. HUD. Revised Dust-Lead Action Levels for Risk Assessment and
Clearance; Clearance of Porch Floors. Policy Guidance 2017-01 Rev 1.
February 16, 2017. https://www.hud.gov/sites/documents/LEADDUSTLEVELS_REV1.pdf.
97. HUD. Guidelines for the Evaluation and Control of Lead-Based
Paint Hazards in Housing. Second Edition, July 2012. https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/healthy_homes/lbp/hudguidelines.
98. EPA. Supporting Statement for an Information Collection Request
(ICR) under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA); Reconsideration of
the Dust-Lead Hazard Standards and Dust-Lead Post-Abatement
Clearance Levels; Proposed Rule (RIN 2070-AK91), (EPA ICR No.
2760.01). June 30, 2023.
99. Council of Large Public Housing Authorities. Letter to EPA RE:
Dust-Lead Hazard Standards (DLHS) and Dust-Lead Clearance Levels
(DLCL) Reconsideration Rulemaking. January 10, 2023.
100. EPA. EJ 2020 Action Agenda: The U.S. EPA's Environmental
Justice Strategic Plan for 2016-2020. October 2016. https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2016-05/documents/052216_ej_2020_strategic_plan_final_0.pdf.
IX. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Additional information about these statutes and Executive Orders
can be found at https://www.epa.gov/laws-regulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Orders 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and 14094:
Modernizing Regulatory Review
This action is a ``significant regulatory action'' as defined under
section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4,
1993), as amended by Executive Order 14094 (88 FR 21879, April 11,
2023). Accordingly, EPA submitted this action to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for review under Executive Order 12866.
Documentation of any changes made in response to the Executive Order
12866 review is available in the docket. The Agency prepared an
analysis of the potential costs and benefits associated with this
action, this analysis (Ref. 14), is available in the docket.
[[Page 50475]]
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
The information collection activities in this proposed rule have
been submitted for review and approval to OMB under the PRA, 44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq. The Information Collection Request (ICR) document that the
EPA prepared has been assigned EPA ICR No. 2760.01 (Ref. 98). You can
find a copy of the ICR in the docket for this rule, and it is briefly
summarized here.
The ICR addresses the incremental changes to the existing
reporting, notification, and recordkeeping programs that are currently
approved under OMB Control Nos. 2070-0151 and 2070-0195. As approved
under OMB Control No. 2070-0151 and pursuant to 24 CFR part 35, subpart
A, and 40 CFR 745, subpart F, sellers and lessors of target housing
must already provide purchasers or lessees any available records or
reports ``pertaining to'' LBP and/or LBP hazards available to the
seller or lessor. Accordingly, a seller or lessor must disclose any
reports showing dust-lead levels, regardless of the value. A lower
hazard standard may prompt a different response on the already required
lead disclosure form, i.e., that a lead-based paint hazard is present
rather than not, which would occur when a dust-lead level is below the
current standard but at or above a lower final standard. However, for
existing target housing, this action would not result in additional
disclosures because the lead disclosure form is required regardless of
whether dust-lead is present at or below the hazard standard.
Nevertheless, due to the change in target housing definition, EPA
estimates an additional 967 disclosure events will occur annually,
which will affect 3,040 respondents at an average burden and cost of
0.08 hours and $4.37 per respondent, resulting in a total annual burden
of 337 hours at a total annual cost of $13,272.
Next, as approved under OMB Control No. 2070-0195, the ICR
addresses the information collection activities associated with the
reporting and recordkeeping requirements for individuals, firms and
state and local government entities conducting LBP activities or
renovations of target housing and COFs; training providers; and states/
territories/Tribes/Alaska Native villages. These information collection
activities include the following:
LBP activity firm pre-abatement reports and occupant
protection plans, abatement activity notifications, post-abatement
reports and recordkeeping;
Applications for certification of individuals performing
LBP activities, and related recordkeeping;
LBP activities training provider accreditation
applications, training notifications, and recordkeeping;
LBP activity firm certification applications and
recordkeeping;
Distribution of pre-renovation lead hazard information
pamphlet and post-renovation checklists documenting lead-safe work
practices;
RRP and LBP professionals classroom training time related
to recordkeeping compliance;
RRP training provider accreditation applications, training
notifications, and recordkeeping;
Private RRP firm and Government-employed RRP professional
certification applications and recordkeeping; and
Submission of related fees.
Incremental abatement notifications would be required when an
abatement occurs due to the revised DLHS/DLCL and does not occur in the
baseline; EPA estimates that 1,618 to 2,404 such notifications will
incur average annual paperwork-associated costs of $149. Additional LBP
workers may need to be hired and subsequently trained and certified to
accommodate the additional dust-lead remediation activities triggered
by the revised DLHS/DLCL. EPA estimates that 2,237 to 3,971 respondents
will incur average annual paperwork-associated costs of $432. Because
the EA finds that the revised DLHS/DLCL would increase the number of
new lead hazard reduction events by no more than 5 per firm per year,
EPA assumes that existing LBP activity firms would cover this new work
and new entrants are unlikely to emerge. As such, EPA does not estimate
any paperwork costs associated with LBP activity firm certification.
Similarly, the EA finds that there would be fewer than 1 incremental
event per affected RRP firm and therefore EPA assumes no new RRP firms
or employees will enter the market in response to the DLHS/DLCL
revision. As such, EPA does not estimate any paperwork costs associated
with RRP firm certification or RRP training.
The revisions to the definition of target housing will result in
paperwork costs in two dimensions. First, abatement firms operating in
newly defined target housing are expected to incur reporting and
recordkeeping costs for those additional events. EPA estimates that 25
respondents will incur an average annual cost of $89.21 for these
activities. Second, renovation service firms performing renovation
activities in newly defined target housing are required to perform
disclosure activities. This will result in recurring disclosure event,
recordkeeping, and materials costs. EPA estimates that 1,977
respondents will incur an average annual cost of $14.73.
