Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 18, September 16, 2024
(a)
Each tenant-occupied residential building constructed before 1978 shall be
subject to the requirements for lead-safe maintenance contained in this
section. All such buildings shall undergo a combined inspection and risk
assessment, and lead hazard control work in accordance with (b) below or shall
comply with the requirements for standard treatments contained in (c) below.
Following the performance of lead hazard control work or standard treatments,
all buildings shall be subject to the requirements for on-going evaluation and
maintenance contained in (d) below.
1. The
requirements of this section shall not apply to:
i. Buildings, dwelling units or common areas
that have been certified to be free of lead-based paint in accordance with
N.J.A.C. 5:17;
ii. A seasonal
rental unit which is rented for less than six months' duration each year;
or
iii. A dwelling unit that has
been certified as having a lead-free interior in accordance with N.J.A.C.
5:17.
(b)
Inspection, risk assessment and lead hazard control work: A combined inspection
and risk assessment shall be performed in accordance with the applicable
provisions of N.J.A.C. 5:17. Data collected from a previous inspection or risk
assessment may be used. If a property or portions of a property were inspected
for lead-based paint prior to May 16, 2005, a risk assessment shall be
performed for the property or portions inspected; however, a new inspection
shall not be required. For purposes of this section, "risk assessment" shall
exclude testing of soil. For purposes of this section, "floors" shall include
both carpeted and uncarpeted surfaces.
1.
Lead hazard control work to address lead-based paint hazards identified in the
risk assessment shall be conducted in accordance with the applicable provisions
of N.J.A.C. 5:17 for lead-based paint abatement and in accordance with the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development rules ( 24 CFR 35) for interim
controls included here as subchapter Appendix 2-A, incorporated herein by
reference.
2. Following the
performance of an inspection and risk assessment and any necessary lead hazard
control work, the owner shall obtain a certification that the property is free
of lead-based paint hazards issued in accordance with
5:17-3.6.
(c) Standard treatments: If the owner chooses
not to have an inspection and risk assessment performed, as described in (b)
above, the following lead hazard control requirements shall be followed for
each dwelling unit and for all common areas. For each such building, the owner
shall undertake periodic standard treatments as described below.
1. Standard treatments for lead safety shall
be undertaken at unit turnover, unless they were undertaken less than 12 months
before. Standard treatments shall be undertaken not less than once every 12
months in dwelling units where the owner has been notified by a tenant that a
pregnant woman or a child under the age of six years resides.
2. Standard treatments shall include the
following:
i. Smooth and cleanable horizontal
surfaces shall be provided. All horizontal surfaces, such as floors, stairs,
interior window sills and window troughs, that are rough, pitted or porous,
shall be covered with a smooth, cleanable covering or coating, such as metal
coil stock, plastic, polyurethane or linoleum;
(1) If carpet is to remain, wipe samples
shall be collected from the carpeted surfaces. For test results that indicate
lead levels above the clearance levels specified in N.J.A.C. 5:17, the carpet
shall be removed.
(A) If carpet is to be
removed and replaced with new carpet, the padding beneath the contaminated
carpet shall also be replaced and the floor below shall be tested and shall not
exceed the clearance levels set forth in N.J.A.C. 5:17.
ii. Conditions of rubbing,
binding, friction or crushing of painted surfaces shall be corrected;
iii. Specialized cleaning shall be performed
in accordance with (c)2iii(1) through (3) below.
(1) The work area shall be vacuumed with a
HEPA vacuum cleaner as follows:
(A) HEPA
vacuuming shall be sequenced to avoid passing through rooms already cleaned.
The entryway shall be vacuumed last; and
(B) In each room, vacuuming shall begin with
the ceiling and shall proceed down the walls. Every surface shall be vacuumed
including, but not limited to, ceiling, walls, windows, window sills, exterior
sills, window wells, doors, heating and air conditioning equipment, fixtures,
such as light fixtures, and built-in appliances. Floors shall be the final
surface vacuumed.
(2)
The work area(s) shall be wet washed with a detergent solution such as
trisodium phosphate, formulated to bind lead. An original, marked container
showing the nature of the formula and any necessary precautions shall be
available at the work site. The name of the product used and its manufacturer
shall be included in the records retained by the owner.
