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S06174 Summary:

BILL NOS06174
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
SPONSORPARKER
 
COSPNSR
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Rpld §§1370, 1373 & 1375, amd Pub Health L, generally; add §§236-b & 242-a, RP L; amd §§210-B & 606, Tax L; add §99-ss, St Fin L; amd §302-a, Mult Dwell L; amd §305-a, Mult Res L; add §131-y, amd §§143-b & 390-a, Soc Serv L; add §3441, Ins L
 
Enacts the childhood lead poisoning prevention and safe housing act to make enforcement of lead hazard control standards in the state of New York more certain and more effective; creates a loan fund to assist owners in complying with lead-safe requirements; provides for inspections and certification of inspectors and remediators; requires registration of affected properties; provides tax credits for remediation; provides for appointment of deputy commissioner of housing and community renewal to oversee provisions; provides for educational programs relating to lead poisoning and abatement.
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S06174 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          6174
 
                               2025-2026 Regular Sessions
 
                    IN SENATE
 
                                      March 6, 2025
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  Sen.  PARKER -- read twice and ordered printed, and when
          printed to be committed to the Committee on Health
 
        AN ACT to amend the public health law, the real property  law,  the  tax
          law,  the  state  finance law, the multiple dwelling law, the multiple
          residence law, the social services  law  and  the  insurance  law,  in
          relation to enacting the "childhood lead poisoning prevention and safe
          housing  act";  and  to repeal certain provisions of the public health
          law relating thereto
 
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section  1.  Short title.  This act shall be known and may be cited as
     2  the "childhood lead poisoning prevention and safe housing act".
     3    § 2. Legislative findings and purposes.   1.  (a)  Lead  poisoning  of
     4  children  persists as one of the most prevalent and preventable environ-
     5  mental diseases in New York.  At least 10,000 children were newly  iden-
     6  tified with levels of lead in their blood at 10 micrograms per deciliter
     7  (ug/dl)  in  New  York  state in 2001. Moreover, only about one-third of
     8  children are receiving the lead screenings that are required by law  and
     9  therefore,  the  actual  number of children affected by the ingestion of
    10  lead is undoubtedly significantly greater than reported.  Prevention  is
    11  the  only  effective  way  to protect children from irreversible damage.
    12  Unless lead poisoning is prevented,  elevated  blood  lead  levels  will
    13  result in impairment of the ability to think, concentrate, and learn.
    14    (b)  Medical  research  indicates  that children can suffer permanent,
    15  irreparable damage at blood levels even lower than 10  ug/dl,  and  that
    16  there  is  no  level  of lead ingestion which is without adverse impact.
    17  Medical research also indicates that fetal injuries from lead paint  can
    18  occur  if  pregnant persons have elevated blood levels during pregnancy.
    19  Because of this, intervention measures that  wait  until  children  have
    20  been   exposed  have  limited  benefits,  and  the  pursuit  of  primary
    21  prevention, which means eliminating lead  hazards  before  children  are
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD10575-01-5

        S. 6174                             2
 
     1  exposed,  has  been recommended by the United States centers for disease
     2  control and prevention and promoted by leading experts in the field as a
     3  critical course of action to protect the health of young children.
     4    (c)  The predominant cause of lead poisoning in children is the inges-
     5  tion of lead particles from deteriorating or  abraded  lead-based  paint
     6  from older and poorly maintained residences.
     7    (d) Deteriorating lead-based paint or excessive amounts of lead-conta-
     8  minated dust in these poorly maintained homes endangers the intellectual
     9  and  emotional development and physical well being of affected children.
    10  In addition, unsafe work practices that inadequately control  lead  dust
    11  in  the  repair  or renovation of older homes can cause substantial lead
    12  hazards.
    13    (e) Although New York state banned the sale of lead paint in 1970, (l.
    14  1970, ch. 338) seventy-four percent of  New  York's  housing  stock  was
    15  constructed  prior  to 1970. At least ninety percent of lead-based paint
    16  still remaining in occupied housing exists in units built  before  1960.
    17  New  York state has both the largest percentage and the largest absolute
    18  number of older housing units with lead paint in the nation.
    19    (f) The  dangers  posed  by  lead-based  paint  can  be  substantially
    20  reduced,  although  not  eliminated, by taking measures to prevent paint
    21  deterioration and limiting children's exposure to paint chips  and  lead
    22  dust.
    23    (g)  The deterioration of lead-based paint in older residences results
    24  in increased expenses each year for the state of New York in the form of
    25  special education and other education expenses, medical care  for  lead-
    26  poisoned  children,  and  expenditures  for  delinquent youth and others
    27  needing special supervision.
    28    (h) Older housing units remain an important part of New York's housing
    29  stock, particularly for those of modest or limited incomes. The  problem
    30  of  lead-based  paint in housing affects urban, suburban and rural areas
    31  of the state.
    32    (i) The existing housing codes and enforcement systems in most  juris-
    33  dictions do not include primary prevention measures for lead hazards and
    34  have  proven  ineffective  in  encouraging  widespread  lead-based paint
    35  hazard abatement, mitigation, and control.
    36    (j) The financial incentives currently in place have not proven suffi-
    37  cient to motivate landlords and other property owners to undertake wide-
    38  spread and effective lead-based paint hazard abatement, mitigation,  and
    39  control;  moreover  low and moderate income property owners may not have
    40  access to the  resources  to  eliminate  or  reduce  substantially  lead
    41  hazards.
    42    (k)  Insurance companies are reluctant to provide coverage to property
    43  owners in the absence of evidence that lead hazards have been  appropri-
    44  ately addressed.
    45    (l)  Knowledge of lead-based paint hazards, their control, mitigation,
    46  abatement, and risk avoidance is not sufficiently widespread, especially
    47  outside urban areas.
    48    2. The purposes of this act are: (a) to increase the supply of afford-
    49  able rental housing in the state of New York in which measures have been
    50  taken to eliminate or substantially reduce the risk  of  childhood  lead
    51  poisoning;
    52    (b)  to  ensure  that  New York's response to lead-based paint hazards
    53  focuses on primary prevention as the essential tool to combat  childhood
    54  lead  poisoning, and thus to substantially reduce, and eventually elimi-
    55  nate, the incidence of childhood lead poisoning  in  the  state  of  New
    56  York;

        S. 6174                             3
 
     1    (c) to establish and make enforcement of lead hazard control standards
     2  in the state of New York more certain and more effective;
     3    (d)  to  improve public awareness of lead safety issues and to educate
     4  both property owners and tenants about practices  that  can  reduce  the
     5  incidence of lead poisoning;
     6    (e)  to  provide access to the resources for property owners and land-
     7  lords who commit to undertake specified lead hazard reduction  measures;
     8  and
     9    (f)  to  facilitate  the  availability  and affordability of liability
    10  insurance protection to those landlords and other owners  who  undertake
    11  specified lead hazard reduction measures.
    12    §  3.  Section  1370  of  the  public health law is REPEALED and a new
    13  section 1370 is added to read as follows:
    14    § 1370. Definitions.    1.  "Abatement"  means  any  set  of  measures
    15  designed  to  permanently eliminate lead-based paint or lead-based paint
    16  hazards. Abatement includes the removal of lead-based paint, the  perma-
    17  nent  enclosure or encapsulation of lead-based paint, the replacement of
    18  components or fixtures painted with lead-based paint, and the removal or
    19  permanent covering of soil-based hazards.
    20    2. "Affected property" means a room or group of rooms within a proper-
    21  ty constructed before nineteen hundred seventy that form a single  inde-
    22  pendent  habitable  dwelling unit for occupation by one or more individ-
    23  uals that has living facilities with permanent  provisions  for  living,
    24  sleeping,  eating, cooking, and sanitation. "Affected property" does not
    25  include:
    26    (a) an area not used for living, sleeping, eating, cooking, or sanita-
    27  tion, such as an unfinished basement, that is not readily accessible  to
    28  children under seven years of age;
    29    (b)  a  unit  within  a hotel, motel, or similar seasonal or transient
    30  facility unless such unit is occupied by one or more persons at risk for
    31  a period exceeding thirty days;
    32    (c) an area which is secured and inaccessible to occupants;
    33    (d) a unit which is not offered for rent or incident to employment;
    34    (e) housing for the elderly,  or  a  residential  property  designated
    35  exclusively  for  persons with disabilities; except this exemption shall
    36  not apply if a person at risk resides or is expected to  reside  in  the
    37  dwelling unit or visits the dwelling unit on a regular basis;
    38    (f)  an unoccupied dwelling unit or residential property that is to be
    39  demolished, provided the dwelling unit or property will  remain  unoccu-
    40  pied until demolition; or
    41    (g)  in  cities of more than one million population, a multiple dwell-
    42  ing, as defined in section four of the multiple dwelling law.
    43    "Affected property" also excludes any property owned or operated by  a
    44  unit  of federal, state, or local government, or any public, quasi-publ-
    45  ic, or municipal corporation, if the property is subject to lead  stand-
    46  ards  that  are  equal  to, or more stringent than, the requirements for
    47  lead-stabilized status  under  subdivision  three  of  section  thirteen
    48  hundred  seventy-six  of  this  title,  but does include privately-owned
    49  properties that receive governmental rental assistance.
    50    3.   "Area of high risk" means an  area  designated  as  such  by  the
    51  commissioner or such commissioner's representative and consisting of one
    52  or  more  dwellings  in which a condition conducive to lead poisoning of
    53  children is present or, additionally, any census tract  or  block  group
    54  within  the  state  where, during any single year, more than twenty-five
    55  children have been identified with elevated blood lead levels.

        S. 6174                             4
 
     1    4. "Change in occupancy" means a change of tenant in an affected prop-
     2  erty in which the property is vacated and possession is  either  surren-
     3  dered to the owner or abandoned.
     4    5.   "Chewable surface" shall mean a protruding interior windowsill in
     5  a dwelling unit in an affected property that is readily accessible to  a
     6  child under age seven. "Chewable surface" shall also mean any other type
     7  of interior edge or protrusion in a dwelling unit in an affected proper-
     8  ty,  such  as  a  rail or stair, where there is evidence that such other
     9  edge or protrusion has been chewed or where an occupant has notified the
    10  owner that a child under age seven residing in  that  affected  property
    11  has mouthed or chewed such edge or protrusion.
    12    6.  "Communities  of concern" means those thirty municipalities in the
    13  state that  have  the  greatest  numbers  of  children  identified  with
    14  elevated blood lead levels in the prior calendar year within the meaning
    15  of subdivision fourteen of this section.
    16    7.  "Condition  conducive  to  lead poisoning" means: (a) a lead-based
    17  paint hazard; and/or (b) other environmental conditions which may result
    18  in significant lead exposure, including soil-lead hazards.
    19    8. "Containment" means the physical measures taken to ensure that dust
    20  and debris created or released during lead-based paint hazard  reduction
    21  are  not  spread,  blown, or tracked from inside to outside of the work-
    22  site.
    23    9. "Council" means the advisory council on lead  poisoning  prevention
    24  established  pursuant  to  section  thirteen  hundred  seventy-b of this
    25  title.
    26    10.   "Deteriorated paint" means any interior  or  exterior  paint  or
    27  other  coating  that  is curling, scaling, flaking, blistering, peeling,
    28  chipping, chalking, cracking, or loose in any manner, such that a  space
    29  or  pocket  of air is behind a portion thereof or such that the paint is
    30  not completely adhered to the underlying  subsurface,  or  is  otherwise
    31  damaged or separated from the substrate.
    32    11. "Deteriorated subsurface" shall mean an unstable or unsound paint-
    33  ed  subsurface,  an indication of which can be observed through a visual
    34  inspection, including, but not limited to, rotted or  decayed  wood,  or
    35  wood or plaster that has been subject to moisture or disturbance.
    36    12.  "Dwelling"  means  a  building  or  structure or portion thereof,
    37  including the property occupied by and  appurtenant  to  such  dwelling,
    38  which is occupied in whole or in part as the home, residence or sleeping
    39  place  of one or more human beings and shall, without limiting the fore-
    40  going, include child care facilities for children under seven  years  of
    41  age, kindergartens and nursery schools.
    42    13. "Dwelling unit" means a:
    43    (a)  single-family  dwelling,  including  attached  structures such as
    44  porches and stoops; or
    45    (b) housing unit in a structure that contains more than  one  separate
    46  housing  unit,  and  in  which  each  such  unit is used or occupied, or
    47  intended to be used or occupied, in whole or in part,  as  the  home  or
    48  separate living quarters of one or more persons.
    49    14.  "Elevated  blood  lead  level"  means a quantity of lead in whole
    50  venous blood, expressed in micrograms per deciliter (ug/dl), of 10 ug/dl
    51  or greater, or such other more stringent level as  may  be  specifically
    52  provided in this title or adopted in regulation by the department pursu-
    53  ant to rule or regulation.
    54    15.  "Encapsulation"  means  the  application of a covering or coating
    55  that acts as a barrier between the lead-based paint and the  environment
    56  and  that  relies for its durability on adhesion between the encapsulant