In addition, EPA currently receives approximately 90 percent of
required notifications as well as applications for accreditation,
certification, and re-certification from training providers, firms, and
lead abatement individuals through EPA's Central Data Exchange (CDX).
The paperwork activities, related burden and costs with CDX user
registration for those who elect to exercise the electronic submission
option established under the Agency's Cross-media Electronic Reporting
Rule (CROMERR) (40 CFR 3) are described in an ICR approved under OMB
Control No. 2025-0003. The amended information collection activities
contained in this proposed rule are designed to assist the Agency in
meeting its responsibility under TSCA to receive, process, and review
reports, data, and other information. Accordingly, this proposed rule
would require regulated parties to submit notifications and
applications through CDX.
The ICR prepared for this proposed rule addresses the incremental
burden changes related to the expected increase in the number of
responses to the activities considered in the other existing ICRs, as
well as the changing response obligation for the use of CDX from
voluntary to mandatory.
Respondents/affected entities: Persons engaged in selling or
leasing certain residential dwellings built before 1978; persons who
are engaged in lead-based paint activities and/or perform renovations
of target housing or child-occupied facilities for compensation, dust
sampling, or dust testing; persons who perform lead-based paint
inspections, lead hazard screens, risk assessments or abatements in
target housing or child-occupied facilities; persons who provide
training or operate a training program for individuals who perform any
of these activities; state, territorial or Tribal agencies that
administer lead-based paint activities and/or renovation programs. See
also Unit I.A.
Respondent's obligation to respond: Mandatory (40 CFR part 745).
Estimated number of respondents: 8,897 to 11,417 (per year).
Frequency of response: On occasion.
Total estimated burden: 23,329 to 38,985 hours (per year). Burden
is defined at 5 CFR 1320.3(b).
Total estimated cost: $1.3 million to $2.1 million (per year),
includes no
[[Page 50476]]
annualized capital or operation and maintenance costs.
Under the PRA, an agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person
is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control number. The OMB control numbers
for certain EPA's regulations in 40 CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9,
and on associated collection instruments.
Submit your comments on the Agency's need for this information, the
accuracy of the provided burden estimates and any suggested methods for
minimizing respondent burden to the EPA using the docket identified at
the beginning of this rule. You may also send your ICR-related comments
to OMB's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs using the
interface at www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain. Find this particular
information collection by selecting ``Currently under Review--Open for
Public Comments'' or by using the search function. EPA will respond to
ICR-related comments in the context of the final rule.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA, 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq. The small entities subject to the requirements of
the revised DLHS and DLCL are small businesses that are landlords who
may incur costs for lead hazard reduction measures in compliance with
the HUD's LSHR; elementary and secondary schools or child day care
services (who make incur costs associated with COFs); residential
remodelers (who may incur costs associated with additional cleaning and
sealing in houses undergoing rehabilitation or ongoing lead-based paint
maintenance subject to the HUD LSHR); and abatement firms (who may also
incur costs associated with additional cleaning and sealing under the
LSHR). The Agency has determined that approximately 39,000 small
businesses would be directly affected by the revised DLHS and DLCL, of
which 87% to 91% have cost impacts less than 1% of revenues, 9% to 12%
have impacts between 1% and 3% of revenues, and 1% have impacts greater
than 3% of revenues. The total estimated costs to small businesses are
between $303.1 million and $414.4 million per year.
Additionally, the rule's other amendments may potentially affect
four types of small entities: property owners that will incur
recordkeeping and material costs for real estate disclosures in newly
defined target housing; renovation firms that will incur renovation
disclosure costs and lead-safe work practice costs in newly defined
target housing; LBP activities firms that will incur reporting and
recordkeeping costs for abatement activities in newly defined target
housing; and EPA-certified training providers that may incur costs for
submitting reports electronically. The Agency has determined that
approximately 2,998 small businesses would be directly affected by the
amendment to the target housing definition, of which 100% have cost
impacts less than 1% of revenues. The Agency has determined that
approximately 86 small businesses would be directly affected by the
amendment to the electronic reporting requirement, of which 100% have
cost impacts less than 1% of revenues. All details of the analysis of
potential costs and benefits associated with this action are presented
in EPA's EA, which is available in the docket (Ref. 14).
The EA estimates potential costs from the revised DLHS and DLCL for
activities in two types of target housing and COFs--those subject to
the HUD LSHR and those where a child with a blood lead level exceeding
a Federal or state threshold lives. Importantly, the DLHS do not
require the owners of properties covered by this proposed rule to
evaluate their properties for the presence of dust-lead hazards, or to
act if dust-lead hazards are identified. Although the DLHS and DLCL do
not compel specific actions under the LBP Activities Rule to address
identified LBP hazards, the DLHS and DLCL are directly incorporated by
reference into certain requirements mandated by HUD in the housing
subject to the LSHR. Aside from the HUD regulations, and, perhaps some
state or local regulations, the DLHS and DLCL do not impose new Federal
requirements on small entities.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action contains a Federal mandate under UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-
1538, that may result in expenditures of $100 million or more for
State, local, and Tribal governments, in the aggregate, or the private
sector in any one year. Accordingly, EPA has prepared the written
statement required under section 202 of UMRA (Ref. 17). The statement
is included in the docket for this action and is briefly summarized
here.
1. Authorizing Legislation
This rulemaking is issued under the authority of TSCA sections 401,
402, 403, 404, and 406, 15 U.S.C. 2601 et seq., as amended by Title X
of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1992 (also known as the
Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act of 1992 or ``Title
X'') (Pub. L. 102-550) (Ref. 1) and section 237(c) of Title II of
Division K of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017 (Pub. L. 115-
31, 131 Stat. 789), as well as sections 1004 and 1018 of Title X (42
U.S.C. 4851b, 4852d), as amended by section 237(b) of Title II of
Division K of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017.
