NPCA Says Report On Lead-Paint Hazards Reflects Industry View
A call for recommendations that reflect the coatings industry’s longstanding position that “targeted, feasible and effective strategies” are needed to reduce the threat of childhood lead poisoning, the National Paint & Coatings Association (NPCA) says.
WASHINGTON — A report that calls for a comprehensive federal strategy aimed at eliminating childhood lead poisoning in the United States by 2010 includes recommendations that reflect the coatings industry’s longstanding position that “targeted, feasible and effective strategies” are needed to reduce the threat of childhood lead poisoning, the National Paint & Coatings Association (NPCA) says.
The report, which is the result of an assessment of children’s environmental health risks ordered by President Clinton in 1997, states that lead-hazard reduction efforts should be concentrated on the 2.3 million low-income housing units most likely to have lead-based paint hazards. The estimate of such housing units is far below earlier totals, and is based on a better definition of what constitutes lead-based paint hazards, the NPCA said. Other factors in the lower estimate are the effects of urban redevelopment programs that have reduced the number of such housing units, the association said.