        S. 6174                             5
 
     1  and the painted surface, and on the  integrity  of  the  existing  bonds
     2  between paint layers and between the paint and the substrate. Encapsula-
     3  tion  may  be  used  as  a  method  of  abatement  if it is designed and
     4  performed so as to be permanent.
     5    16. "Exterior surfaces" means:
     6    (a)  all  fences  and  porches  that are part of a dwelling that is or
     7  contains an affected property;
     8    (b) all outside surfaces of a dwelling that is or contains an affected
     9  property that are accessible to a child under the age of seven and that:
    10    (1) are attached to the outside of such dwelling; or
    11    (2) consist of other buildings that are appurtenant to such  dwelling,
    12  such as a garage or shed; and
    13    (c)  all  painted  surfaces  in  stairways,  hallways, entrance areas,
    14  recreation areas, laundry  areas,  and  garages  within  a  multi-family
    15  dwelling  that  are  common to individual dwelling units, one or more of
    16  which constitutes an affected property, and are accessible  to  a  child
    17  under the age of seven.
    18    17.   "Friction surface" means an interior or exterior painted surface
    19  that touches or is in contact with another surface, such  that  the  two
    20  surfaces are capable of relative motion and abrade, scrape, or bind when
    21  in  relative motion. Friction surfaces shall include, but not be limited
    22  to, window frames and jambs, doors, and hinges.
    23    18. "g" means gram, "mg" means milligram (thousandth of a  gram),  and
    24  "ug" means microgram (millionth of a gram).
    25    19.  "Hazard reduction" means measures designed to reduce or eliminate
    26  human exposure to lead-based hazards.
    27    20. "Health care provider" means any health care practitioner  author-
    28  ized  to  order  a blood lead test and any facility licensed pursuant to
    29  article twenty-eight of this chapter.
    30    21. "High efficiency particle air vacuum"  or  "hepa-vacuum"  means  a
    31  device capable of filtering out particles of 0.3 microns or greater from
    32  a  body  of  air  at  an  efficiency of 99.97% or greater; "hepa-vacuum"
    33  includes use of a hepa-vacuum.
    34    22.  "Impact surface" means an interior or  exterior  painted  surface
    35  that  shows  evidence, such as marking, denting, or chipping, that it is
    36  subject to damage by repeated sudden force, such  as  certain  parts  of
    37  door frames, moldings, or baseboards.
    38    23. "Inspection" means a comprehensive survey by a properly accredited
    39  person  to  determine  the  presence  of lead-based paint and lead-based
    40  paint hazards and the provision of a report explaining  the  results  of
    41  the inspection.
    42    24.  "Interior  windowsill"  means  a portion of the horizontal window
    43  ledge that is protruding into the interior of a room.
    44    25. "Investigation" means an examination conducted by the owner of  an
    45  affected property, the owner's agent or employee, or someone retained by
    46  the owner, in accordance with the requirements established by the deputy
    47  commissioner, to determine whether the affected property meets the stan-
    48  dards  of  lead-stabilized  status  as  defined  in subdivision three of
    49  section thirteen hundred seventy-six of this title.
    50    26. "Lead-based paint" means paint or other  similar  surface  coating
    51  material  containing  1.0  milligrams  of  lead per square centimeter or
    52  greater, as determined by laboratory analysis, or by an  x-ray  fluores-
    53  cence  analyzer.  If  an  x-ray  fluorescence analyzer is used, readings
    54  shall be corrected for substrate bias when necessary as specified by the
    55  performance characteristic sheets released by the United States environ-
    56  mental protection agency and the United States department of housing and

        S. 6174                             6
 
     1  urban development for the specific  x-ray  fluorescence  analyzer  used.
     2  X-ray fluorescence readings shall be classified as positive, negative or
     3  inconclusive  in accordance with the United States department of housing
     4  and urban development guidelines for the evaluation and control of lead-
     5  based  paint  hazards  in  housing  (June  1995,  revised  1997) and the
     6  performance characteristic sheets released by the United States environ-
     7  mental protection agency and the United States department of housing and
     8  urban development for the specific  x-ray  fluorescence  analyzer  used.
     9  X-ray  fluorescence  readings that fall within the inconclusive zone, as
    10  determined by the performance characteristic sheets, shall be  confirmed
    11  by  laboratory  analysis  of  paint  chips, results shall be reported in
    12  milligrams of lead per square centimeter and the measure of such labora-
    13  tory analysis shall be definitive. If laboratory  analysis  is  used  to
    14  determine  lead content, results shall be reported in milligrams of lead
    15  per square centimeter. Where the surface area of  a  paint  chip  sample
    16  cannot  be  accurately  measured or if an accurately measured paint chip
    17  sample cannot be removed, a  laboratory  analysis  may  be  reported  in
    18  percent  by  weight. In such case, lead-based paint shall mean any paint
    19  or other similar surface-coating material containing more than  0.5%  of
    20  metallic  lead,  based on the non-volatile content of the paint or other
    21  similar surface-coating material.
    22    27. "Lead-based paint hazard" means any condition in, or proximate to,
    23  a dwelling or dwelling unit occupied by a person  at  risk  that  causes
    24  exposure to lead from lead-contaminated dust, from lead-based paint that
    25  is  deteriorated,  or  from lead-based paint that is present on chewable
    26  surfaces,  deteriorated  subsurfaces,  friction  surfaces,   or   impact
    27  surfaces, or in soil, that would result in adverse human health effects.
    28    28.  "Lead-contained"  means property that has attained lead-contained
    29  property status within the meaning of subdivision six of  section  thir-
    30  teen hundred seventy-six of this title.
    31    29.  "Lead-contaminated  dust" means surface dust that contains a mass
    32  per area concentration of lead equal to or exceeding 40  micrograms  per
    33  square  foot ("ug/ft2") on floors, or 250 ug/ft2 on interior windowsills
    34  based on wipe sample, or 400 ug/ft2 on window wells, or such more strin-
    35  gent standards as may be adopted by the department.
    36    30. "Lead-free" means property that has  attained  lead-free  property
    37  status  within  the  meaning  of  subdivision  five  of section thirteen
    38  hundred seventy-six of this title.
    39    31. "Lead-stabilized" means property that has attained lead-stabilized
    40  property status within the meaning of subdivision four of section  thir-
    41  teen hundred seventy-six of this title.
    42    32.  "Local  designee"  means  a  municipal, county, or other official
    43  designated by the deputy commissioner of public  health  as  responsible
    44  for  assisting  the  designating authority, relevant state agencies, and
    45  relevant county and municipal authorities, in  implementing  the  activ-
    46  ities specified by this article for the localities.
    47    33.  "Occupant" means any individual living or sleeping in a building,
    48  or having possession of a space within a building.
    49    34. "Owner" means a person, firm, corporation, nonprofit organization,
    50  partnership, government, guardian, conservator, receiver, trustee, exec-
    51  utor, or other judicial officer, or other entity which,  alone  or  with
    52  others, owns, holds, or controls the freehold or leasehold title or part
    53  of  the  title to property, with or without actually possessing it. Such
    54  term includes a vendee who possesses the title, but does not  include  a
    55  mortgagee  or  an  owner  of a reversionary interest under a ground rent

        S. 6174                             7
 
     1  lease.  "Owner" includes any authorized agent of the owner, including  a
     2  property manager or leasing agent.
     3    35.  "Permanent"  means  an  expected  design  life of at least twenty
     4  years.
     5    36. "Person" means any natural person.
     6    37. "Person at risk" means a child under the age of seven years  or  a
     7  pregnant person who resides in an affected property.
     8    38.  "Program"  means  the  lead  poisoning  prevention program in the
     9  department established pursuant to section thirteen hundred seventy-a of
    10  this title.
    11    39. "Relocation expenses" means all expenses necessitated by the relo-
    12  cation of a tenant's household to housing free of lead hazards,  includ-
    13  ing, but not limited to, moving and hauling expenses, the hepa-vacuuming
    14  of  all upholstered furniture, laundering of clothes and linens, payment
    15  of a security deposit for the relocation housing, and  installation  and
    16  connection of utilities and appliances.
    17    40.  "Soil-lead  hazard" means soil in a play area where the soil-lead
    18  concentration from a composite play area sample of bare soil is equal to
    19  or greater than 400 parts per million; or in the rest of the  yard  when
    20  the  arithmetic  mean  lead  concentration  from  a composite sample (or
    21  arithmetic mean of composite samples) of bare soil from the rest of  the
    22  yard  (i.e., non-play areas) is equal to or greater than 1,200 parts per
    23  million.
    24    41. "Tenant" means the individual named as  the  lessee  in  a  lease,
    25  rental  agreement  or other form of occupancy agreement, whether written
    26  or oral, for a dwelling unit, and includes tenancies incident to employ-
    27  ment.  Where applicable, the term "tenant" shall also include any  occu-
    28  pant of the tenant's household.
    29    42. "Wipe sample" means a sample collected by an appropriately accred-
    30  ited person wiping a representative surface of known area, as determined
    31  by  American Society for Testing Materials (ASTM) e1728 ("standard prac-
    32  tice for the field collection of settled dust samples using wipe  sampl-
    33  ing  methods for lead determination by atomic spectrometry techniques"),
    34  with lead determination conducted by an  accredited  laboratory  partic-
    35  ipating  in  the  environmental  lead  laboratory  accreditation program
    36  (nlap).
    37    § 4. Subdivision 2 of section 1370-a of  the  public  health  law,  as
    38  added  by  chapter  485 of the laws of 1992, paragraph (a) as amended by
    39  section 4 of part A of chapter 58 of the laws of 2009 and paragraphs (c)
    40  and (d) as amended by paragraphs (e) and (f) as added by chapter 532  of
    41  the  laws  of 2022, is amended and three new subdivisions 4, 5 and 6 are
    42  added to read as follows:
    43    2. The department shall:
    44    (a) identify and designate as communities of concern the thirty  muni-
    45  cipalities  in the state having the greatest numbers of children identi-
    46  fied with elevated blood lead levels, and,  in  cooperation  with  local
    47  health  officials  and  municipal  officials,  develop  a  local primary
    48  prevention plan for each community of concern  to  prevent  exposure  to
    49  lead  consistent  with  this  title.   The commissioner is authorized to
    50  enter into and shall enter into agreements or memoranda of understanding
    51  with, and provide technical  and  other  resources  to,  communities  of
    52  concern  and  shall  ensure  that  the  primary  prevention plan targets
    53  persons at risk living in the  highest  risk  affected  housing  in  the
    54  community.   Municipalities identified by the commissioner shall cooper-
    55  ate fully with the department in the formulation and  implementation  of
    56  the primary prevention plan for the designated community of concern;