2. Cost-Benefit Analysis
The EA (Ref. 14) presents the costs of the rule as well as various
regulatory options, and is summarized in Unit I.E. The rule is
estimated to result in total compliance costs of $536 million to $784
million per year. Thus, the annual cost of the rule to the private
sector (and State, local, and Tribal governments) in the aggregate
exceeds the inflation-adjusted $100 million UMRA threshold.
This rule will reduce exposures to lead, resulting in benefits from
avoided adverse health effects. For the subset of health effects where
the results were quantified, the estimated annualized benefits are
$1.069 billion to $4.684 billion per year using a 3% discount rate and
$231 million to $1.013 billion per year using a 7% discount rate. There
are additional unquantified benefits due to other avoided health
effects.
Net benefits are the difference between benefits and costs. The
rule is estimated to result in quantified net benefits of $532 million
to $3.899 billion per year using a 3% discount rate and -$302 million
to $231 million per year using a 7% discount rate. EPA considers
unquantified health benefits to be potentially important non-monetized
impacts that contribute to the overall net benefits of this rule.
3. State, Local, and Tribal Government Input
EPA sought input from State and local government representatives
early in the rulemaking process during the joint intergovernmental
consultation initiated in November 2022 and will continue to engage
these partners throughout the rulemaking process. EPA's experience in
administering the existing LBP activities program under TSCA section
402 suggests that these governments will play a critical role in the
successful implementation of the national program to reduce exposures
to LBP hazards.
This action is not subject to the requirements of UMRA section 203
because it contains no regulatory requirements that exceed the
inflation-adjusted cost significance threshold or
[[Page 50477]]
uniquely affect small governments. Additionally, although EPA does not
believe that this action would impose an unfunded mandate on Tribal
governments or otherwise have substantial direct effects on one or more
federally recognized Indian Tribes as specified in Executive Order
13175, the Agency is soliciting input from Tribal officials during the
public comment period.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
EPA has concluded that this action has federalism implications, as
specified in Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999),
because it imposes substantial direct compliance costs on public
housing authorities that state or local governments may be obligated to
offset, and while some HUD funding for LBP projects exists, the Federal
Government may not provide the funds necessary to pay the entirety of
the costs. These costs to public housing authorities--estimated at $143
million for the primary option--cover additional lead hazard reduction
activities, cleaning, and dust-lead testing to ensure that public
housing units are in compliance with the LSHR. Public school districts
that administer COFs are also estimated to have annual compliance costs
of approximately $904 thousand. Additionally, states that have
authorized LBP Activities programs must demonstrate that they have DLHS
and DLCL at least as protective as the levels at 40 CFR 745.65 and 40
CFR 745.227. However, authorized states are under no obligation to
continue to administer the LBP Activities program, and if they do not
wish to adopt the new DLHS and DLCL they can relinquish their
authorization. In the absence of a state authorization, EPA will
administer these requirements.
EPA provides the following federalism summary impact statement. EPA
consulted with state and local officials early in the process of
developing the proposed action to permit them to have meaningful and
timely input into its development. EPA invited the following national
organizations representing state and local elected officials to a
consultation meeting on November 10, 2022: National Governors'
Association, National Conference of State Legislatures, U.S. Conference
of Mayors, National League of Cities, Council of State Governments,
International City/County Management Association, National Association
of Counties, National Association of Towns and Townships, County
Executives of America, and Environmental Council of the States.
Additionally, the agency invited professional organizations that
represent or have state and local government members, such as Public
Housing Authorities Directors Association, Council of Large Public
Housing Authorities, Association of State and Territorial Health
Officials, American Public Works Association, and other groups to
participate in the meeting.
During the consultation EPA presented an overview on LBP
terminology, authorized programs and background on the DLHS and the
DLCL, including the relevant statutory authority and regulatory and
litigation history. EPA also discussed potentially impacted entities,
especially those relevant to the organizations present, as well as the
three regulatory approaches for DLHS (i.e., GTZ, numeric standard, and
the post-1977 background) and what the Agency is considering while
revising the DLCL. EPA concluded the consultation with a description of
the preliminary costs and benefits, an update on target housing
revisions, and a series of targeted questions for organizations'
consideration.
Throughout the presentation several clarifying questions/comments
were posed and responded to about the program requirements, triggers,
and impacted entities. One commenter inquired whether cost estimates
were included for COFs. EPA responded that the costs to COFs had not
been considered; these costs are now included in the analysis. The
Agency has also added a request for comment seeking additional data on
COFs, see Unit VII.
Additionally, two commenters expressed concerns about having
adequate funding for public housing authorities to meet their basic
needs, such as electricity, and the inability to be proactive about
issues such as lead, due to those same financial concerns. EPA
appreciates those concerns being highlighted and will note that
according to the 2021 Court Opinion the Agency cannot take into account
non-health factors, such as costs, when revising the DLHS. However, the
Agency can consider non-health factors when revising the DLCL. In this
proposal EPA has a lower primary and higher alternative DLCL, which the
Agency is requesting comment on. EPA has also spoken to nine NLLAP
laboratories and has incorporated their feedback into the discussion
surrounding DLCL within Unit IV.B. EPA is also requesting comment on a
phased approach for the DLCL (i.e., lowering the DLCL to the
alternative and then the primary options), and on whether this proposal
will have impacts on tenants or landlords of public housing, including
the potential to impact availability of federally assisted housing.
After the consultation was complete, EPA provided the organizations
and officials an opportunity to provide follow-up comments in writing.
The Agency received one comment from a non-profit organization whose
members consist of over seventy large public housing authorities (Ref.
