by Nina Misuraca Ignaczak October 22, 2024
Detroit halts lead hazard vote over enforcement worries Tuesday Pictured: peeling lead paint exposed after siding fell off on April Ross' home. Photo by Nick Hagen.|
Overview:
- Detroit City Council has delayed a vote on rental ordinance amendments that would revamp lead hazard identification and regulation in rental units.
- Developed with lead safety advocates, the amendments seek to boost compliance with safety standards while ensuring health protections.
- Despite some criticism, the changes have garnered support from key lead safety advocates. The City Council will revisit the amendments next week in a formal session.
Detroit City Council postponed a vote Tuesday on proposed amendments to the cityâs rental ordinance that would overhaul how lead hazards are identified and regulated in rental properties, with some council members seeking additional discussion about enforcement mechanisms.
The amendments, developed in consultation with lead safety advocates and based on an 18-month study by the Center for Community Progress, aim to increase compliance with rental safety standards while maintaining critical health protections.
âSimply put, the current approach to enforcing the rental ordinance, despite its good intentions, is too complex. It takes too long to get into compliance, and itâs incredibly costly,â said Matthew Kreis, general counsel from the Center for Community Progress during an Oct. 7 Public Safety committee meeting.
The proposed changes would streamline the inspection process while expanding tenant protections. According to Andie Taverna, director of policy and implementation with the mayorâs office, the new ordinance would âmake it very easy for good landlords who are doing the right thing, offering a property in good condition to come into compliance with the cityâs rental ordinance requirements.â
Key changes include:
- Combining property condition and lead safety into a single inspection
- Focusing on 15 of the most serious repair issues
- Reducing inspection costs from over $1,000 to an annual fee of $150 or less
- Strengthening enforcement through increased violation tickets and property liens
- Expanding tenant protections through an enhanced rent escrow program
The amendments include two recently agreed-upon changes: requiring full lead inspection and risk assessment when a child under 6 is identified with elevated blood lead levels, and increasing the minimum percentage of geographic areas requiring dust sampling from 10% to 25%.
A more substantial proposed change requiring dust sampling across 100% of the city within six years will be considered a separate ordinance or an amendment to the current ordinance.
However, the proposed changes have drawn criticism from some experts and advocates. Lyke Thompson, director of Wayne State Universityâs Center for Urban Studies, warned that the amendments could put children at risk by relying on visual assessments to detect lead hazards.
âThe current proposal to modify the code will weaken and likely injure children,â Thompson testified. He pointed out that the visual assessment method contradicts federal guidelines, noting that âHUD, EPA, and ASTM say it is limited in its ability to detect lead.â Thompson also argued that the proposal violates Michigan state standards, which require certified lead assessors to use XRF machines for risk assessments.
Taverna indicated that the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services has declined to determine whether the proposed program meets state requirements. Instead, according to Taverna, the state has committed to providing technical assistance to Detroit once the ordinance is adopted to ensure successful implementation.
learn more
Lead Poisoning Prevention Fund offers free lead inspections, loans for lead abatement
The program, built on Michigan Savesâ model for clean energy and energy efficiency financing, aims to reduce lead poisoning in the state.
Michigan toddlers to receive universal lead testing under new legislation
Detroit kids test positive for lead at triple the stateâs rate, but few get tested. A new universal testing law means more exposed kids may get help.
Lead paint is a major threat to kids. Old Detroit homes are full of it, but the city keeps selling them
The Detroit Land Bank sells thousands of cheap homes without disclosing the potential hazards of lead-based paint. Remediation has been slow. LaShawna Anthony needed to move into a new home in the summer of 2020 to get herself and her newborn out of a toxic romantic relationship. Instead of renting a new house, she boughtâŠ
Despite these concerns, several prominent lead safety advocates supported the changes, including Mary Sue Schottenfels, former executive director of CLEARCorps Detroit.
âOver 1,200 Detroit kids are lead poisoned per year generally, and many more because the testing rates are abysmally low,â Schottenfels testified on Tuesday before City Council. âLead poisoning creates lifelong problems for kids â ADHD, lowered IQ, slowed learning. Later in life, those kids are more likely to drop out of school and be introduced to the criminal justice system.â
Councilman Fred Durhal requested a one-week postponement to address concerns from smaller developers about the proposed lien enforcement mechanism.
âI want to afford myself the opportunity to talk to some of those folks who would be impacted possibly by that,â Durhal said, while emphasizing his overall support for the ordinance.
Dr. Theresa Holtropp, a pediatrician with 24 years of experience at Childrenâs Hospital of Michigan, endorsed the amendments, noting that the current 2017 ordinance âhas not had the hoped-for impact.â She emphasized that the revised ordinance âcombines approaches that give better protections to tenantsâ while incentivizing landlord compliance.
The City Council is expected to revisit the amendments next week in formal session.
https://planetdetroit.org/2024/10/detroit-rental-ordinance-lead-hazards/
Comments