TITLE 6. HEALTH CODE
CHAPTER 6-800. LEAD PAINT DISCLOSURE
§6-801. The Council makes the following findings:
(1) Forty-five percent (45%) of the Philadelphia children
who were screened for lead poisoning in 1993 had levels of concern as defined by
the Centers for Disease Control. This amounts to 22,302
children.
(2) The Centers for Disease Control has determined that the
presence of lead in the bloodstream at levels as low as ten (10) micrograms per
deciliter indicate a level of concern requiring minimally that such children be
monitored and tested every three to four months.
(3) The Philadelphia
Department of Health has estimated that sixty-five thousand (65,000)
Philadelphia children under the age of six (6) years are poisoned by lead and
most of those poisoned are undiagnosed and untreated.
(4) Environmental
exposure to even low levels of lead increases a child's risk of developing
permanent learning disabilities, reduced concentration and attentiveness, and
behavior problems which may persist and adversely affect the child's
chances for success in school and life. Exposure to higher levels of lead can
cause mental retardation, seizures and death.
(5) The most significant
remaining source of environmental lead is lead-based paint in housing built
prior to 1978 and house dust and soil contaminated by lead deposits and
lead-based paint. The ingestion of household dust containing deteriorating lead
or abraded lead-based paint is the most common cause of lead poisoning in
children.
(6) Since there is no effective medical treatment for the
great majority of lead-poisoned children, and the damage from lead can be
irreversible, prevention efforts such as information dissemination and
disclosure requirements are vitally necessary and critical tools for the
eradication of lead poisoning.
(7) The United States Congress has
enacted the "Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act of 1992," with
the purpose of commencing the elimination of lead-based paint hazards and
creating a national approach to the presence of lead-based paint, and proposes
that the partnership between the Federal and local governments envisioned by the
Congress will be enhanced and the dangers of lead-based paint reduced, by the
enactment of regulations within The Philadelphia Code, codifying, implementing,
supplementing and enforcing the disclosure requirements of the federal
law.
(8) The purpose of this legislation is to provide an educational
tool which will assist the Department of Health in identifying, reducing and
combating lead poisoning in Philadelphia children.
(9) The task of
eliminating lead from those properties that house children will be a costly one
and will require a public/private collaboration and partnership in order to
preserve and to protect Philadelphia's affordable housing
stock.