        S. 6174                             8
 
     1     (b)  identify and designate as areas of high risk any census tract or
     2  block group in the state in which during  any  single  year,  more  than
     3  twenty-five  children  have  been  identified  with  elevated blood lead
     4  levels. In such areas of high risk, the department shall further require
     5  that  the county commissioner of health, in cooperation with appropriate
     6  local municipal officials, prioritize and implement  the  inspection  of
     7  affected  properties  with persons at risk, and require the abatement of
     8  lead-based paint hazards, or the stabilization of all conditions  condu-
     9  cive  to  lead  poisoning  in these inspected units using lead safe work
    10  practices, in accordance with the definitions  and  provisions  of  this
    11  title;
    12    (c)  promulgate  and  enforce  regulations [for screening children and
    13  pregnant women, including requirements for blood lead testing, for  lead
    14  poisoning,  and  for  follow  up of children and pregnant women who have
    15  elevated blood lead levels] necessary  for  the  implementation  of  all
    16  portions  of  this  title,  except where responsibility for implementing
    17  specific portions of this title is specifically assigned to the  commis-
    18  sioner  of housing and community renewal or to the commissioner of taxa-
    19  tion and finance;
    20    [(b)] (d) enter into interagency agreements to coordinate lead poison-
    21  ing prevention, exposure reduction, identification and treatment  activ-
    22  ities  and lead reduction activities with other federal, state and local
    23  agencies and programs;
    24    [(c)](e) establish a statewide registry of  lead  levels  of  children
    25  provided  such  information is maintained as confidential except for (i)
    26  disclosure for medical treatment purposes; (ii) disclosure of  non-iden-
    27  tifying  epidemiological  data; and (iii) disclosure of information from
    28  such registry to the statewide immunization  information  system  estab-
    29  lished by section twenty-one hundred sixty-eight of this chapter;
    30    [(d)](f) develop and implement public education and community outreach
    31  programs on lead exposure, detection and risk reduction;
    32    [(e)]  (g) require primary health care providers to provide the parent
    33  or guardian of each child under six years of age  anticipatory  guidance
    34  on  lead poisoning prevention as part of routine care, including but not
    35  limited to contact information for the state-designated  childhood  lead
    36  poisoning primary prevention program serving their county; and
    37    [(f)](h) develop and update as necessary, in consultation with the New
    38  York state advisory council on lead poisoning prevention, a standardized
    39  lead  exposure  risk assessment questionnaire that shall be available on
    40  the department's website for primary health care  providers  to  utilize
    41  pursuant  to  subdivision two-a of section thirteen hundred seventy-c of
    42  this title.
    43    4. The commissioner  or  the  commissioner's  designee  shall  develop
    44  culturally  and linguistically appropriate information pamphlets regard-
    45  ing childhood lead poisoning, the importance  of  testing  for  elevated
    46  blood  lead levels, prevention of childhood lead poisoning, treatment of
    47  childhood lead poisoning, and tenants' and owners' rights and  responsi-
    48  bilities  under  this  title.    These  information  pamphlets  shall be
    49  distributed as follows:
    50    (a) by the owner of any affected property or such  owner's  agents  or
    51  employees  at  the time of the initiation and renewal of a rental agree-
    52  ment to the tenant;
    53    (b) by the health care provider to the parent or guardian of  a  child
    54  at  the time of a child's birth and at the time of any childhood immuni-
    55  zation or  vaccine  unless  it  is  established  that  such  information
    56  pamphlet has been provided previously to the parent or legal guardian by

        S. 6174                             9
 
     1  the  health  care  provider  within the prior twelve months. Health care
     2  providers shall also revise their patient forms to include a reminder to
     3  check the lead screening status of each child under six years of age;
     4    (c)  by  the owner or operator of any child care facility, pre-school,
     5  or kindergarten class on or before October fifteenth  of  each  calendar
     6  year, to the parent or guardian of a child enrolled in such facility;
     7    (d)  by an obstetrician or gynecologist to each patient of child-bear-
     8  ing age at the patient's first  visit  and  at  each  pregnancy  of  the
     9  patient; and
    10    (e)  by  the  provider  of  the pregnant persons, infants and children
    11  program to each person enrolled in such program and upon enrollment  and
    12  annually thereafter.
    13    5. Within three months after the close of the fiscal year, the commis-
    14  sioner shall report to the advisory council established in section thir-
    15  teen  hundred seventy-b of this title on the department's implementation
    16  of this section during  the  preceding  period.  Such  report  shall  be
    17  publicly available and shall include, at a minimum, a detailed statement
    18  of  revenue  and expenditures and statement of the department's program,
    19  supported by a statistical section with geographic indexing designed  to
    20  provide  a detailed explanation of the department's enforcement, includ-
    21  ing but not limited to the following:
    22    (a) a statistical profile of dwellings in which violations  have  been
    23  placed  pursuant to this title, indicating the ages of the dwellings and
    24  other factors relevant to the prevalence of  lead-based  paint  hazards,
    25  which  may  include  the prior lead poisoning of a person at risk in the
    26  dwelling, outstanding violations, emergency repair charges, tax  arrears
    27  and mortgage debt;
    28    (b)  the number of dwelling units inspected by the department or other
    29  state or local agency pursuant to this title, the number of  such  units
    30  where a person at risk resided, and the number of inspectors assigned to
    31  conduct such inspections;
    32    (c)  the  number of dwelling units in which the occupant complained of
    33  peeling paint or a deteriorated subsurface and the number  of  pre-nine-
    34  teen  hundred  seventy  dwelling  units  in  which the existence of such
    35  conditions were confirmed by the department  or  other  state  or  local
    36  agency;
    37    (d)  the  number  of  dwelling units where a person at risk resides in
    38  which a violation  was  placed  pursuant  to  this  title,  whether  the
    39  violation  was  placed  in response to an occupant's complaint or other-
    40  wise;
    41    (e) an evaluation of the department's capability  to  timely  inspect,
    42  serve a notice of violation, and enforce the correction of violations;
    43    (f)  an  evaluation of the department's implementation of a program of
    44  inspection pursuant to  subdivision  six  of  section  thirteen  hundred
    45  seventy-eight of this title; and
    46    (g) a tabulation of all municipalities, census tracts, or census block
    47  groups  which  have  in  any  year  more  than twenty-five children with
    48  elevated blood lead levels, including totals of the number  of  children
    49  with such elevated blood lead levels by five point increments.
    50    6.  The  commissioner  shall designate a deputy commissioner of health
    51  responsible for fulfilling the objectives of this title when such objec-
    52  tives involve the responsibilities of the department.
    53    § 5. Section 1370-b of the public health law is amended  by  adding  a
    54  new subdivision 5 to read as follows:
    55    5.  The  department  shall make recommendations to amend this title if
    56  any of the following conditions occur:

        S. 6174                            10
 
     1    (a) In fiscal year two thousand twenty-five, the rate of children  who
     2  obtain  blood  lead  testing in compliance with section thirteen hundred
     3  seventy-c of this title is less than seventy-five percent;
     4    (b) In fiscal year two thousand twenty-five, the number of children in
     5  this  state  whose blood lead level is equal to or exceeds 10 micrograms
     6  per deciliter is greater than four thousand;
     7    (c) In fiscal year two thousand twenty-six, the rate of  children  who
     8  obtain  blood  lead  testing in compliance with section thirteen hundred
     9  seventy-c of this title is less than ninety percent; or
    10    (d) In fiscal year two thousand twenty-six, the number of children  in
    11  this  state  whose blood lead level is equal to or exceeds 10 micrograms
    12  per deciliter is greater than two thousand.
    13    Such recommendations shall be submitted to the advisory council within
    14  six months after the close of the fiscal year  in  which  the  condition
    15  occurs.
    16    §  6.  Subdivision  1  of  section 1370-c of the public health law, as
    17  added by chapter 485 of the laws of 1992, is amended and four new subdi-
    18  visions 5, 6, 7 and 8 are added to read as follows:
    19    1. The department [is authorized  to]  shall  promulgate  and  enforce
    20  regulations  establishing  the means by which and the intervals at which
    21  [children and pregnant women] persons at  risk  shall  be  screened  for
    22  elevated blood lead levels and for follow up of persons at risk who have
    23  elevated  blood  lead  levels.    The  department  is also authorized to
    24  require screening for lead poisoning in other high  risk  groups.  At  a
    25  minimum,  the  department shall ensure that all children at both age one
    26  year and at age two years and pregnant persons  shall  be  screened  and
    27  that  all  children  who  are  considered at risk up to six years of age
    28  shall be screened at least once each year.
    29    5. Each health insurer or health maintenance organization shall report
    30  annually to the department its aggregate data regarding compliance  with
    31  the  screening  requirements  pursuant  to this section. Such data shall
    32  detail the number and percentage of children seen who were ages one  and
    33  two,  the  number  and  percentage who were screened at age one, and the
    34  number and percentage who were screened at age two, separately organized
    35  by zip code. This report on screening compliance shall  be  provided  to
    36  the  department  by  March first following the end of the calendar year.
    37  The comptroller shall include a review of compliance with  this  section
    38  in any audit it performs.
    39    6.  The  department shall include the screening and reporting require-
    40  ments in its contracts for services under the medicaid and child  health
    41  plus  programs  or  any  other  programs funded in whole or in part with
    42  state or local funds and providing health services to persons  at  risk,
    43  and  shall  impose compliance targets and appropriate penalties or sanc-
    44  tions in the event such targets are not achieved.
    45    7. By April fifteenth of each year the department shall report to  the
    46  health committees of the senate and assembly and make publicly available
    47  a  report  on  screening  rates  of  the preceding year pursuant to this
    48  section, including the actual number and  estimated  percentage  of  one
    49  year  old children and the actual number and estimated percentage of two
    50  year old children screened for blood lead, the actual number  and  esti-
    51  mated  percentage  of  children screened at both one year of age and two
    52  years of age, the performance of Medicaid and child health plus programs
    53  or any other programs funded in whole or in part with  state  and  local
    54  funds  and providing health services to persons at risk, and its actions
    55  to publicize and enforce the obligations on health care providers pursu-
    56  ant to this section.

        S. 6174                            11

     1    8. The department shall promulgate regulations establishing  penalties
     2  for knowing violations of subdivision two of this section.
     3    §  7. Sections 1373 and 1375 of the public health law are REPEALED and
     4  eight new sections 1370-f, 1373, 1375,  1376,  1378,  1379,  1379-a  and
     5  1379-b are added to read as follows:
     6    §  1370-f.  Response  to  a  child with elevated blood lead levels and
     7  conditions conducive to lead poisoning.  1. For each person at risk  who
     8  has a confirmed elevated blood lead level, primary health care providers
     9  shall  provide  or  make reasonable efforts to ensure the provision of a
    10  complete diagnostic evaluation; medical  treatment,  if  necessary;  and
    11  referral to the appropriate local or state health unit for environmental
    12  management. A complete diagnostic evaluation shall include at a minimum:
    13  a detailed lead exposure assessment, a nutritional assessment, including
    14  iron status, and, as appropriate, development screening.
    15    2.  The  commissioner or the commissioner's designated representative,
    16  as the appropriate local or state health unit for environmental  manage-
    17  ment,  shall conduct an environmental assessment, which shall include an
    18  emergency inspection in accordance with  subdivision  three  of  section
    19  thirteen hundred seventy-eight of this title, to determine the source of
    20  exposure to lead for any person at risk referred pursuant to subdivision
    21  one of this section.
    22    3.  For  each person at risk who is referred for environmental manage-
    23  ment pursuant to this section, whenever the commissioner or such commis-
    24  sioner's designated representative determines that a condition conducive
    25  to lead poisoning exists in a dwelling, a written notice and demand  for
    26  discontinuance  shall  be  issued  in  accordance  with section thirteen
    27  hundred seventy-nine of this title. The commissioner or the  commission-
    28  er's  designated representative shall also immediately notify the appro-
    29  priate public welfare department of the issuance of such written  notice
    30  and demand.
    31    4.    Whenever  the commissioner or such commissioner's representative
    32  shall designate an area of high risk, other than a census tract or block
    33  group so designated pursuant to section thirteen  hundred  seventy-a  of
    34  this  title  they may give written notice and demand, served as provided
    35  in section thirteen hundred seventy-nine of this title for  the  discon-
    36  tinuance  of a paint condition conducive to lead poisoning in any desig-
    37  nated dwelling in such area within a specified period of time.
    38    5. Whenever the commissioner or such commissioner's designated  repre-
    39  sentative has issued a written notice and demand for a discontinuance of
    40  a  condition  conducive to lead poisoning, prior to clearing such condi-
    41  tion as meeting the requirements of this title, the commissioner or such
    42  commissioner's designated  representative  shall  complete  a  clearance
    43  examination  to confirm the safety of the location. Such clearance exam-
    44  inations shall include a visual assessment, dust sampling, submission of
    45  samples for analysis for lead, interpretation of sampling  results,  and
    46  preparation  of  a  report. Clearance examinations shall be performed in
    47  accordance with federal guidelines  in  24  C.F.R.  section  35.1340  or
    48  successor regulation.
    49    § 1373. Safe work practices for activities disturbing lead-based paint
    50  or  paint of unknown lead content in affected properties with persons at
    51  risk.   1. All work performed by an  owner  or  the  owner's  agents  or
    52  contractors,  in  affected  property  occupied by a person or persons at
    53  risk, that disturbs lead-based  paint  or  paint  of  undetermined  lead
    54  content  shall  be  performed  in  accordance with safe work regulations
    55  promulgated by the commissioner. Such  regulations  shall  provide  for,
    56  among other things:

        S. 6174                            12
 
     1    (a) notice to tenants;
     2    (b)  training  requirements,  which  shall  require  that such work be
     3  performed by persons who have, at a minimum,  successfully  completed  a
     4  course  on lead-safe work practices given by or on behalf of the depart-
     5  ment, or the division of housing and community renewal,  by  the  United
     6  States  environmental protection agency or an entity authorized by it to
     7  give such course, or by the United  States  department  of  housing  and
     8  urban development or an entity authorized by it to give such course;
     9    (c) precautions to prevent entry into the work area by occupants until
    10  clean-up is completed and for temporary relocation provided by the owner
    11  for  the occupants of a dwelling or dwelling unit to appropriate housing
    12  when work cannot be performed safely;
    13    (d) precautions to prevent the dispersion  of  lead  dust  and  debris
    14  during the work;
    15    (e) prohibited practices of lead paint removal, including dry scraping
    16  and  sanding,  use of power tools without proper environmental controls,
    17  and the use of toxic substances;
    18    (f) proper daily and final clean-up requirements;
    19    (g) dust wipe clearance testing;
    20    (h) pre-notification of local municipal code enforcement  agencies  or
    21  health departments, where appropriate; and
    22    (i)  exceptions  for  small jobs that involve disturbing less than two
    23  square feet of lead-based paint or paint of undetermined lead content or
    24  less than ten percent of the total surface area of peeling  paint  on  a
    25  type  of  component  with  a small surface area, such as a windowsill or
    26  door frame.
    27    2. A tenant shall allow access to an affected property, at  reasonable
    28  times, to the owner to perform any work required under this title.
    29    3.  If a tenant must vacate an affected property for a period of twen-
    30  ty-four hours or more in order to allow an owner to  perform  work  that
    31  will  disturb the paint on interior surfaces, the owner shall pay to the
    32  tenant in advance the reasonable relocation  expenses  that  the  tenant
    33  incurs directly related to the required relocation.
    34    4.  The  deputy  commissioner  or  the deputy commissioner's designee,
    35  within one hundred twenty days following  the  effective  date  of  this
    36  section,  shall establish guidelines and a trainer's manual for a "lead-
    37  safe housing awareness seminar" with a total class time of  three  hours
    38  or  less.  Such guidelines and materials shall be made available so that
    39  such courses may be offered by professional associations  and  community
    40  organizations  with a training capacity, existing accredited educational
    41  institutions, and for-profit educational providers.  All  such  offering
    42  proposals  shall  be reviewed and approved, based on seminar content and
    43  qualifications of instructors, by the deputy commissioner of housing and
    44  community renewal or the deputy commissioner's designee.
    45    § 1375. Accreditation of inspectors and contractors  performing  work.
    46  1.    No  person  shall act as a contractor or supervisor to perform the
    47  work necessary for lead-based paint hazard abatement as defined in  this
    48  title unless that person is accredited pursuant to one of the following:
    49    (a)  Regulations  that  may be adopted by the commissioner pursuant to
    50  this section governing the accreditation of  individuals  to  engage  in
    51  lead-based paint activities sufficient to satisfy the requirements of 40
    52  C.F.R. 745.325 or successor regulation;
    53    (b) Certification by the United States environmental protection agency
    54  to  engage  in lead-based paint activities pursuant to 40 C.F.R. 745.226
    55  or successor regulation; or

        S. 6174                            13
 
     1    (c) Certification by a state  or  tribal  program  authorized  by  the
     2  United  States  environmental  protection  agency to certify individuals
     3  engaged in lead-based paint activities pursuant to 40 C.F.R. 745.325  or
     4  successor regulation.
     5    The  commissioner  shall,  by  regulation,  create  exceptions  to the
     6  accreditation requirement for instances where the disturbance  of  lead-
     7  based paint is small and incidental, such as work that disturbs surfaces
     8  of less than either two square feet of peeling lead-based paint per room
     9  or  ten  percent of the total surface area of peeling paint on a type of
    10  component with a small surface area, such as a windowsill or door frame.
    11    2. No person shall conduct an inspection required by sections thirteen
    12  hundred seventy-six and thirteen hundred seventy-eight  of  this  title,
    13  unless that person is accredited pursuant to one of the following:
    14    (a)  regulations  that  may be adopted by the commissioner pursuant to
    15  this section governing the  accreditation  of  individuals  eligible  to
    16  conduct the inspections required by this title sufficient to satisfy the
    17  requirements of 40 C.F.R. 745.325 or successor regulation; or
    18    (b) certification to conduct inspections by the United States environ-
    19  mental  protection  agency pursuant to 40 C.F.R. 745.226(b) or successor
    20  regulation; or
    21    (c) certification by a state  or  tribal  program  authorized  by  the
    22  United  States  environmental  protection  agency to certify individuals
    23  engaged in lead-based paint activities pursuant to 40 C.F.R. 745.325  or
    24  successor regulation.
    25    3.   The commissioner may adopt regulations, sufficient to satisfy the
    26  requirements of 40 C.F.R. 745.325 or successor regulation, governing the
    27  accreditation of individuals engaging  in  lead-based  paint  activities
    28  under this title or eligible to conduct the inspections required by this
    29  title.    The accreditation of such persons pursuant to such regulations
    30  shall extend for a period of three years unless the deputy  commissioner
    31  has probable cause to believe a person accredited under this section has
    32  violated  the terms of the accreditation or engaged in illegal or uneth-
    33  ical conduct related to inspections required by this title in which case
    34  the accreditation to perform inspections shall be  suspended  pending  a
    35  hearing  in  accordance  with the provisions of the state administrative
    36  procedure act. The commissioner shall establish by regulation a schedule
    37  of fees for the accreditation and registration  of  such  persons.  Such
    38  fees  shall  be  required to be paid at the time of initial registration
    39  and at the time of subsequent renewal  of  registration,  and  shall  be
    40  sufficient  to  cover all costs, including the costs of state personnel,
    41  attributable to accreditation activities conducted under this section.
    42    (a) Fees collected pursuant to this subdivision  will  be  held  in  a
    43  continuing,  non-lapsing  special  fund  to  be  used  for accreditation
    44  purposes under this section.
    45    (b) The fund established under this subdivision shall be invested  and
    46  reinvested and any investment earnings shall be paid into the fund.
    47    4.  Any  violation of the provisions of this section shall be a misde-
    48  meanor.
    49    § 1376.  Requirements for affected properties occupied by  persons  at
    50  risk.  1.  All  affected properties occupied by persons at risk shall be
    51  maintained free of conditions conducive to lead paint poisoning.
    52    2. Within two years following the effective date of this  section  the
    53  owner of any affected property that is occupied by a person at risk must
    54  certify,  through  a sworn statement in a form prescribed by the commis-
    55  sioner, that the property meets "lead-stabilized" status as  defined  by
    56  subdivision three of this section and the owner is complying with subdi-

        S. 6174                            14
 
     1  vision  two  of  section  thirteen  hundred seventy-eight of this title,
     2  unless a report has been submitted by a certified inspector stating that
     3  the property is either "lead-free" or is  "lead-contained"  as  provided
     4  for in subdivision five or six of this section.
     5    3.  An  affected  property  will be considered to be "lead-stabilized"
     6  when:
     7    (a) All exterior and interior  painted  surfaces  have  been  visually
     8  reviewed;  and  all  chipping,  peeling,  or flaking lead-based paint or
     9  paint of unknown lead content on exterior and interior painted  surfaces
    10  has  been  removed  and  repainted, or stabilized and repainted, and any
    11  structural defect that is causing or likely to cause lead-based paint or
    12  paint of unknown lead content to chip, peel, or flake that the owner  of
    13  the  affected property has knowledge of, or with the exercise of reason-
    14  able care should have knowledge of, has been repaired; and
    15    (b) All window friction surfaces with lead-based  paint  or  paint  of
    16  unknown lead content have had such paint removed or permanently covered,
    17  such  as  via the installation of replacement window channels or slides,
    18  and interior window troughs and windowsills have  been  either  stripped
    19  and repainted, replaced, or encapsulated with vinyl, metal, or any other
    20  durable materials which render the surface smooth and cleanable; and
    21    (c)  All doors and doorways have been adjusted or re-hung as necessary
    22  to prevent the rubbing together of any surface with lead-based paint  or
    23  paint of unknown lead content with another surface; and
    24    (d) All bare floors have been made smooth and cleanable; and
    25    (e) All work has been completed in compliance with the safe work prac-
    26  tice regulations promulgated pursuant to section thirteen hundred seven-
    27  ty-three of this title; and
    28    (f)  At the completion of any activities described in this subdivision
    29  that disturb lead-based paint or paint of unknown lead content:
    30    (i) the interior of the affected property has been HEPA  vacuumed  and
    31  washed with high phosphate detergent or its equivalent; and
    32    (ii)  clearance  for lead dust hazards has been achieved as determined
    33  by wipe samples in all areas accessible to persons  at  risk,  taken  by
    34  properly accredited independent personnel after completion of all activ-
    35  ities undertaken pursuant to subdivision two of this section.
    36    4.  An  owner  certifying that an affected property meets "lead-stabi-
    37  lized" status under subdivision two of this  section  shall  retain  the
    38  sworn  certification, which shall be  valid for three years, and make it
    39  available for inspection by department or local officials, including the
    40  results of wipe tests when conducted, and shall provide a  copy  of  the
    41  certification and wipe test results to the tenant.
    42    5.  An  affected property will be considered to be "lead-free" for the
    43  purposes of this section if the owner of the affected  property  submits
    44  to the deputy commissioner's designee for the jurisdiction in which such
    45  property  is  located  an  inspection  report  which  indicates that the
    46  affected property has been tested by an inspector,  accredited  pursuant
    47  to  the  provisions  of  section  thirteen  hundred seventy-five of this
    48  title, for the presence of lead in accordance with standards and  proce-
    49  dures established by the regulations promulgated by the commissioner and
    50  states  under  penalties of perjury that there is no lead-based paint or
    51  lead-contaminated dust present on the interior surfaces of the  dwelling
    52  unit,  no  lead-based paint on the interior surfaces of the common areas
    53  of the property, and no lead-based paint present on any of the  exterior
    54  surfaces  of  the  property. A copy of the most recent inspection report
    55  shall be provided to the tenant.

        S. 6174                            15

     1    6. An affected property will be considered to be "lead-contained"  for
     2  the  purposes  of  this  section  if  the owner of the affected property
     3  submits a report by a certified inspector, accredited  pursuant  to  the
     4  provisions of section thirteen hundred seventy-five of this title, which
     5  indicates that the affected property has been tested for the presence of
     6  lead-based paint and lead-contaminated dust in accordance with the stan-
     7  dards  and  procedures  established  by  regulations  promulgated by the
     8  commissioner and states under penalties of perjury that:
     9    (a) All interior surfaces in  the  affected  property  either  do  not
    10  contain lead-based paint or have been permanently abated; and
    11    (b)(i)  All  exterior  painted  surfaces of the affected property that
    12  were chipping, peeling, or flaking  have  been  restored  with  non-lead
    13  based  paint  and  no exterior painted surfaces of the affected property
    14  are chipping, peeling, or flaking; or
    15    (ii) All exterior painted surfaces of the affected property have  been
    16  covered  with vinyl siding or similar siding and sealed in a manner that
    17  prevents exposure to chipping, peeling, or flaking paint; and
    18    (c) Clearance for lead dust hazards has been achieved as determined by
    19  wipe samples in all areas accessible to persons at risk, taken by  prop-
    20  erly  accredited  independent personnel. A copy of the inspection report
    21  shall be provided to the tenant.
    22    7. In order to  maintain  "lead-contained"  status  the  owner  of  an
    23  affected  property  with  lead-based paint on any exterior surface which
    24  has been certified as "lead-contained" pursuant to  subdivision  six  of
    25  this  section shall submit to the deputy commissioner's designee for the
    26  jurisdiction in which such property  is  located  every  three  years  a
    27  certification  by  an inspector, stating under penalties of perjury that
    28  no exterior painted surface of the affected property is chipping,  peel-
    29  ing,  or  flaking, and that there has been no compromise of any interior
    30  abatement system that relies upon the  enclosure  or  encapsulation  for
    31  lead-based  paint. A copy of such certification shall be retained by the
    32  owner and made available for inspection by department or local officials
    33  and shall be provided to the tenant.
    34    § 1378. Due  diligence  inquiries;  investigation  and  inspection  of
    35  affected properties. 1.  Beginning two years after the effective date of
    36  this  section,  unless  the owner of an affected property has previously
    37  documented in the manner required by  the  deputy  commissioner  that  a
    38  property  has  been  determined  to  have  achieved "lead-free" property
    39  status or "lead-contained" property status, the  owner  of  an  affected
    40  property  shall  make  a  due  diligence  inquiry to ascertain whether a
    41  person at risk resides in an affected property.
    42    (a) No occupant in a dwelling unit in  such  affected  property  shall
    43  refuse or unreasonably fail to provide accurate and truthful information
    44  regarding the residency of a person at risk.
    45    (b)  All  leases offered to tenants or prospective tenants in affected
    46  properties must contain a notice, conspicuously set forth therein, which
    47  advises tenants of the obligations of the owner and tenant as set  forth
    48  in  this section. Such notice must be in a manner approved by the deputy
    49  commissioner, the content of which shall, at a minimum,  be  in  English
    50  and  Spanish.  The owner of an affected property shall provide the occu-
    51  pant of such dwelling unit with a pamphlet developed pursuant to  subdi-
    52  vision four of section thirteen hundred seventy-a of this title.
    53    (c)(i)  The  owner of such affected property shall provide to an occu-
    54  pant of a dwelling unit at the signing of a lease, including  a  renewal
    55  lease, if any, or upon any agreement to lease, or at the commencement of
    56  occupancy  if  there  is  no lease, a notice in English and Spanish, the