(A) In each room, the wet wash process shall
begin with the ceiling and work down to the floor following the sequence in
(c)2iii(1)(A) and (B) above.
(B)
String mops and mop buckets with wringers are required for wet washing floors.
Sponge mops shall not be used.
(3) When dry, the abated area(s) shall be
HEPA vacuumed again, following the sequence in (c)2iii(2)(A) and (B) above;
and
iv. Maintenance
staff trained in accordance with
5:28-2.1(g) or a
lead evaluation firm certified in accordance with N.J.A.C. 5:17 shall perform
dust wipe sampling per
5:17-9.1, Table 9.1 for Single
Surface Wipe Samples, if standard treatments are performed that disturb painted
surfaces that total two square feet or more in any one interior room space, or
ten percent or more of the total surface area of an interior component with a
small surface area, including, but not limited to, window sills, baseboards or
trim. The results shall not exceed the levels established in N.J.A.C.
5:17.
(d)
On-going evaluation and maintenance, as described below, shall be required for
all buildings.
1. A visual examination for
deteriorated paint shall be performed by the owner at unit turnover or every
twelve months, whichever comes first.
2. Deteriorated paint and the causes of
deterioration shall be promptly and safely repaired in accordance with the
requirements of (i) below.
i. Painted surfaces
shall be made intact by paint stabilization, enclosure, encapsulation or
removal.
ii. The causes of paint
deterioration shall be diagnosed and corrected.
iii. Dust wipe testing shall be performed in
accordance with (d)2iii(1) through (4) below when the work is complete to
ensure that the lead dust levels do not exceed the lead hazard levels
established by N.J.A.C. 5:17. If the level exceeds the lead hazard level
established by N.J.A.C. 5:17, cleaning and retesting shall be performed until
the results of testing demonstrate lead levels below the standard.
(1) Dust wipe sampling shall be performed
following the first 20 maintenance activities. Ninety-five percent of these
samples taken shall meet the clearance levels set forth at N.J.A.C.
5:17.
(2) If the 95 percent
accuracy level is reached, dust wipe sampling shall be performed following five
percent of maintenance activities performed and samples shall be ordered on a
random basis. A 95 percent accuracy level shall be maintained.
(3) If the accuracy level falls below 95
percent or if a 95 percent accuracy level was not achieved following the first
20 maintenance activities, dust wipe sampling shall be performed following all
maintenance activities until the 95 percent accuracy level is
reached.
(4) Property owners shall
be required to maintain records of all dust wipe sampling performed.
(e) The
following concern exterior surfaces:
1. The
requirements set forth in (a) through (d) above shall apply to stairwells,
porches, balconies, entryways, and windows.
2. For all other exterior surfaces, lead-safe
work practices, in accordance with (i) below, shall be used for any work to be
undertaken, unless the paint has been tested and not found to be lead-based
paint.
(f) The following
concern recordkeeping:
1. A record of testing
performed and any certificate issued by a certified evaluation firm indicating
that the building or any portion thereof is lead free shall be maintained for
the life of the structure.
2. A
record of all testing, visual examinations, findings and corrective action
taken, including the date(s) and location(s) of any sampling performed and of
corrective actions taken, shall be maintained for not less than five years and
shall be made available upon request for review by the enforcing agency having
jurisdiction. This shall include a record of:
i. Inspections, risk assessments and lead
hazard control work performed pursuant to (b) above;
ii. Standard treatments undertaken pursuant
to (c) above;
iii. On-going
evaluation and maintenance undertaken pursuant to (d) above;
iv. Any certificates issued to the building
owner by a certified lead evaluation firm;
v. Tenant notification required pursuant to
(h) below; and
vi. Any reports of
deteriorated paint received from tenants and documentation of the owner's
responses pursuant to (h) below.
3. A record of the training in safe building
maintenance practices of each individual as required by (g) below shall be
maintained by the owner as long as that individual is involved in the
maintenance of the building and shall be made available upon request for review
by the enforcing agency having jurisdiction.