99). The commenter highlighted that a large portion of public housing
properties are dated, resulting in many families and children who are
living in dated housing units. They explained that public housing
authorities have unmet financial needs and strongly encouraged the
Agency to consider costs when revising the DLCL. The commenter
expressed concerns about the lower DLCL resulting in a need to switch
laboratory technology to ICP, which could require a larger surface
area, increase turnaround time and an increase in costs. Feedback on
all three DLHS approaches was also provided, notably that the post-1977
background approach would incur the highest costs and was ``undesirable
as currently presented'' and the commenter emphasized the importance of
communication materials and clear communication surrounding the GTZ
approach.
The Agency appreciates the feedback provided to the EPA during the
consultation process. Regarding concerns over the laboratories moving
to ICP, EPA conducted laboratory outreach and included their feedback
in this proposed rule. EPA is proposing the primary DLCL of 3/20/25
[mu]g/ft\2\ and is also proposing an alternative DLCL of 5/40/100
[mu]g/ft\2\ and requesting comment on both options. As mentioned above,
EPA is also requesting comment on a phased approach to lowering the
DLCL, as well as the proposal to extend the compliance date by one year
and whether it should be shorter or longer to allow laboratories
adequate time to adjust. Additionally, the Agency agrees that
communication surrounding the GTZ approach may be an important element
of this rulemaking and has added in an additional request for comment
in Unit VII.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action does not have Tribal implications as specified in
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000), because it will
not have substantial direct effects on Tribal governments, on the
relationship between the Federal Government and
[[Page 50478]]
the Indian Tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities
between the Federal Government and Indian Tribes. Federally recognized
Tribes that have authorized LBP Activities programs must demonstrate
that they have DLHS and DLCL at least as protective as the levels at 40
CFR 745.65 and 40 CFR 745.227. However, these authorized Tribes are
under no obligation to continue to administer the LBP Activities
program, and if they do not wish to adopt the new DLHS and DLCL they
can relinquish their authorization. In the absence of a Tribal
authorization, EPA will administer these requirements. This action does
not create an obligation for Tribes to administer LBP Activities
programs or alter EPA's authority to administer these programs. For
these reasons, Executive Order 13175 does not apply to this action.
However, EPA still intends to hold a Tribal consultation on this
rulemaking in order to solicit input from Tribal officials from the
four Indian Tribes with authorized programs during the public comment
period. This consultation will also be open to any Tribal officials who
would like to participate. EPA will ensure that the consultation
materials are accessible to Tribal officials so that they may view it
later as they consider submitting feedback during the public comment
period. If a Tribal official is interested in attending the
consultation on behalf of an Indian Tribe, please consult the technical
person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
Executive Order 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997) directs Federal
agencies that Federal health and safety standards must include an
evaluation of the health and safety effects of the planned regulation
on children. This action is subject to Executive Order 13045 because it
is a significant regulatory action under section 3(f)(1) of Executive
Order 12866, and EPA believes that the environmental health or safety
risk addressed by this action has a disproportionate effect on children
as they are more susceptible to the adverse health effects of lead due
to their behavior and physiology. Accordingly, we have evaluated the
environmental health or safety effects of dust-lead exposure on
children.
The results of this evaluation are contained in Unit I.E. and in
the EA and TSD, where the health impacts of lead exposure on children
are discussed more fully (Refs. 14 and 16). The documents referenced
above are available in the public docket for this action.
The proposed DLHS aligns with the current state of the science,
which does not support identifying a threshold of dust-lead exposure
below which there would be no adverse human health effects; while the
proposed DLCL is more health protective than the alternative in that it
results in the least amount of dust-lead left on a surface after the
completion of an abatement. EPA is proposing to revise the DLCL given
the statutory criteria of reliability, effectiveness, and safety.
Furthermore, EPA's Policy on Children's Health also applies to this
action. Discussion about how the Agency applied this policy is
presented in Unit I.E.6.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution or Use
This action is not a ``significant energy action'' as defined in
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001), because it is not
likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply, distribution
or use of energy.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA) and 1 CFR
Part 51
This action involves technical standards under NTTAA section 12(d),
15 U.S.C. 272 note. ASTM E1728 and ASTM E1792 are already cited in an
existing regulatory definition of ``wipe sample'' at 40 CFR 745.63. EPA
is proposing to formally incorporate the most current version of these
standards (i.e., ASTM E1728-20 and ASTM E1792-20). Additional
information about these standards, including how to access them, is
provided in Unit IV.F.8.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994) directs
Federal agencies, to the greatest extent practicable and permitted by
law, to make environmental justice part of their mission by identifying
and addressing, as appropriate, disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects of their programs, policies, and
activities on minority populations (people of color and/or indigenous
peoples) and low-income populations.
EPA believes that the human health or environmental conditions that
exist prior to this action result in or have the potential to result in
disproportionate and adverse human health or environmental effects on
people of color, low-income populations and/or Indigenous peoples. See
discussion in Section 8.6 of the EA concerning existing
disproportionate impacts of lead pollution faced by children in low-
income households and households of people of color and/or Indigenous
peoples, and the measured extent to which this action particularly
benefits the health of children in low-income households.
EPA believes that this action is likely to reduce existing
disproportionate and adverse effects on communities with environmental
justice concerns. For example, 49% of children who will benefit from
the rule are members of households below the poverty line, compared to
17% of children nationally who live below the poverty line. An
estimated 44% of total monetized benefits from this rule accrue to
children living in a household below the poverty line. 22-27% of
children who will benefit from the rule are non-Hispanic Black,
compared to 12% of children nationally who are non-Hispanic Black. An
estimated 23% of total monetized benefits from this rule accrue to non-
Hispanic Black children.