        S. 6174                            16
 
     1  form and content of which shall be approved by the department, inquiring
     2  whether a person at risk resides or will reside therein. If there  is  a
     3  lease,  such  notice shall be included in such lease or be attached as a
     4  rider  to  such lease. Such notice shall be completed by the occupant at
     5  the time of such signing of a lease, including a renewal lease, if  any,
     6  or such agreement to lease, or at such commencement of occupancy.
     7    (ii)  Where  an  occupant  has responded to the notice provided by the
     8  owner pursuant to subparagraph (i) of this paragraph by indicating  that
     9  no person at risk resides therein, during the period between the date of
    10  such  response  and  the  delivery  of  the notice provided by the owner
    11  pursuant to paragraph (d) of this  subdivision  during  the  immediately
    12  following  year the occupant shall have the responsibility to inform the
    13  owner of any person at risk that comes to  reside  therein  during  such
    14  period.
    15    (d)(i)  Each  year, an owner of an affected property shall, no earlier
    16  than January first and  no  later  than  January  sixteenth,  except  as
    17  provided  for in subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (c) of this subdivision,
    18  present to the occupant of each dwelling unit in such affected  property
    19  a  notice inquiring as to whether a person at risk resides therein. Such
    20  notice, the form and content of which shall be approved  by  the  deputy
    21  commissioner, shall be presented as provided for in subparagraph (ii) of
    22  paragraph (c) of this subdivision, and shall be in English and Spanish.
    23    (ii)  The owner may present the notice required by subparagraph (i) of
    24  this paragraph by delivering said notice by any  one  of  the  following
    25  methods:
    26    (1)  by  first  class  mail, addressed to the occupant of the dwelling
    27  unit;
    28    (2) by hand delivery to the occupant of the dwelling unit; or
    29    (3) by enclosure with the January rent bill,  if  such  rent  bill  is
    30  delivered after December fifteenth but no later than January sixteenth.
    31    (iii)  (1)  Upon  receipt  of  such notice the occupant shall have the
    32  responsibility to deliver by February fifteenth of that year, a  written
    33  response to the owner indicating whether or not a person at risk resides
    34  therein.  If,  subsequent to delivery of such notice, the owner does not
    35  receive such written response by February fifteenth, and does not other-
    36  wise have actual knowledge as to whether a person at risk resides there-
    37  in, then the owner shall at reasonable times and upon reasonable  notice
    38  inspect  that  occupant's  dwelling unit to ascertain the residency of a
    39  person at risk and, when necessary, conduct an investigation in order to
    40  make that determination. Where, between  February  sixteenth  and  March
    41  first  of  that  year,  the  owner  has made reasonable attempts to gain
    42  access to a dwelling unit to determine if a person at  risk  resides  in
    43  that dwelling unit and was unable to gain access, the owner shall notify
    44  the  deputy  commissioner or the deputy commissioner's local designee of
    45  that circumstance.
    46    (2) Where an occupant has responded to  the  notice  provided  by  the
    47  owner  pursuant to subparagraph (i) of this paragraph by indicating that
    48  no person at risk resides therein, during the period between the date of
    49  such response and the delivery of  the  notice  provided  by  the  owner
    50  pursuant  to  this subdivision during the immediately following year the
    51  occupant shall have the responsibility to inform the owner of any person
    52  at risk that comes to reside therein during such period.
    53    (e) The owner shall make and maintain a record of  all  due  diligence
    54  inquiries, in electronic or hard-copy format, for a period of six years.
    55  Copies of such records shall be made available upon request to the depu-
    56  ty commissioner or such commissioner's local designee.

        S. 6174                            17
 
     1    2.  Beginning two years after the effective date of this section, when
     2  the owner determines that a person at risk resides at an affected  prop-
     3  erty as provided in subdivision one of this section, and the owner of an
     4  affected  property  has not previously documented in the manner required
     5  by  the  deputy commissioner that a property has been determined to have
     6  achieved either "lead-free" property status or "lead-contained" property
     7  status, notwithstanding any certification completed pursuant to subdivi-
     8  sion two of section thirteen hundred  seventy-six  of  this  title,  the
     9  owner  shall  then cause an investigation to be made, either directly by
    10  the owner, the owner's agent or employee, or by any other person author-
    11  ized by the deputy commissioner,  to  determine  whether  such  property
    12  complies, at a minimum, with "lead-stabilized" property status. Alterna-
    13  tively, the owner may cause an inspection to be made by a person trained
    14  and  accredited  for  such  inspections as described in section thirteen
    15  hundred seventy-five of this title for the purpose of determining wheth-
    16  er the affected  property  complies  with  either  "lead-free"  property
    17  status or "lead-contained" property status.
    18    (a)  The  investigation  to ascertain whether a property complies with
    19  "lead-stabilized" property status shall occur at least once a  year  and
    20  more  often if necessary, such as when the owner knows or should reason-
    21  ably be aware that a person at  risk  has  become  an  occupant  of  the
    22  affected property.
    23    (b)  An  inspection  or investigation shall, in addition, be conducted
    24  when, in the exercise of reasonable care, an owner knows or should  know
    25  of  a  condition  that is reasonably foreseeable to be conducive to lead
    26  poisoning, or when an occupant specifically requests that an  inspection
    27  or  investigation  be  made based upon the reasonable belief that such a
    28  condition exists, or when an occupant makes a  complaint  to  the  owner
    29  concerning a condition that the owner knows or should know is reasonably
    30  foreseeable to be conducive to lead poisoning.
    31    (c)  In  addition  to any investigations or inspections required under
    32  paragraphs (a) or (b) of this subdivision, the owner shall cause such an
    33  investigation or inspection to be made within the thirty days  prior  to
    34  the  leasing,  rental,  or  other  turnover of an affected property, and
    35  shall report  the  findings  of  that  investigation  or  inspection  to
    36  prospective  tenants  in accordance with Title X of the federal residen-
    37  tial lead poisoning prevention act and this title.
    38    (d) The owner shall make and maintain a record of  all  investigations
    39  or  inspections conducted under this subdivision in a form prescribed by
    40  the deputy commissioner. The owner shall maintain such record, in  elec-
    41  tronic  or  hard-copy  format, for a period of six years. Copies of such
    42  records shall be made available upon request to the deputy commissioner,
    43  such deputy commissioner's local designee, tenants and occupants of  the
    44  affected  property,  and  any  prospective  tenants  or occupants of the
    45  affected property.
    46    (e)  The  owner  shall  cause  a  summary  of  such  investigation  or
    47  inspection  report,  in a form prescribed by the deputy commissioner, to
    48  be conspicuously posted in a common area of the dwelling in or  adjacent
    49  to main entrances. Where there is more than one affected property in the
    50  dwelling,  the  summary shall be posted in a common area of the dwelling
    51  in, or adjacent to, the main entrance or entrances. In cases where it is
    52  not feasible to post such reports in a common area, the owner  or  agent
    53  shall  deliver  individual copies of such summary to each affected unit.
    54  Said summary shall indicate that the full report of  such  investigation
    55  or inspection is available to tenants upon request.

        S. 6174                            18
 
     1    3.  Beginning  two years after the effective date of this section, the
     2  deputy commissioner's designee for the jurisdiction in which such  prop-
     3  erty  is located shall order an inspection of an affected property by an
     4  inspector accredited pursuant to  the  provisions  of  section  thirteen
     5  hundred  seventy-five  of this title, at the expense of the owner of the
     6  affected property, whenever the deputy commissioner's designee  for  the
     7  jurisdiction  in  which  such property is located, receives notification
     8  that the affected property does not reasonably  appear  to  comply  with
     9  either the lead-free, lead-contained, or lead-stabilized property status
    10  and that a person at risk resides in the affected property. Any state or
    11  local  agency  employees who have occasion to observe deteriorated paint
    12  or any other condition believed to be conducive to lead poisoning at  an
    13  affected  property  are  authorized  to  report,  and shall report, such
    14  conditions to the deputy commissioner's designee, and in such  instance,
    15  the  deputy  commissioner's  designee  shall require an inspection to be
    16  made of the affected property. An inspection required under this  subdi-
    17  vision  shall  be completed within ninety days after notification of the
    18  deputy commissioner's designee for the jurisdiction in which such  prop-
    19  erty  is  located.  In the event such inspection results in a finding of
    20  lead hazards, a report of such findings shall be immediately transmitted
    21  by the deputy commissioner or the deputy commissioner's designee for the
    22  jurisdiction in which such property is located to the appropriate  local
    23  social services department pursuant to section one hundred forty-three-b
    24  of the social services law.
    25    4.  The deputy commissioner, or the deputy commissioner's designee for
    26  the jurisdiction in which such  property  is  located,  shall  order  an
    27  inspection  of  an  affected  property  for conditions conducive to lead
    28  poisoning, by an inspector accredited  pursuant  to  the  provisions  of
    29  section  thirteen  hundred seventy-five of this title, at the expense of
    30  the owner of the affected property, whenever the deputy commissioner  or
    31  the  deputy  commissioner's  designee for the jurisdiction in which such
    32  property is located is notified that a person at risk who resides in the
    33  affected property or spends more than fifteen  hours  per  week  in  the
    34  affected  property has an elevated blood lead level. An inspection under
    35  this subdivision shall be completed within fifteen days after  notifica-
    36  tion  of  the  deputy commissioner or the deputy commissioner's designee
    37  for the jurisdiction in which such property is  located.  In  the  event
    38  such  inspection  results  in  a finding of conditions conducive to lead
    39  poisoning, a report of such finding shall be promptly transmitted by the
    40  deputy commissioner, or  the  deputy  commissioner's  designee  for  the
    41  jurisdiction  in which the subject property is located, to the appropri-
    42  ate local social services department pursuant  to  section  one  hundred
    43  forty-three-b of the social services law.
    44    5.  An  owner  of an affected property at any time after the effective
    45  date of this section, may request voluntarily that  the  deputy  commis-
    46  sioner,  or  the  deputy commissioner's designee for the jurisdiction in
    47  which such property is located, conduct an inspection  by  an  inspector
    48  accredited pursuant to the provisions of section thirteen hundred seven-
    49  ty-five  of  this  title, of an affected property, at the expense of the
    50  owner, to determine whether it complies with the requirements for  lead-
    51  free property status, lead-contained property status, or lead-stabilized
    52  property  status.  Such inspection shall be completed within thirty days
    53  after the owner's request.
    54    6. The  deputy  commissioner  shall  establish  a  primary  prevention
    55  inspection program in areas of high risk to identify and target affected
    56  properties  where  there  are  persons  who may be exposed to lead-based

        S. 6174                            19
 
     1  paint hazards in order that inspections may  be  conducted  without  the
     2  receipt of a complaint or other such event triggering an inspection, and
     3  require  for each such area of high risk that the county commissioner of
     4  health  or  such commissioner of health's other local designee, and such
     5  local municipal building or property maintenance code enforcement  offi-
     6  cials  having  jurisdiction  over  such  area as the deputy commissioner
     7  shall designate, prepare and implement a strategy to:
     8    (a) assure that a sufficient number of qualified inspection  personnel
     9  are available;
    10    (b)  identify  the  affected  properties  with persons at risk in that
    11  municipality, census tract or census block group that are most likely to
    12  contain conditions conducive to lead poisoning;
    13    (c) require, at the owner's expense, the inspection of affected  prop-
    14  erties for conditions conducive to lead poisoning; and
    15    (d) require that such inspected properties attain lead-free, lead-con-
    16  tained,  or  lead-stabilized  status,  and elimination of all conditions
    17  conducive to lead poisoning in such properties,  using  lead  safe  work
    18  practices in accordance with the provisions of this title.
    19  In  preparing this primary prevention inspection strategy, the responsi-
    20  ble officials shall, among other factors, consider reports of persons at
    21  risk with elevated blood lead levels in other units in a  building;  the
    22  age and maintenance history of a building; and any available data on the
    23  presence of young children from birth certificates issued by the depart-
    24  ment.
    25    7.  An  inspector  shall submit a verified report of the result of the
    26  inspection conducted pursuant to subdivision two, three, four,  five  or
    27  six of this section to the deputy commissioner or the deputy commission-
    28  er's  designee  for  the jurisdiction in which such property is located,
    29  the owner, and the tenant, if any, of the affected property. Such report
    30  shall be completed subject to penalties  for  perjury  and  include  the
    31  inspector's  state  registration  number  and  date  of certification to
    32  perform such inspections. In the event  such  inspection  results  in  a
    33  finding  of  lead-based  paint  hazards  or conditions conducive to lead
    34  poisoning, a report of such findings shall be  promptly  transmitted  by
    35  the  deputy  commissioner  or the deputy commissioner's designee for the
    36  jurisdiction in which such property is located and  to  the  appropriate
    37  local  social services department pursuant to section one hundred forty-
    38  three-b of the social services law.
    39    8. Unless an affected property has been certified as "lead-free  prop-
    40  erty  status" as provided in subdivision two of section thirteen hundred
    41  seventy of this title, any written or printed lease  for  the  lease  or
    42  renting of an affected property for a term beginning at a date more than
    43  one  year  following  the effective date of this title shall include the
    44  following provisions,  in  both  English  and  Spanish,  in  prominently
    45  displayed and easily readable type or printing:
    46    "This  property, constructed before January 1, 1970, may contain lead-
    47  based paint. Lead-based paint, if it is not properly  removed  or  main-
    48  tained,  may cause brain damage or other serious health impacts in chil-
    49  dren less than seven years of age and fetal injury in pregnant  persons.
    50  New  York  state  law  requires  the landlord to comply with maintenance
    51  standards to avoid lead-based paint hazards.  This  property  (owner  or
    52  agent to check appropriate box):
    53         has  been  inspected  by an independent inspector certified under
    54  New York state law within the past sixty days and found not  to  contain
    55  lead-based paint hazards.

