What Homeowners & Contractors Need To Know About The Lead Paint Law

Was your home built prior to 1978?  This is what your contractor, handyman, plumber, etc. need to know and have included in their contracts.

Daggett Builders, Inc  Tel. 207 354 6177  www.daggettbuilders.com

From: Remodeling magazine 2010

  • Posted on: April 7, 2010

Careful Contracts, Conversations Protect Remodelers Against RRP Liability

By:
Leah Thayer

Two weeks until the EPA’s lead paint law takes effect on April 22, which means it’s high time not only to review the work practices and certifications that have received so much attention lately – but also your contracts.

 

“The stakes are very, very high” for remodelers, says construction and real estate lawyer Andrea Goldman of the EPA’s Lead: Renovation, Repair, and Painting (RRP) rule. For starters, the EPA can assess heavy fines against contractors (up to $37,500 per violation per day) for not complying with the rule, which will impact work on homes built before 1978. Many remodelers have been scrambling to get the firm and employee certifications that the rule requires, despite a widely reported shortage of training providers in many parts of the country.

 

Then there are the legal stakes. “You cannot shield yourself from liability,” says Goldman, of The Law Office of Andrea Goldman, Newton, Mass. Lawsuits emerging from the rule could make it fairly easy for homeowners to point fingers at their general contractor if a child or other occupant of the home tests positive for lead poisoning, regardless of when or how that person was exposed.

 

She suggests a number of proactive steps with regard to your contracts, adding that it’s always safest to consult a lawyer for direct legal advice.

 

Homeowner Contracts

 

Before you begin any work in a home built before 1978, Goldman says, give clients a copy of the pamphlet Renovate Right: Important Lead Hazard Information for Families, Child Care Providers and Schools (available from EPA by clicking here). Be sure that clients understand the rule, and provide them with proof of your firm and employee certifications (EPA will provide you with the green logo shown here, as well as certification numbers).

 

Then, prepare and have clients sign an agreement specific to the RRP covering points such as:

  • They received the pamphlet before the work began.

  • Their home has/has not been tested for lead paint. (If the house has been tested, and no lead paint has been found, they acknowledge that you are not required to use lead-safe practices.)

  • They understand the lead-safe practices that will be followed.

  • They acknowledge that high winds or other variables could delay work.

Goldman (see contact info at the bottom of article) has produced a contract for her clients that covers these items and more. You can also download a sample pre-renovation disclosure form here from EPA.

 

“The main thing is for contractors to provide homeowners with the pamphlet and to get them to put in writing that they understand the facts,” Goldman says. Between a signed contract and the contractor’s good-faith effort to educate and work safely, “it’s hard, psychologically, for homeowners to file a claim against you,” she believes.

 

Subcontractor Contracts

 

The RRP rule applies to any trade performing work that disturbs the minimum area of lead-painted surfaces. This means that not only must your firm and at least one of your on-site employees be RRP certified for work in pre-1978 homes, but so must your electricians, plumbers, HVAC contractors, and other trade contractors.

 

Unless, of course, you want to allocate the time and resources of your own RRP-certified staff to train subs in lead-safe measures, oversee their cleanup, and more. In that case, says Goldman, “You’re taking on a lot of liability and supervisory responsibility that you might not want to have.”

 

Besides requiring your trade contractors to have proof of EPA firm- and renovator certifications, Goldman advises that your contracts with them:

 

  • Include an indemnification clause making the subcontractor liable for his part of the work that requires lead-containment procedures.

  • Clearly spell out subcontractors’ scope of work, including lead containment procedures.

  • Make final payment contingent upon subcontractors’ completion of all documentation required by the EPA.

 

 

Full coverage of the RRP and its impact on remodelers.

RRP information from EPA, including a fact sheet updated April 5.

 

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