Maryland Environment Section 6-801
The 1978 MDE lead paint law, also known as the Reduction of Lead Risk in Housing Act, is a Maryland law that regulates lead paint in rental properties built before 1978. The law aims to reduce the incidence of lead poisoning in children by requiring property owners to take steps to reduce the risk of lead exposure.
The law requires property owners to:
- Register their rental properties with the Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE)
- Provide lead hazard education materials to tenants
- Inspect their properties for lead paint hazards at certain triggering events, such as a change in tenancy or a renovation
- Take steps to reduce lead paint hazards, such as covering or removing lead paint
The law also sets standards for lead paint risk reduction. For example, property owners must ensure that lead paint is not chipping, flaking, or chalking, and that lead dust is not present in the air.
The 1978 MDE lead paint law is an important tool for protecting children from lead poisoning. Lead poisoning can cause a variety of health problems, including learning disabilities, behavioral problems, and delayed growth. By requiring property owners to take steps to reduce lead paint hazards, the law helps to keep children safe.
Here are some additional details about the 1978 MDE lead paint law:
- The law applies to all rental properties built before 1978, regardless of whether they have been renovated.
- Property owners must register their properties with the MDE within 30 days of acquiring them.
- The registration fee is $30 per rental unit.
- Property owners must provide lead hazard education materials to tenants before they move in.
- The materials must be written in plain language and be easy to understand.
- Property owners must inspect their properties for lead paint hazards at certain triggering events, such as a change in tenancy or a renovation.
- The inspection must be conducted by a qualified inspector.
- If lead paint hazards are found, the property owner must take steps to reduce the risk of lead exposure.
- The property owner must obtain a lead risk reduction certificate from the MDE before the tenants can move in.
The 1978 MDE lead paint law is a complex law, but it is an important tool for protecting children from lead poisoning. If you are a property owner, it is important to be familiar with the law and to comply with its requirements.
1. § 6-801.
(a) In this subtitle the following words have the meanings indicated.
(b) (1) “Affected property” means:
(i) A property constructed before 1950 that contains at least one rental dwelling unit; or
(ii) Any residential rental property for which the owner makes an election under § 6-803(a)(2) of this subtitle.
(2) “Affected property” includes an individual rental dwelling unit within a multifamily rental dwelling.
(3) “Affected property” does not include property exempted under § 6-803(b) of this subtitle.
(c) “Change in occupancy” means a change of tenant in an affected property in which the property is vacated and possession is either surrendered to the owner or abandoned.
(d) “Child” means an individual under the age of 6 years.
(e) “Commission” means the Lead Poisoning Prevention Commission.
(f) “Elevated blood lead” or “EBL” means a quantity of lead in whole venous blood, expressed in micrograms per deciliter (ug/dl), that exceeds a specified threshold level.
(g) “Exterior surfaces” means:
(1) All fences and porches that are part of an affected property;
(2) All outside surfaces of an affected property that are accessible to a child and that are:
(i) Attached to the outside of an affected property; or
(ii) Other buildings and structures, including play equipment, benches, and laundry line poles, that are part of the affected property, except buildings or structures that are not owned or controlled by the owner of the affected property; and
(3) All painted surfaces in stairways, hallways, entrance areas, recreation areas, laundry areas, and garages within a multifamily rental dwelling unit that are common to individual dwelling units and are accessible to a child.
(h) “Fund” means the Lead Poisoning Prevention Fund.
(i) (1) “High efficiency particle air vacuum” or “HEPA-vacuum” means a device capable of filtering out particles of 0.3 microns or greater from a body of air at an efficiency of 99.97% or greater.
(2) “HEPA-vacuum” includes use of a HEPA-vacuum.
(j) “Lead-based paint” means paint or other surface coatings that contain lead in excess of the maximum lead content level allowed by the Department by regulation.
(k) “Lead-contaminated dust” means dust in affected properties that contains an area or mass concentration of lead in excess of the lead content level determined by the Department by regulation.
(l) “Lead-free” means at or below a lead content level deemed to be lead-free in accordance with criteria established by the Department by regulation.
(m) “Lead-safe housing” means a rental dwelling unit that:
(1) Is certified to be lead-free in accordance with § 6-804 of this subtitle;
(2) Was constructed after 1978;
(3) Is deemed to be lead-safe by the Department in accordance with criteria established by the Department by regulation; or
(4) Is certified to be in compliance with § 6-815(a) of this subtitle and:
(i) In which all windows are either lead-free or have been treated so that all friction surfaces are lead-free;
(ii) In which lead particulate levels are determined to be within abatement clearance levels established by the Department by regulation, within 15 days prior to the relocation of a person at risk to the rental dwelling unit in accordance with a qualified offer made under Part V of this subtitle; and
(iii) Which is subject to ongoing maintenance and testing as specified by the Department by regulation.
(n) “Multifamily rental dwelling” means a property which contains more than one rental dwelling unit.
(o) (1) “Owner” means a person, firm, corporation, guardian, conservator, receiver, trustee, executor, or legal representative who, alone or jointly or severally with others, owns, holds, or controls the whole or any part of the freehold or leasehold interest to any property, with or without actual possession.
(2) “Owner” includes:
(i) Any vendee in possession of the property; and
(ii) Any authorized agent of the owner, including a property manager or leasing agent.
(3) “Owner” does not include:
(i) A trustee or a beneficiary under a deed of trust or a mortgagee; or
(ii) The owner of a reversionary interest under a ground rent lease.
(p) “Person at risk” means a child or a pregnant woman who resides or regularly spends at least 24 hours per week in an affected property.
(q) “Related party” means any:
(1) Person related to an owner by blood or marriage;
(2) Employee of the owner; or
(3) Entity in which an owner, or any person referred to in paragraph (1) or (2) of this subsection, has an interest.
(r) “Relocation expenses” means all expenses necessitated by the relocation of a tenant’s household to lead-safe housing, including moving and hauling expenses, the HEPA-vacuuming of all upholstered furniture, payment of a security deposit for the lead-safe housing, and installation and connection of utilities and appliances.
(s) “Rent subsidy” means the difference between the rent paid by a tenant for housing at the time a qualified offer is made under Part V of this subtitle and the rent due for the lead-safe housing to which the tenant is relocated.
(t) (1) “Rental dwelling unit” means a room or group of rooms that form a single independent habitable rental unit for permanent occupation by one or more individuals that has living facilities with permanent provisions for living, sleeping, eating, cooking, and sanitation.
(2) “Rental dwelling unit” does not include:
(i) An area not used for living, sleeping, eating, cooking, or sanitation, such as an unfinished basement;
(ii) A unit within a hotel, motel, or similar seasonal or transient facility;
(iii) An area which is secured and inaccessible to occupants; or
(iv) A unit which is not offered for rent.
(u) “Risk reduction standard” means a risk reduction standard established under § 6-815 or § 6-819 of this subtitle.