        S. 6174                            20
 
     1         has been investigated by the owner, manager, or their agent with-
     2  in  the  past  thirty  days and observable lead-based paint hazards have
     3  been stabilized.
     4         has  not been inspected for lead-based paint hazards.  This prop-
     5  erty may contain lead-based paint hazards dangerous to a child less than
     6  seven years of age."
     7    9. At the time of the lease or renting of an affected property without
     8  a written or printed lease at a date more than one  year  following  the
     9  effective  date  of  this  section, the front entranceway or door of the
    10  affected property shall be posted with a sign  containing  the  language
    11  quoted  in  subdivision eight of this section, in both English and Span-
    12  ish, and in prominently displayed and easily readable type or printing.
    13    § 1379. Enforcement.  1. Whenever the deputy  commissioner  or  deputy
    14  commissioner's  designee finds an affected property to not be in compli-
    15  ance with the applicable requirements for either lead-free, or lead-con-
    16  tained, or lead-stabilized property status, the deputy  commissioner  or
    17  deputy  commissioner's  designee  shall  give written notice and demand,
    18  served as provided herein, for the discontinuance of any condition fail-
    19  ing to comply with either the lead-free, lead-contained, or  lead-stabi-
    20  lized  standards  in  an  affected property within a specified period of
    21  time not to exceed  thirty  days.  The  deputy  commissioner  or  deputy
    22  commissioner's  designee  shall  also immediately notify the appropriate
    23  local social services department of the issuance of such written  notice
    24  and demand.
    25    2.  In  the  event  of failure to comply with a notice and demand, the
    26  deputy commissioner or the deputy commissioner's designee shall  conduct
    27  a  formal  hearing  upon due notice in accordance with the provisions of
    28  this section and on proof of violation of such notice and  demand  shall
    29  order  the  owner  of  an affected property to take specified corrective
    30  actions to have the affected property satisfy  the  requirements,  at  a
    31  minimum,  of lead-contained or lead-stabilized property and may assess a
    32  penalty not to  exceed  two  thousand  five  hundred  dollars  for  each
    33  affected  property.  In the event that such failure to comply concerns a
    34  notice and demand issued in  response  to  an  environmental  assessment
    35  undertaken  pursuant  to  subdivision  two  of  section thirteen hundred
    36  seventy-f of this title, the deputy commissioner or the  deputy  commis-
    37  sioner's designee, shall cause the condition to be remediated within the
    38  next  thirty  days,  and  may place a lien on such property and commence
    39  such legal actions as are necessary to recover from the  owner  of  such
    40  property the deputy commissioner's expenditures in connection therewith,
    41  including legal fees.
    42    3.  A  notice  required by this section may be served upon an owner or
    43  occupant of the dwelling or agent of the owner in the same manner  as  a
    44  summons  in  a  civil action or by registered or certified mail to their
    45  last known address or place of residence.
    46    4. The deputy commissioner's designee having jurisdiction, county  and
    47  city  commissioners  of health, and local housing code enforcement agen-
    48  cies designated by the deputy commissioner's designee  having  jurisdic-
    49  tion  or  county  or  city  commissioner  of  health shall have the same
    50  authority, powers and duties within their  respective  jurisdictions  as
    51  has the deputy commissioner under the provisions of this title.
    52    5. The deputy commissioner or deputy commissioner's representative and
    53  an  official  or agency specified in subdivision one of this section may
    54  request and shall receive from  all  public  officers,  departments  and
    55  agencies  of  the  state and its political subdivisions such cooperation

        S. 6174                            21
 
     1  and assistance as may be necessary or proper in the enforcement  of  the
     2  provisions of this title.
     3    6.  Any  violation  of  the  requirements  of section thirteen hundred
     4  seventy-six of this title shall  also  constitute  a  violation  of  any
     5  municipal  or other local housing code and shall subject the owner of an
     6  affected property to all orders, criminal  penalties,  and  other  civil
     7  forfeitures or penalties that are possible under such municipal or local
     8  housing code, and shall also constitute a rent impairing violation with-
     9  in  the  meaning of section three hundred two-a of the multiple dwelling
    10  law and section three hundred five-a of the multiple residence law.
    11    7. Nothing contained in this title shall  be  construed  to  alter  or
    12  abridge  any  duties  and powers now or hereafter existing in the deputy
    13  commissioner, county boards of health, city and county commissioners  of
    14  health,  the New York city department of housing preservation and devel-
    15  opment and the department of health, local boards  of  health  or  other
    16  public agencies or public officials, or any private party, including the
    17  power to impose more stringent measures to protect public health.
    18    8.  The  office  of  the  attorney  general  and all local authorities
    19  responsible for the enforcement of state,  municipal,  and  other  local
    20  housing codes are hereby empowered to and shall vigorously enforce civil
    21  remedies  and/or  criminal  penalties provided for by law arising out of
    22  the failure to comply with the requirements of  this  section,  sections
    23  thirteen  hundred  seventy-five  or thirteen hundred seventy-six of this
    24  title and may seek injunctive relief where appropriate.
    25    9. (a) Any administrative proceeding or civil or  criminal  action  by
    26  state or local officials to enforce the provisions of this section shall
    27  be reported to the deputy commissioner.
    28    (b)  The  deputy  commissioner  shall issue an annual report outlining
    29  specifically the enforcement actions brought pursuant to  this  section,
    30  the  identity  of  the  owners of the affected properties, the authority
    31  bringing the enforcement action, the nature of the action, and  describ-
    32  ing the criminal penalties and/or civil relief.
    33    10.  The  removal of a tenant from or the surrender by the tenant of a
    34  dwelling with respect to which the deputy commissioner  or  such  deputy
    35  commissioner's  representative,  pursuant  to  subdivision  one  of this
    36  section, has given written notice and demand for the discontinuance of a
    37  condition conducive to lead poisoning  shall  not  absolve,  relieve  or
    38  discharge  any  persons  chargeable  therewith  from  the obligation and
    39  responsibility to discontinue such condition conducive to lead poisoning
    40  in accordance with the method of discontinuance prescribed  therefor  in
    41  such notice and demand.
    42    §  1379-a.  Injunctive relief.  1. If an owner of an affected property
    43  fails to comply with the requirements of section thirteen hundred seven-
    44  ty-six of this title, a person at risk or the parent or  legal  guardian
    45  of  a  person  at  risk  or other interested persons may seek injunctive
    46  relief from a court of competent jurisdiction against the owner  of  the
    47  affected property in the form of a court order to compel compliance.
    48    2. A court shall not grant the injunctive relief requested pursuant to
    49  subdivision  one  of this section, unless, at least thirty days prior to
    50  the filing requesting the injunction, the owner of the affected property
    51  has received written notice of the violation of standards  contained  in
    52  section  thirteen  hundred  seventy-six  of this title and has failed to
    53  bring the affected property into compliance with the  applicable  stand-
    54  ards.  This  notice  to  the owner of the affected property is satisfied
    55  when any of the following has occurred:

        S. 6174                            22
 
     1    (a) A person at risk, such  person's  parent  or  legal  guardian,  or
     2  attorney,  has notified the owner of an affected property that the prop-
     3  erty fails to meet the requirements for either  lead-contained  property
     4  status or lead-stabilized property status;
     5    (b) The deputy commissioner, the commissioner of housing and community
     6  renewal,  or the designee of either of these such officials, a municipal
     7  or other local authority with responsibility  for  enforcing  any  local
     8  housing  code or codes, or a local or municipal department of health has
     9  notified the owner  of  the  affected  property  of  violations  of  the
    10  provisions of this title occurring within an affected property or of the
    11  failure to register and file reports as required by this title; or
    12    (c) A criminal or civil action pursuant to this title has been brought
    13  by either state or local enforcement officials to enforce this title.
    14    3. The notice requirement of subdivision two of this section shall not
    15  apply with respect to applications for preliminary injunctive relief.
    16    4.  A  person  who  prevails in an action to enforce the provisions of
    17  this title is entitled to an award of the costs of the litigation and to
    18  an award of reasonable attorneys' fees in an amount to be fixed  by  the
    19  court.
    20    5.  Cases brought before the court under this section shall be granted
    21  an accelerated hearing.
    22    6. The legal remedies created under this section shall be in  addition
    23  to  any  other common law or statutory remedies, which may be pursued in
    24  the same or separate action or proceeding.
    25    § 1379-b. Retaliatory  evictions  prohibited.    1.  An  owner  of  an
    26  affected  property  may  not  evict or take any other retaliatory action
    27  against a person at risk or such person's parent or  legal  guardian  in
    28  response  to  the  actions  of the person at risk, their parent or legal
    29  guardian in:
    30    (a) providing information to the owner of the affected  property,  the
    31  deputy  commissioner, the commissioner of housing and community renewal,
    32  or the designee of either of  these  officials,  a  local  or  municipal
    33  department  of  health,  or  a  municipal  or other local authority with
    34  responsibility for enforcing any local housing code or codes  concerning
    35  lead-based  paint  hazards within an affected property or elevated blood
    36  lead levels of a person at risk; or
    37    (b) enforcing any of their rights under this title.
    38    2. For purposes of this section, a retaliatory action includes any  of
    39  the  following  actions in which the activities protected under subdivi-
    40  sion one of this section  are  a  material  factor  in  motivating  said
    41  action:
    42    (a) A refusal to renew a lease;
    43    (b) Termination of a tenancy;
    44    (c)  An  arbitrary  rent increase or decrease in services to which the
    45  person at risk or such person's parent or legal guardian is entitled; or
    46    (d) Any form of constructive eviction.
    47    3. A person at risk or such person's parent or legal guardian  subject
    48  to  an  eviction or retaliatory action under this section is entitled to
    49  the relief as may be provided  by  statute  and/or  any  further  relief
    50  deemed  just  and equitable by the court, and is eligible for reasonable
    51  attorneys' fees and costs.
    52    § 8. The real property law is amended by adding two new sections 236-b
    53  and 242-a to read as follows:
    54    § 236-b. Discrimination against persons and families receiving  public
    55  assistance or governmental housing subsidies prohibited.  1. Any person,
    56  firm  or  corporation  owning  or  having in charge any apartment house,