There is some uncertainty, however, regarding the environmental
justice implications of this rule on HUD-assisted housing. If the rule
inadvertently limits the availability of federally-assisted affordable
housing, a subset of low-income individuals or families currently
residing in assisted housing may face higher housing costs on the
private market, disruptions caused by an involuntary loss of housing,
and the potential for dust lead levels that exceed those in their
baseline LSHR-regulated housing.
EPA additionally identified and addressed environmental justice
concerns through public comment and collaboration with state, Tribal,
and other co-regulatory bodies related to the EJ2020 action agenda and
the development of the Lead Strategy. Through the agency-wide Lead
Strategy, EPA has engaged with key stakeholders, communities, and
organizations with vested interests in addressing lead exposures.
Disparities in lead pollution are a national area of focus in the
EJ2020 action agenda (Ref. 100), and this rulemaking's protective
standards will deliver demonstrative progress on addressing childhood
lead exposure and health disparities to members of overburdened
communities.
The information supporting the Executive Order 12898 review is
contained in the EA (Ref. 14) and Lead Strategy (Ref. 10), both of
which are available in the docket.
[[Page 50479]]
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 745
Environmental protection, Abatement, Child-occupied facility,
Clearance levels, Hazardous substances, Lead, Lead poisoning, Lead-
based paint, Target housing.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
Therefore, for the reasons set forth in the preamble, it is
proposed that 40 CFR chapter I be amended as follows:
PART 745--LEAD-BASED PAINT POISONING PREVENTION IN CERTAIN
RESIDENTIAL STRUCTURES
0
1. The authority citation for part 745 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2605, 2607, 2681-2692 and 42 U.S.C. 4852d.
0
2. Amend Sec. 745.63 by adding in alphabetical order a definition for
``Reportable level'' to read as follows:
Sec. 745.63 Definitions.
* * * * *
Reportable level means the lowest analyte concentration (or amount)
that does not contain a ``less than'' qualifier and that is reported
with confidence for a specific method by a laboratory recognized by EPA
under TSCA section 405(b).
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec. 745.65 by revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 745.65 Lead-based paint hazards.
* * * * *
(b) Dust-lead hazard. Before [DATE 12 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF
PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER], a dust-lead
hazard is surface dust in a residential dwelling or child-occupied
facility that contains a mass-per-area concentration of lead equal to
or exceeding 10 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors or 100 [micro]g/ft\2\ for
interior window sills based on wipe samples. On or after [DATE 12
MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE IN THE FEDERAL
REGISTER], a dust-lead hazard is surface dust in a residential dwelling
or child-occupied facility that contains a mass-per-area concentration
of any reportable level of lead for floors or for interior window sills
based on wipe samples analyzed by an NLLAP-recognized laboratory.
* * * * *
0
4. Amend Sec. 745.81 by:
0
a. Removing paragraph (a)(4)(i) and redesignating paragraph (a)(4)(ii)
as paragraph (a)(4); and
0
b. Revising paragraph (b).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 745.81 Effective dates.
(a) * * *
(4) Work practices. * * *
* * * * *
(b) Renovation-specific pamphlet. On or after December 22, 2008,
renovators or firms performing renovations in States and Indian Tribal
areas without an authorized program must provide owners and occupants
the following EPA pamphlet: Renovate Right: Important Lead Hazard
Information for Families, Child Care Providers and Schools.
* * * * *
0
5. Amend Sec. 745.83, by adding in alphabetical order a definition for
``Electronic'' to read as follows:
Sec. 745.83 Definitions.
* * * * *
Electronic means the submission of an application, payment, or
notification using the Agency's Central Data Exchange (CDX), or
successor platform.
* * * * *
0
6. Amend Sec. 745.89 by revising paragraphs (a)(1), (b)(1), and (c)(1)
to read as follows:
Sec. 745.89 Firm certification.
(a) * * *
(1) Firms that perform renovations for compensation must
electronically apply to EPA for certification to perform renovations or
dust sampling. To apply, a firm must submit to EPA a completed
``Application for Firms,'' signed by an authorized agent of the firm,
and pay electronically at least the correct amount of fees. If a firm
pays more than the correct amount of fees, EPA will reimburse the firm
for the excess amount.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) Timely and complete application. To be re-certified, a firm
must submit a complete electronic application for re-certification. A
complete application for re-certification includes a completed
``Application for Firms'' which contains all of the information
requested by the form and is signed by an authorized agent of the firm,
noting on the form that it is submitted as a re-certification. A
complete application must also include at least the correct amount of
fees. If a firm pays more than the correct amount of fees, EPA will
reimburse the firm for the excess amount.
(i) An application for re-certification is timely if it is
electronically submitted 90 days or more before the date the firm's
current certification expires. If the firm's application is complete
and timely, the firm's current certification will remain in effect
until its expiration date or until EPA has made a final decision to
approve or disapprove the re-certification application, whichever is
later.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) To amend certification, a firm must electronically submit a
completed ``Application for Firms,'' signed by an authorized agent of
the firm, noting on the form that it is submitted as an amendment and
indicating the information that has changed. The firm must also pay at
least the correct amount of fees.
* * * * *
0
7. Amend Sec. 745.90 by revising paragraphs (a)(3) and (4) to read as
follows:
Sec. 745.90 Renovator certification and dust sampling technician
certification.
(a) * * *
(3) Individuals who have successfully completed an accredited lead-
based paint inspector or risk assessor course before October 4, 2011,
may take an accredited refresher dust sampling technician course in
lieu of the initial training to become a certified dust sampling
technician. Individuals who are currently certified as lead-based paint
inspectors or risk assessors may act as certified dust sampling
technicians without further training.