(g) Training requirements are as follows:
1. All owners or employees of the owner
performing visual examinations or undertaking corrective action or maintenance
work shall complete a one-day training course on safe building maintenance
practices and applicable New Jersey law offered by a training provider
accredited by the Department of Health and Senior Services. Courses approved
for this purpose shall include:
i. The
Lead-Based Paint Maintenance Training Program, "Work Smart, Work Wet, and Work
Clean to Work Lead Safe," prepared by the National Environmental Training
Association for EPA and HUD;
ii.
"The Remodeler's and Renovator's Lead-Based Paint Training Program," prepared
by HUD and the National Association of the Remodeling Industry;
iii. Lead Safety for Remodeling, Repair and
Painting: A Joint EPA-HUD Course; or
iv. Any other course that the Department
finds to be substantially equivalent.
2. Owners or employees of the owner shall not
perform dust wipe sampling unless they have completed a State-certified course
in accordance with this section or a HUD-approved clearance technician course
(for example, the course developed by EPA, "Lead Sampling Technician ('HUD
Clearance Technician') Training Course").
(h) Tenant notification and owner response
requirements are as follows:
1. Owners shall
distribute a pamphlet developed by the Department prior to commencement of
repair work that will disturb more than two square feet of lead-based paint,
unless the tenant has received the pamphlet within the last 12
months.
2. Owners shall post a
notice advising tenants to report deteriorated paint and shall respond to any
reported problem within 30 days. The notice shall include the landlord's name,
address, and telephone number.
i. If an owner
has received notice from a tenant that there is a pregnant woman or a child
under the age of six years residing in the unit or, with regard to any problem
reported in a common area, in the building, the owner shall correct any
conditions of deteriorated paint within one week of the tenant
complaint.
ii. In buildings where
there is no central location for posting notices or where notices are likely to
be defaced or removed without authorization, the owner shall provide each
tenant with a copy of such a notice.
(i) Lead-safe work practices: All work
undertaken to repair or stabilize deteriorated paint and any other work that
will disturb painted surfaces shall comply with the following:
1. Occupant protection and worksite
preparation shall be performed in accordance with the applicable provisions of
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development rules 24 CFR 35 included as
subchapter Appendix 2-B, incorporated herein by reference.
2. The following work practices shall be
prohibited:
i. Open flame burning or the use
of high temperature (in excess of 1,100 degrees Fahrenheit) heat
guns;
ii. Power sanding or
sandblasting, unless a special HEPA (high efficiency particulate air) filter
equipped vacuum attachment is used to contain dust;
iii. Uncontained water blasting or power
washing; or
iv. Dry scraping or
sanding more than two square feet of painted surface per room (interior) or
more than 10 square feet per building (exterior).
3. All work shall be undertaken in a manner
that prevents the spread of dust.
4. Specialized cleaning shall be performed at
the end of each work day if the job will take more than one day and the area is
to be occupied before work begins again and at the end of each job.
5. Occupant protection, worksite preparation
and specialized cleaning ((i)1 and 4 above) are not required for maintenance
activities that disturb painted surfaces that total:
i. Twenty square feet or less on the exterior
of the building;
ii. Two square
feet or less in any one interior room or space; or
iii. Ten percent or less of the total surface
area of an interior or exterior component with a small surfaces area,
including, but not limited to, window sills, baseboards or trim.
6. After the completion of any
work involving the disturbance of painted surfaces of a size that exceeds the
limits of (i)5 above, at least one dust wipe sample shall be taken by
maintenance staff trained in accordance with (g) above in each room that is
part of the work area at a location where work was performed. If the level
exceeds the lead hazard level established by N.J.A.C. 5:17, the room shall be
cleaned and retested until the results of testing demonstrate lead levels below
the standard.
(j) Bare
soil in excess of nine square feet per property shall be covered or access to
these areas shall be restricted and bare soil in play areas or walkways of any
size shall be covered unless that soil has been tested and has been found to be
below the lead hazard level established by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency at 40 CFR 745, incorporated herein by reference.
(k) Garages and other structures on the site:
Any work on garages and other structures on the site shall be performed in
accordance with the lead-safe work practices listed in (i) above. Structures to
which tenants have access shall comply with the requirements set forth in (a)
through (e) above.