RESIDENTIAL LEAD-BASED PAINT HAZARD REDUCTION ACT RULES
AND REGULATIONS
The
Act: Section 1018 of the Residential
Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act of 1992 (Title X of the Housing and
Community Development Act of 1992) requires sellers, landlords and real estate
agents to warn homebuyers and tenants of lead-based paint and lead-based paint
hazards in pre-1978 housing.
Exemptions: The regulations apply to all transactions to
sell or lease pre-1978 housing, except the following:
Housing
constructed on or after 1978 (when lead-based paint was banned for residential
use;
Housing
for the elderly or persons with disabilities, unless a child under 6 resides or
is expected to reside in the housing;
Dwellings
without bedrooms, i.e., efficiencies and military barracks;
Foreclosure
sales;
Short-term
leases of 100 days or less;
Renewal
of leases where all information has been disclosed previously and where lessor
has acquired no new information ("renewal" is defined under the
regulations to "include both renegotiations of existing lease terms and/or
ratification of a new lease");
Leases of housing which has been inspected and found to be free of
lead-based paint by a certified inspector.
INFORMATION THE PURCHASER OR LESSEE MUST
RECEIVE FROM THE SELLER OR LANDLORD PRIOR TO BECOMING OBLIGATED UNDER ANY
CONTRACT TO LEASE OR PURCHASE HOUSING CONSTRUCTED PRIOR TO 1978:
An
EPA-approved information pamphlet on identifying and controlling lead-based
paint hazards;
Any
known information concerning lead-based paint or lead-based paint hazards. The seller or landlord must also disclose
information such as the location of the lead-based paint and/or lead-based
paint hazards, and the condition of the painted surfaces;
Any
records and reports on lead-based paint which are available to the seller or
landlord (for multi-unit buildings, this requirement includes records and
reports concerning common areas and other units, when such information was
obtained as a result of a building-wide evaluation);
An
attachment to the contract or lease (or language inserted in the lease itself)
which includes a Lead Warning Statement and confirms that the seller or
landlord has complied with all notification requirements. This attachment is to
be provided in the same language used in the rest of the contract or
leases. All parties, sellers, landlords,
agents, homebuyers, tenants, must sign and date the attachment.
10
DAY INSPECTION PERIOD FOR HOMEBUYERS
Sellers
must provide homebuyers a 10-day period to conduct a paint inspection or risk
assessment for lead-based paint or lead-based paint hazards.
Parties
may mutually agree, in writing, to lengthen or shorten the time period for
inspection. Homebuyers may waive this inspection opportunity.
Sellers
are not required by law to allow homebuyers to void their contract based on the
results of the lead-based paint evaluation.
RECORD KEEPING
Sellers and lessors
must retain a copy of the disclosures for no less than three years from the
date of sale or the date the leasing period begins.