(4) To maintain renovator certification or dust sampling technician
certification, an individual must complete a renovator or dust sampling
technician refresher course accredited by EPA under Sec. 745.225 or by
a State or Tribal program that is authorized under subpart Q of this
part within 5 years of the date the individual completed the initial
course described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section. If the individual
does not complete a refresher course within this time, the individual
must re-take the initial course to become certified again. Individuals
who take a renovator refresher course that does not include hands-on
training will be certified for 3 years from the date they complete the
training. Individuals who take a refresher training course that
includes hands-on training will be certified for 5 years. Individuals
who take the renovator refresher without hands-on training must, for
their next refresher course, take a refresher course that includes
hands-on training to maintain renovator certification.
* * * * *
0
8. Amend Sec. 745.92 by revising paragraph (c)(2) to read as follows:
[[Page 50480]]
Sec. 745.92 Fees for the accreditation of renovation and dust
sampling technician training and the certification of renovation firms.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) Submit the application and a payment of $15 electronically in
accordance with the instructions provided with the application package.
* * * * *
0
9. Amend Sec. 745.103 by revising the definition for ``Target
housing'' to read as follows:
Sec. 745.103 Definitions.
* * * * *
Target housing means any housing constructed prior to 1978, except
housing for the elderly or persons with disabilities or any 0-bedroom
dwelling (unless any child who is less than 6 years of age resides or
is expected to reside in such housing).
* * * * *
0
10. Amend Sec. 745.113 by revising paragraphs (a)(4), (b)(1) and (4)
to read as follows:
Sec. 745.113 Certification and acknowledgement of disclosure.
(a) * * *
(4) A statement by the purchaser affirming receipt of the
information set out in paragraphs (a)(2) and (3) of this section and
the lead hazard information pamphlet required under 15 U.S.C. 2686.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) A Lead Warning Statement with the following language:
Housing built before 1978 may contain lead-based paint. Lead
from paint, paint chips, and dust can pose health hazards if not
managed properly. Lead exposure is especially harmful to young
children and pregnant women. Before renting pre-1978 housing,
lessors must disclose the presence of known lead-based paint and/or
lead-based paint hazards in the dwelling. Lessees must also receive
a federally approved pamphlet on lead poisoning prevention.
* * * * *
(4) A statement by the lessee affirming receipt of the information
set out in paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of this section and the lead
hazard information pamphlet required under 15 U.S.C. 2686.
* * * * *
0
11. Amend Sec. 745.223 by:
0
a. Revising the introductory text and paragraphs (1), (3)(i) through
(iii), and (4) of the definition for ``Abatement'';
0
b. Revising the definition for ``Child-occupied facility'';
0
c. Adding in alphabetical order the definitions for ``Electronic'' and
``Housing for the elderly''; and
0
d. Revising the definitions for ``Living area'' and ``Target housing''.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 745.223 Definitions.
* * * * *
Abatement means any measure or set of measures designed to
permanently eliminate lead-based paint hazards, in the case of dust-
lead hazards to below the clearance levels. Abatement includes, but is
not limited to:
(1) The removal of paint and dust (in the case of dust-lead hazards
to below the clearance levels), the permanent enclosure or
encapsulation of lead-based paint, the replacement of painted surfaces
or fixtures, or the removal or permanent covering of soil, when lead-
based paint hazards are present in such paint, dust or soil; and
* * * * *
(3) * * *
(i) * * *
(A) Shall result in the permanent elimination of lead-based paint
hazards, in the case of dust-lead hazards to below the clearance
levels; or
(B) Are designed to permanently eliminate lead-based paint hazards,
in the case of dust-lead hazards to below the clearance levels, and are
described in paragraphs (1) and (2) of this definition.
(ii) Projects resulting in the permanent elimination of lead-based
paint hazards, in the case of dust-lead hazards to below the clearance
levels, conducted by firms or individuals certified in accordance with
Sec. 745.226, unless such projects are covered by paragraph (4) of
this definition;
(iii) Projects resulting in the permanent elimination of lead-based
paint hazards, in the case of dust-lead hazards to below the clearance
levels, conducted by firms or individuals who, through their company
name or promotional literature, represent, advertise, or hold
themselves out to be in the business of performing lead-based paint
activities as identified and defined by this section, unless such
projects are covered by paragraph (4) of this definition; or
* * * * *
(4) Abatement does not include renovation, remodeling, landscaping
or other activities, when such activities are not designed to
permanently eliminate lead-based paint hazards, in the case of dust-
lead hazards to below the clearance levels, but, instead, are designed
to repair, restore, or remodel a given structure or dwelling, even
though these activities may incidentally result in a reduction or
elimination of lead-based paint hazards. Furthermore, abatement does
not include interim controls, operations and maintenance activities, or
other measures and activities designed to temporarily, but not
permanently, reduce lead-based paint hazards, in the case of dust-lead
hazards to below the clearance levels.
* * * * *
Child-occupied facility means a building, or portion of a building,
constructed prior to 1978, visited regularly by the same child, under 6
years of age, on at least two different days within any week (Sunday
through Saturday period), provided that each day's visit lasts at least
3 hours and the combined weekly visit lasts at least 6 hours, and the
combined annual visits last at least 60 hours. Child-occupied
facilities may include, but are not limited to, day-care centers,
preschools and kindergarten classrooms.
* * * * *
Electronic means the submission of an application, payment, or
notification using the Agency's Central Data Exchange (CDX), or
successor platform.
* * * * *
Housing for the elderly means retirement communities or similar
types of housing reserved for households composed of one or more
persons 62 years of age or more at the time of initial occupancy.
* * * * *
Living area means any area of a residential dwelling used by one or
more children under age 6 including, but not limited to, living rooms,
kitchen areas, dens, play rooms, and children's bedrooms.
* * * * *
Target housing means any housing constructed prior to 1978, except
housing for the elderly or persons with disabilities or any 0-bedroom
dwelling (unless any child who is less than 6 years of age resides or
is expected to reside in such housing).