        S. 6174                            23
 
     1  tenement house or other building or  manufactured  home  park  used  for
     2  dwelling  purposes  who  shall  refuse  to  rent any or part of any such
     3  building or manufactured home park to  any  person  or  family,  or  who
     4  discriminates  in  the  terms,  conditions,  or  privileges  of any such
     5  rental, on the ground that such person or family receives public assist-
     6  ance or any other government subsidy for payment of rent shall be guilty
     7  of a misdemeanor and on conviction thereof shall be punished by  a  fine
     8  of  not  less  than  five hundred nor more than one thousand dollars for
     9  each offense.
    10    2.  (a) Where discriminatory conduct prohibited by  this  section  has
    11  occurred,  an  aggrieved  individual shall have a cause of action in any
    12  court of competent jurisdiction for damages, declaratory and  injunctive
    13  relief.
    14    (b)  In  all actions brought under this section, the court shall allow
    15  the prevailing plaintiff reasonable attorney's fees and, upon a  finding
    16  that  defendant's  discriminatory  conduct  was  willful,  an additional
    17  amount as liquidated damages equal to two thousand five hundred  dollars
    18  shall be awarded.
    19    §  242-a. Inspection of residential real property for lead-based paint
    20  prior to transfer.  1. (a) Effective January first, two  thousand  twen-
    21  ty-seven,  the  transferor  or  grantor of any residential real property
    22  erected prior to the year nineteen hundred seventy, or in cities with  a
    23  population  of  one million or more a dwelling erected prior to the year
    24  nineteen hundred sixty, shall provide to the  transferee  or  grantee  a
    25  certificate that such property has been tested for the presence of lead-
    26  based  paint,  as  defined in subdivision twenty-six of section thirteen
    27  hundred seventy of the public health law, and  a  report  of  such  test
    28  indicating  the  locations  where lead-based paint has been detected, if
    29  any. Such testing shall not  be  valid  unless  performed  by  a  person
    30  accredited  pursuant  to  section  thirteen  hundred seventy-five of the
    31  public health law. A copy of such certificate shall be  filed  with  the
    32  department of health.
    33    (b) The presentation of a certificate of such testing by a prior owner
    34  of said property and evidence of filing such certificate and report with
    35  the  department  of  health shall be deemed to be in compliance with the
    36  provisions of this subdivision.
    37    (c) In the event the transferor or grantor has  not  received  from  a
    38  prior  owner  a  certification  and report of such tests as set forth in
    39  this subdivision, the costs of testing  for  lead-based  paint  and  the
    40  preparation  of  a  certificate  and  report thereof as provided in this
    41  subdivision shall be deductible by the transferor or grantor, up to  the
    42  amount  of  five  hundred  dollars,  or in a building with more than one
    43  dwelling unit up to four hundred dollars per dwelling unit tested,  from
    44  the  taxes imposed by sections fourteen hundred two and fourteen hundred
    45  two-a of the tax law.
    46    2. Any provision in a purchase offer, contract of sale,  lease,  offer
    47  to  lease,  or any other document related to the transfer of an interest
    48  in real property that purports to waive any right created under state or
    49  federal law for the purchaser, tenant, or transferee to conduct  a  risk
    50  assessment  or  inspection  of the property to determine the presence of
    51  lead-based paint and/or lead-based paint hazards, or any oral  agreement
    52  that  purports  to  waive such right, is null and void as against public
    53  policy, notwithstanding that such waivers might otherwise  be  permitted
    54  by federal law.
    55    §  9. Section 210-B of the tax law is amended by adding a new subdivi-
    56  sion 61 to read as follows:

        S. 6174                            24
 
     1    61. Lead hazard reduction tax credit. (a) Tax  credit  for  activities
     2  resulting  in  lead-free  or  lead-contained status. A taxpayer shall be
     3  allowed a credit against tax imposed  by  this  article  for  activities
     4  necessary  to  bring  any  affected property into lead-free or lead-con-
     5  tained  status  within  the meaning of sections thirteen hundred seventy
     6  and thirteen hundred seventy-six of the public health law, provided that
     7  the taxpayer complies with the documentation requirements  of  paragraph
     8  (d) of this subdivision.
     9    (b)  Tax  credit  for  multiple  dwelling units located within munici-
    10  palities of more than one million inhabitants. A taxpayer also shall  be
    11  eligible for the tax credit under paragraph (a) of this subdivision if a
    12  dwelling  unit that satisfies all the requirements for an affected prop-
    13  erty contained in subdivision two of section thirteen hundred seventy of
    14  the public health law but such dwelling unit is located in a city with a
    15  population of one million or more.  In  such  case,  the  taxpayer  must
    16  comply  with  equivalent standards in local laws concerning lead hazards
    17  that apply to multiple dwellings.
    18    (c) Tax credits for certain renovations as part of achieving lead-sta-
    19  bilized status. A taxpayer shall be allowed a credit against tax imposed
    20  by this article for the costs of certain activities necessary  to  bring
    21  any  affected property into lead-stabilized status within the meaning of
    22  section thirteen hundred seventy-six of the public health law,  provided
    23  that  the  expected useful life of such renovations is ten years or more
    24  and the taxpayer complies with the documentation requirements  of  para-
    25  graph  (d)  of this subdivision. The deputy commissioner of health shall
    26  promulgate regulations defining those activities  necessary  to  achieve
    27  lead-stabilized  status  with  an  expected useful life of more than ten
    28  years. Taxpayers who have completed renovations  of  habitable  dwelling
    29  units contained in multiple dwellings, as defined in section four of the
    30  multiple dwelling law in a city of more than one million population also
    31  shall  be  allowed  a  credit  under  this subdivision provided that the
    32  taxpayer complies with similar standards in local laws  concerning  lead
    33  hazards that apply to multiple dwellings.
    34    (d)  Documentation  required for credit allowance.  No credit shall be
    35  allowed under paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of this subdivision unless  the
    36  taxpayer  provides  documentation  to  the deputy commissioner of health
    37  that:
    38    (1) the activities described above have been performed by a contractor
    39  accredited pursuant to section  thirteen  hundred  seventy-five  of  the
    40  public health law;
    41    (2)  the  affected  property was constructed prior to nineteen hundred
    42  seventy;
    43    (3) the taxpayer has paid for the activities described above; and
    44    (4) includes a written certification obtained by the taxpayer from  an
    45  inspector,  accredited pursuant to section thirteen hundred seventy-five
    46  of the public health law, that the activities described above have  been
    47  completed  in  accordance  with  all  applicable  requirements  and that
    48  either:
    49    (A) Where applicable, the affected property or property unit  can  now
    50  be  certified  as either lead-free or lead-contained under section thir-
    51  teen hundred seventy-six of the public health law; or
    52    (B) Where applicable, the affected property has undergone  renovations
    53  that  satisfy  the  requirements established by regulation by the deputy
    54  commissioner of health as activities necessary  to  achieve  lead-stabi-
    55  lized status with an expected useful life of more than ten years.

        S. 6174                            25
 
     1    (e)  Amount  of  credit.   The tax credit shall be equal to the amount
     2  actually paid for the activities described in this subdivision up  to  a
     3  maximum  of  three  thousand  dollars per affected property for a credit
     4  allowed under either paragraph (a) or (b) of this subdivision or a maxi-
     5  mum  of  one  thousand  five  hundred dollars for a credit allowed under
     6  paragraph (c) of this subdivision.
     7    (f) Carry-over of credit.  Any amount of tax credit not  used  in  the
     8  taxable  year of certification may be carried forward and applied to the
     9  corporation's tax liability for any one or more of the  succeeding  five
    10  taxable  years.    The credit may not be applied until all other credits
    11  available to the taxpayer for that taxable year have been applied.
    12    § 10. Section 606 of the tax law is amended by adding a new subsection
    13  (bbb) to read as follows:
    14    (bbb) Lead-hazard reduction in housing tax credit.  (1)  Allowance  of
    15  credit for activities resulting in lead-free or lead-contained status. A
    16  taxpayer  shall  be  allowed a credit as provided in this subsection for
    17  activities necessary to bring any affected property  into  lead-free  or
    18  lead-contained  status  within  the meaning of sections thirteen hundred
    19  seventy and thirteen hundred  seventy-six  of  the  public  health  law,
    20  provided  that the taxpayer complies with the documentation requirements
    21  of paragraph four of this subsection.
    22    (2) Tax credit for multiple  dwelling  units  located  within  munici-
    23  palities  of more than one million inhabitants. A taxpayer also shall be
    24  eligible for the tax credit under paragraph one of this subsection if  a
    25  dwelling  unit that satisfies all the requirements for an affected prop-
    26  erty contained in subdivision two of section thirteen hundred seventy of
    27  the public health law but such dwelling unit is located in a city with a
    28  population of one million or more.  In  such  case,  the  taxpayer  must
    29  comply  with  equivalent standards in local laws concerning lead hazards
    30  that apply to multiple dwellings.
    31    (3) Tax credits for certain renovations as part of achieving lead-sta-
    32  bilized status. A taxpayer shall be allowed a credit against tax imposed
    33  by this article for the costs of certain activities necessary  to  bring
    34  any  affected property into lead-stabilized status within the meaning of
    35  section thirteen hundred seventy-six of the public health law,  provided
    36  that  the  expected useful life of such renovations is ten years or more
    37  and the taxpayer complies with the documentation requirements  of  para-
    38  graph  four  of this subsection. The deputy commissioner of health shall
    39  promulgate regulations defining those activities  necessary  to  achieve
    40  lead-stabilized  status  with  an  expected useful life of more than ten
    41  years. Taxpayers who have completed renovations  of  habitable  dwelling
    42  units contained in multiple dwellings, as defined in section four of the
    43  multiple dwelling law in a city of more than one million population also
    44  shall be allowed a credit under this paragraph provided that the taxpay-
    45  er complies with similar standards in local laws concerning lead hazards
    46  that apply to multiple dwellings.
    47    (4)  Documentation  required  for credit allowance. No credit shall be
    48  allowed under paragraph one, two or three of this subsection unless  the
    49  taxpayer  provides  documentation  to  the deputy commissioner of health
    50  that:
    51    (A) the activities described above have been performed by a contractor
    52  accredited pursuant to section  thirteen  hundred  seventy-five  of  the
    53  public health law;
    54    (B)  the  affected  property was constructed prior to nineteen hundred
    55  seventy;
    56    (C) the taxpayer has paid for the activities described above; and

        S. 6174                            26
 
     1    (D) includes a written certification obtained by the taxpayer from  an
     2  inspector,  accredited pursuant to section thirteen hundred seventy-five
     3  of the public health law, that the activities described above have  been
     4  completed  in  accordance  with  all  applicable  requirements  and that
     5  either:
     6    (i)  Where  applicable,  the affected property can now be certified as
     7  either lead-free or lead-contained under section thirteen hundred seven-
     8  ty-six of the public health law; or
     9    (ii) Where applicable, the affected property has undergone renovations
    10  that satisfy the requirements established by regulation  by  the  deputy
    11  commissioner  of  health  as activities necessary to achieve lead-stabi-
    12  lized status with an expected useful life of more than ten years.
    13    (5) The tax credit pursuant to this subsection shall be available to a
    14  person who owns and occupies their own dwelling unit in the same  manner
    15  and  to  the  same extent as it is available to the owner of an affected
    16  property who leases the premises.
    17    (6) Amount of credit. The tax credit shall  be  equal  to  the  amount
    18  actually  paid  for  the activities described in this subsection up to a
    19  maximum of three thousand dollars per affected  property  for  a  credit
    20  allowed  under either paragraph one or two of this subsection or a maxi-
    21  mum of one thousand five hundred dollars  for  a  credit  allowed  under
    22  paragraph three of this subsection.
    23    (7)  Application  of  credit. Any amount of tax credit not used in the
    24  taxable year of certification may be carried forward and applied to  the
    25  individual's  tax  liability  for any one or more of the succeeding five
    26  taxable years. The credit may not be applied  until  all  other  credits
    27  available to the taxpayer for that taxable year have been applied.
    28    §  11.  The state finance law is amended by adding a new section 99-ss
    29  to read as follows:
    30    §  99-ss.  Residential  property  lead-based  paint  hazard  abatement
    31  revolving loan fund.  1. There is created, as a separate fund within the
    32  general  fund, a fund to be known as the residential property lead-based
    33  paint hazard abatement revolving loan fund. Such fund shall  consist  of
    34  proceeds  received from the sale of bonds pursuant to subdivision two of
    35  this section, and any sums that the state may from  time  to  time  deem
    36  appropriate,  as  well  as donations, gifts, bequests, or otherwise from
    37  any public or private source, which money is intended to  assist  owners
    38  of  residential properties in meeting the standards for either lead-free
    39  or lead-contained certification pursuant  to  section  thirteen  hundred
    40  seventy-six  of  the  public  health  law, or, for multiple dwellings in
    41  cities of one million population or more,  compliance  with  local  laws
    42  concerning  the  control  of  lead-based  paint hazards in such multiple
    43  dwellings.
    44    2. The state shall issue bonds in an amount specified for the  purpose
    45  of  funding  the  residential property lead-based paint hazard abatement
    46  revolving loan fund.
    47    (a) Any bonds issued or to be  issued  pursuant  to  this  subdivision
    48  shall  be  subject to all the requirements and conditions established by
    49  the state for the sale of bonds.
    50    (b) The interest rate and other terms  upon  which  bonds  are  issued
    51  pursuant  to  this subdivision shall not create a prospective obligation
    52  of the state of New York in excess of the amount of  revenues  that  can
    53  reasonably be expected from the loan repayments, interest on such loans,
    54  and  fees  that  the  state  of New York can reasonably expect to charge
    55  under the provisions of title ten of  article  thirteen  of  the  public
    56  health law.