* * * * *
0
12. Amend Sec. 745.225 by:
0
a. Revising the introductory text of paragraph (b)(1), paragraphs
(c)(13)(vi) and (14)(iii), the introductory text of paragraph (e)(5)
and paragraph (f)(2);
0
b. Removing and reserving paragraph (i)(2)(ii); and
0
c. Revising paragraph (j)(2).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 745.225 Accreditation of training programs: target housing and
child-occupied facilities.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) A training program seeking accreditation shall submit an
electronic
[[Page 50481]]
application to EPA containing the following information:
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(13) * * *
(vi) Notification must be accomplished electronically. Instructions
can be obtained online at https://www.epa.gov/lead or from the NLIC at
1-800-424-LEAD (5323). Hearing- or speech-impaired persons may reach
the above telephone number through TTY by calling the toll-free Federal
Communications Commission's Telecommunications Relay Service at 711.
* * * * *
(14) * * *
(iii) Notification must be accomplished electronically.
Instructions can be obtained online at https://www.epa.gov/lead or from
the NLIC at 1-800-424-LEAD (5323).
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(5) A training program seeking accreditation to offer refresher
training courses only shall submit an electronic application to EPA
containing the following information:
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(2) A training program seeking re-accreditation shall submit an
electronic application to EPA no later than 180 days before its
accreditation expires. If a training program does not submit its
application for re-accreditation by that date, EPA cannot guarantee
that the program will be re-accredited before the end of the
accreditation period.
* * * * *
(i) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) [Reserved]
* * * * *
(j) * * *
(2) To amend an accreditation, a training program must
electronically submit a completed ``Accreditation Application for
Training Providers,'' signed by an authorized agent of the training
provider, noting on the form that it is submitted as an amendment and
indicating the information that has changed.
* * * * *
0
13. Amend Sec. 745.226 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (a)(1), introductory text of paragraph (e)(1),
paragraphs (e)(2), (f)(2) and (3);
0
b. Removing and reserving paragraph (f)(5); and
0
c. Revising paragraph (h)(1)(iii).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 745.226 Certification of individuals and firms engaged in lead-
based paint activities: target housing and child-occupied facilities.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Submit to EPA an electronic application demonstrating that they
meet the requirements established in paragraphs (b) or (c) of this
section for the particular discipline for which certification is
sought; or
(ii) Submit to EPA an electronic application attaching a valid
lead-based paint activities certification (or equivalent) from a State
or Tribal program that has been authorized by EPA pursuant to subpart Q
of this part.
(2) [Reserved]
(3) Following the submission of an electronic application
demonstrating that all the requirements of this section have been meet,
EPA shall certify an applicant as an inspector, risk assessor,
supervisor, project designer, or abatement worker, as appropriate.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(1) To maintain certification in a particular discipline, a
certified individual shall apply electronically to and be re-certified
by EPA in that discipline by EPA either:
* * * * *
(2) An individual shall be re-certified if the individual
successfully completes the appropriate accredited refresher training
course and electronically submits a valid copy of the appropriate
refresher course completion certificate.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(2) A firm seeking certification shall electronically submit to EPA
an application attesting that the firm shall only employ appropriately
certified employees to conduct lead-based paint activities, and that
the firm and its employees shall follow the work practice standards in
Sec. 745.227 for conducting lead-based paint activities.
(3) From the date of receiving the firm's electronic application
requesting certification, EPA shall have 90 days to approve or
disapprove the firm's request for certification. Within that time, EPA
shall respond with either a certificate of approval or a letter
describing the reasons for a disapproval.
* * * * *
(5) [Reserved]
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) Misrepresented facts in its electronic application for
certification to EPA.
* * * * *
0
14. Amend Sec. 745.227 by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (c)(2)(i), (iv) and (v), (d)(3), (5), (6)(ii)
and (7), (e)(4)(ii), (vii) and (8)(viii);
0
b. Adding paragraph (e)(10)(vii); and
0
c. Revising paragraph (h)(3).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 745.227 Work practice standards for conducting lead-based paint
activities: target housing and child-occupied facilities.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Background information regarding the physical characteristics
of the residential dwelling or child-occupied facility and occupant use
patterns that may cause lead-based paint exposure to one or more
children under age 6 shall be collected.
* * * * *
(iv) In residential dwellings, two composite dust samples shall be
collected, one from the floors and the other from the windows, in
rooms, hallways or stairwells where one or more children, under age 6,
are most likely to come in contact with dust.
(v) In multi-family dwellings and child-occupied facilities, in
addition to the floor and window samples required in paragraph
(c)(1)(iii) of this section, the risk assessor shall also collect
composite dust samples from common areas where one or more children,
under age 6, are most likely to come into contact with dust.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(3) Background information regarding the physical characteristics
of the residential dwelling or child-occupied facility and occupant use
patterns that may cause lead-based paint exposure to one or more
children under age 6 shall be collected.
* * * * *
(5) In residential dwellings, dust samples (either composite or
single-surface samples) from the interior window sill(s) and floor
shall be collected and analyzed for lead concentration in all living
areas where one or more children, under age 6, are most likely to come
into contact with dust.
(6) * * *
(ii) Other common areas in the building where the risk assessor
determines that one or more children, under age 6, are likely to come
into contact with dust.
(7) For child-occupied facilities, interior window sill and floor
dust samples (either composite or single-surface samples) shall be
collected and
[[Page 50482]]
analyzed for lead concentration in each room, hallway or stairwell
utilized by one or more children, under age 6, and in other common
areas in the child-occupied facility where one or more children, under
age 6, are likely to come into contact with dust.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(4) * * *
(ii) Notification for lead-based paint abatement activities
required in response to an elevated blood lead level (EBL)
determination, or Federal, State, Tribal, or local emergency abatement
order should be received by EPA as early as possible before, but must
be received no later than, the start date of the lead-based paint
abatement activities. Should the start date and/or location provided to
EPA change, an updated notification must be received by EPA on or
before the start date provided to EPA. Documentation showing evidence
of an EBL determination or a copy of the Federal/State/Tribal/local
emergency abatement order must be included in the notification to take
advantage of this abbreviated notification period.
* * * * *
(vii) Notification must be accomplished electronically.
Instructions can be obtained online at https://www.epa.gov/lead, or
from the NLIC at 1-800-424-LEAD (5323).
* * * * *
(8) * * *
(viii) Before [DATE 12 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF PUBLICATION OF THE
FINAL RULE IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER], the clearance levels for lead in
dust are 10 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors, 100 [micro]g/ft\2\ for interior
window sills, and 400 [micro]g/ft\2\ for window troughs; on or after
[DATE 12 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE IN THE
FEDERAL REGISTER], the clearance levels for lead in dust are 3
[micro]g/ft\2\ for floors, 20 [micro]g/ft\2\ for interior window sills,
and 25 [micro]g/ft\2\ for window troughs.
* * * * *
(10) * * *
(vii) On or after [DATE 12 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF PUBLICATION OF
THE FINAL RULE IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER], when dust-lead clearance
sampling results are below the dust-lead clearance levels and at or
above the dust-lead hazard standards, a dust-lead hazard statement with
the following language must be included:
Although the completed abatement project achieved dust-lead
levels below clearance, some dust-lead hazards remain because any
reportable level of dust-lead is considered a dust-lead hazard. In
order for abatement work to be considered complete, dust-lead levels
must be below clearance levels, which are established based on
reliability, effectiveness and safety. To continue to reduce lead
exposure from dust, the EPA pamphlet entitled Protect Your Family
From Lead in Your Home includes recommendations such as: using a
vacuum with a high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filter on
furniture and other items returned to the work area and regularly
cleaning hard surfaces with a damp cloth or sponge and a general
all-purpose cleaner. For more information on how to continue to
reduce lead exposure see Protect Your Family From Lead in Your Home.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(3) Dust-lead hazards and dust-lead clearance levels are identified
for residential dwellings and child-occupied facilities as follows:
(i) Before [DATE 12 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF PUBLICATION OF THE
FINAL RULE IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER], a dust lead-hazard is present in a
residential dwelling on floors and interior window sills when the
weighted arithmetic mean lead loading for all single surface or
composite samples of floors and interior window sills are equal to or
greater than 10 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors and 100 [micro]g/ft\2\ for
interior window sills, respectively; for projects where clearance
sampling is required or otherwise performed, levels of lead in dust
must be below 10 [micro]g/ft\2\ for floors, 100 [micro]g/ft\2\ for
interior window sills, and 400 [micro]g/ft\2\ for window troughs for
purposes of clearance; on or after [DATE 12 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF
PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER], a dust lead-
hazard is present in a residential dwelling on floors and interior
window sills when the lead loading for any single surface or composite
sample of floors and interior window sills is equal to or greater than
any reportable level of dust-lead for floors and for interior window
sills; for projects where clearance sampling is required or otherwise
performed, levels of lead in dust must be below 3 [micro]g/ft\2\ for
floors, 20 [micro]g/ft\2\ for interior window sills, and 25 [micro]g/
ft\2\ for window troughs for purposes of clearance;
(ii) A dust lead-hazard is present on floors or interior window
sills in an unsampled residential dwelling in a multi-family dwelling,
if a dust-lead hazard is present on floors or interior window sills,
respectively, in at least one sampled residential unit on the property
(and, for projects where clearance sampling is required or otherwise
performed, levels of lead in dust must be below the applicable value
from paragraph (h)(3)(i) of this section for purposes of clearance);
and
(iii) A dust lead-hazard is present on floors or interior window
sills in an unsampled common area in a multi-family dwelling, if a
dust-lead hazard is present on floors or interior window sills,
respectively, in at least one sampled common area in the same common
area group on the property (and, for projects where clearance sampling
is required or otherwise performed, levels of lead in dust must be
below the applicable value from paragraph (h)(3)(i) of this section for
purposes of clearance).
* * * * *
0
15. Amend Sec. 745.238 by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (d)(1) and (2),
0
b. Removing paragraph (d)(3),
0
c. Revising paragraphs (e)(1) and (2).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 745.238 Fees for accreditation and certification of lead-based
paint activities.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) Certification and re-certification.
(i) Individuals. Submit a completed application electronically
(titled ``Application for Individuals to Conduct Lead-based Paint
Activities''), the materials described at Sec. 745.226, and the
application fee(s) described in paragraph (c) of this section.
(ii) Firms. Submit a completed application electronically (titled
``Application for Firms''), the materials described at Sec. 745.226,
and the application fee(s) described in paragraph (c) of this section.
(2) Accreditation and re-accreditation. Submit a completed
application electronically (titled ``Accreditation Application for
Training Programs''), the materials described at Sec. 745.225, and the
application fee described in paragraph (c) of this section.
(e) * * *
(1) Parties seeking identification card or certificate replacement
shall electronically complete the applicable portions of the
appropriate application in accordance with the instructions provided.
The appropriate applications are:
* * * * *
(2) Submit application and payment electronically in the amount
specified in paragraph (c)(3) of this section in accordance with the
instructions.
* * * * *
[[Page 50483]]
0
16. Amend Sec. 745.325 by revising paragraph (d)(3)(ii) to read as
follows:
Sec. 745.325 Lead-based paint activities: State and Tribal program
requirements.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(3) * * *
(ii) Abatements permanently eliminate lead-based paint hazards, in
the case of dust-lead hazards to below the clearance levels, and are
conducted in a way that does not increase the hazards of lead-based
paint to the occupants of the dwelling or child-occupied facility.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2023-15073 Filed 7-31-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P