        S. 6174                            27
 
     1    (c)  All money received from the sale of bonds shall be deposited into
     2  the residential property lead-based  paint  hazard  abatement  revolving
     3  loan fund.
     4    3. The comptroller shall contract for the administration and disburse-
     5  ment of funding. The deputy commissioner of health shall adopt rules and
     6  regulations which provide for the orderly and equitable disbursement and
     7  repayment of funds.
     8    4.  Funds  placed  in the residential property lead-based paint hazard
     9  abatement revolving loan fund shall be made available, at the discretion
    10  of the deputy commissioner of health, to the owners of affected  proper-
    11  ties  including  those  located  within  municipalities of more than one
    12  million inhabitants, and to non-profit organizations for the purpose  of
    13  bringing  affected  properties  into  compliance  with the standards for
    14  lead-free, lead-contained, or lead-stabilized property status as  speci-
    15  fied  by  section thirteen hundred seventy-six of the public health law,
    16  or, for multiple dwellings in cities with a population of one million or
    17  more, compliance with local laws concerning the  control  of  lead-based
    18  paint  hazards  in  such  multiple dwellings. An owner of a pre-nineteen
    19  hundred seventy property who owns and occupies the dwelling  unit  shall
    20  be  eligible for loans under this section in the same manner, and to the
    21  same extent, as an owner of an affected property.
    22    5. Loans made available under the provisions of this  section  may  be
    23  made  directly, or in cooperation with other public and private lenders,
    24  or any agency, department, or bureau of the federal  government  or  the
    25  state.
    26    6.  The proceeds from the repayment of any loans made for that purpose
    27  shall be deposited in and returned to  the  residential  property  lead-
    28  based paint hazard abatement revolving loan fund to constitute a contin-
    29  uing revolving fund for the purposes provided in this section.
    30    7. The deputy commissioner of housing and community renewal shall take
    31  any  action  necessary  to  obtain  federal  assistance  for lead hazard
    32  reduction to be used in conjunction with the residential property  lead-
    33  based paint hazard abatement revolving loan fund.
    34    §  12.  Paragraph  a of subdivision 2 of section 302-a of the multiple
    35  dwelling law, as added by chapter 911 of the laws of 1965, is amended to
    36  read as follows:
    37    a. A "rent impairing" violation within the  meaning  of  this  section
    38  shall designate a condition in a multiple dwelling which, in the opinion
    39  of  the  department,  constitutes,  or  if  not promptly corrected, will
    40  constitute, a fire hazard, a lead-based paint hazard within the  meaning
    41  of  subdivision  twenty-seven of section thirteen hundred seventy of the
    42  public health law, or a serious threat to the life, health or safety  of
    43  occupants thereof.
    44    §  13.  Paragraph  a of subdivision 2 of section 305-a of the multiple
    45  residence law, as added by chapter 291 of the laws of 1966,  is  amended
    46  to read as follows:
    47    a.  A  "rent  impairing"  violation within the meaning of this section
    48  shall designate a condition in a multiple dwelling which, in the opinion
    49  of the state building code council,  constitutes,  or  if  not  promptly
    50  corrected,  will  constitute,  a  fire hazard, a lead-based paint hazard
    51  within the meaning  of  subdivision  twenty-seven  of  section  thirteen
    52  hundred  seventy  of  the  public health law, or a serious threat to the
    53  life, health or safety of occupants thereof.
    54    § 14. The social services law is amended by adding a new section 131-y
    55  to read as follows:

        S. 6174                            28
 
     1    § 131-y. Supplemental shelter allowance. Every public welfare official
     2  shall pay, in addition to the shelter allowance  components  established
     3  by  the  department pursuant to section one hundred thirty-one-a of this
     4  title, a supplemental shelter allowance for units for  which  the  owner
     5  has  submitted  documentation  certifying  that  the dwelling unit is in
     6  compliance with subdivision seven of section one  hundred  forty-three-b
     7  of this title. This monthly lead-safe housing supplement shall be in the
     8  amount of fifty dollars for efficiency or one-bedroom units; one hundred
     9  dollars  for two-bedroom units; one hundred fifty dollars for three-bed-
    10  room units; and  two  hundred  dollars  for  units  with  four  or  more
    11  bedrooms;  or  such  higher  amounts  as the department may establish by
    12  regulation as appropriate to induce landlords in  high  risk  lead-paint
    13  poisoning  areas  to  voluntarily  remove  lead-paint hazards from their
    14  units using lead-safe work practices. This supplemental  shelter  allow-
    15  ance  for  lead-safe housing shall be paid for a period of twelve months
    16  following the submission of the most recent certification of  compliance
    17  and  shall  be  renewed  for  subsequent  twelve  month periods upon the
    18  submission of further  certifications  of  compliance  based  upon  more
    19  recent inspections.
    20    §  15.  Subdivision  2 of section 143-b of the social services law, as
    21  added by chapter 997 of the laws of 1962, is amended and a new  subdivi-
    22  sion 7 is added to read as follows:
    23    2.  Every  public welfare official shall have power to and [may] shall
    24  withhold the payment of any such rent in any case where [he] such public
    25  welfare official has knowledge that there exists or there is outstanding
    26  any violation of law in respect to the building containing  the  housing
    27  accommodations  occupied by the person entitled to such assistance which
    28  is dangerous, hazardous or detrimental to life or health.  A  report  of
    29  each  such  violation  shall  be  made to the appropriate public welfare
    30  department by the appropriate department or agency  having  jurisdiction
    31  over violations.
    32    7. No state or local agency shall arrange to place a family consisting
    33  of  a  person  or  persons  under seven years of age or a known pregnant
    34  person in any dwelling unit constructed prior to nineteen hundred seven-
    35  ty, or, in cities with a population of one million or more, any dwelling
    36  unit constructed prior to nineteen hundred sixty, for which rent is paid
    37  in any part with state funds unless such dwelling unit  has  been  first
    38  inspected  by  a  person accredited pursuant to section thirteen hundred
    39  seventy-five of the public health law, and  determined  to  be  free  of
    40  lead-based  paint  hazards,  as  defined  by subdivision twenty-seven of
    41  section thirteen hundred seventy of the public health  law,  and  unless
    42  such  agency  has first obtained appropriate documentation acceptable to
    43  the commissioner that such dwelling  unit  is  in  compliance  with  the
    44  requirements  of  section  thirteen  hundred  seventy-six  of the public
    45  health law, or, for multiple dwellings in cities with  a  population  of
    46  one  million  or  more,  in  compliance  with  local laws concerning the
    47  control of lead-based paint hazards in such multiple dwellings. A  writ-
    48  ten  report  shall  be  prepared of any inspection performed pursuant to
    49  this subdivision and shall be provided to the family.
    50    § 16. Section 390-a of the social services law is amended by adding  a
    51  new subdivision 6 to read as follows:
    52    6.  No  license  or  registration  shall be issued to a child day care
    53  center, a family day care home, or a group family day care home  and  no
    54  such  registration  shall  be  renewed until it can be demonstrated that
    55  those portions of the facility in which  such  child  day  care  center,
    56  family day care home, or group family day care home is located and those

        S. 6174                            29
 
     1  portions  of  such  facility  that are readily accessible to children in
     2  such child day care center, family day care home, or  group  family  day
     3  care  home,  meet the standards for lead-free property status, lead-con-
     4  tained  property status, or lead-stabilized property status set forth in
     5  section thirteen hundred seventy-six of the public health law,  or,  for
     6  multiple  dwellings  in cities with a population of one million or more,
     7  with all local laws concerning the control of lead-based  paint  hazards
     8  that apply to multiple dwelling units where children reside.
     9    §  17.  The  insurance  law is amended by adding a new section 3441 to
    10  read as follows:
    11    § 3441. Insurance coverage for lead poisoning. (a) For the purpose  of
    12  this section, the term "affected property" shall mean a room or group of
    13  rooms  within a property constructed before nineteen hundred seventy, or
    14  constructed before nineteen hundred sixty in cities with a population of
    15  one million or more, that form a single independent  habitable  dwelling
    16  unit  for  occupation by one or more individuals that has living facili-
    17  ties with permanent provisions for living,  sleeping,  eating,  cooking,
    18  and sanitation. "Affected property" shall not include:
    19    (1) an area not used for living, sleeping, eating, cooking, or sanita-
    20  tion,  such as an unfinished basement, that is not readily accessible to
    21  children under seven years of age;
    22    (2) a unit within a hotel, motel, or  similar  seasonal  or  transient
    23  facility  unless  such  unit is occupied by one or more  persons at risk
    24  for a period exceeding thirty days;
    25    (3) an area which is secured and inaccessible to occupants;
    26    (4) housing for the elderly,  or  a  residential  property  designated
    27  exclusively  for  persons with disabilities; except this exemption shall
    28  not apply if a person at risk resides or is expected to  reside  in  the
    29  dwelling unit or visits the dwelling unit on a regular basis; or
    30    (5)  an unoccupied dwelling unit or residential property that is to be
    31  demolished, provided the dwelling unit or property will  remain  unoccu-
    32  pied until demolition.
    33    For  the  purpose  of this section, the term "affected property" shall
    34  not mean any property owned or operated by a unit of federal, state,  or
    35  local government, or any public, quasi-public, or municipal corporation,
    36  but  does  include  privately-owned properties that receive governmental
    37  rental assistance.
    38    (b) After  fourteen  months  following  the  effective  date  of  this
    39  section,  no  insurer licensed or permitted by the department to provide
    40  liability coverage to rental property owners shall  exclude,  except  as
    41  otherwise provided by this section, an affected property covered under a
    42  policy  coverage  for losses or damages caused by exposure to lead-based
    43  paint.  The department shall not permit, authorize or approve any exclu-
    44  sion for injury or damage resulting from exposure to  lead-based  paint,
    45  except as specifically provided for in law, that was not in effect as of
    46  the  effective  date of this section, and all previously approved exclu-
    47  sions shall terminate on or before fourteen months following the  effec-
    48  tive date of this section.
    49    (c)  All  insurers  issuing  liability  insurance  policies, including
    50  commercial lines insurance policies, personal lines insurance  policies,
    51  and/or  any  other  policies,  covering  affected properties shall offer
    52  coverage for bodily injury caused by exposure to lead-based paint.
    53    (d) Rates for the coverage specified in subsection (c) of this section
    54  shall be approved by the superintendent using the following standards:
    55    (1) Such rates must not be excessive, inadequate, or unfairly  discri-
    56  minatory; and

        S. 6174                            30
 
     1    (2) In establishing such rates, consideration will be given to:
     2    (A) Past and prospective loss experience;
     3    (B) A reasonable margin for profits and contingencies;
     4    (C) Past and prospective expenses;
     5    (D) Such other data as the department may deem necessary;
     6    (E) The past history of the owner with regard to lead poisoning or any
     7  other  liability or violations of ordinances or statutes relating to the
     8  affected property or  similar  properties  reasonably  believed  by  the
     9  insurer to be relevant; and
    10    (F)  Compliance  with  the  requirements  of  either  section thirteen
    11  hundred seventy-six of the public health law or, for multiple  dwellings
    12  in  cities with a population of one million or more, with all local laws
    13  concerning the control of lead-based  paint  hazards  in  such  multiple
    14  dwellings.
    15    (e)  The  department  shall  determine  within two years following the
    16  effective date of this section the availability in the state of  liabil-
    17  ity  personal  injury/bodily injury coverage described in subsection (b)
    18  of this section, and may if such coverage is  not  generally  available,
    19  establish  a market assistance plan or take other measures to assure the
    20  availability of such coverage that offers a liability limit which is  at
    21  least three hundred thousand dollars or shall require that such coverage
    22  be made available through a joint underwriting plan.
    23    (f) An owner may not assign liability nor require a tenant to limit or
    24  waive  liability  and any such limit or waiver shall be void as contrary
    25  to the public policy of New York state.
    26    (g) The superintendent shall, within twelve months after the effective
    27  date of this section:
    28    (1) Adopt rules for and  issue  an  advisory  bulletin  to  all  state
    29  licensed,  admitted  insurers  providing liability coverage for property
    30  owners regarding their responsibilities under this section; and
    31    (2) Adopt rules for and  issue  an  advisory  bulletin  to  all  state
    32  licensed  insurance  agents and brokers outlining the provisions of this
    33  section and the new requirements for state licensed, admitted insurers.
    34    § 18. This act shall take effect immediately.
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