The
New York City Housing Authority has identified 6,000 additional apartments
where children live who are at risk of lead exposure.
The
announcement was made by the federal monitor. The number is three times more
than originally identified two years ago.
NYCHA
says the announcement is the result of its dialogue with residents during
in-apartment X-ray fluorescence (XRF) testing visits and the housing
authority's door-knocking campaign.
The
federal monitor says they must make sure children in those apartments are
protected from lead risks and that NYCHA has already undertaken numerous steps
in that direction.
A
Vision Zero campaign was announced by Mayor Bill de Blasio two years ago to
eradicate lead paint poisoning. On Thursday, the mayor said that they are on
the clearest path yet to making it happen.
"It
can be done. It must be done. We're seeing many, many fewer cases,” he said.
“We put out the information quarterly and there's been a steady decrease, but
if there's anything we got to double back and go farther, we will."
The
mayor also says they will follow up on this federal monitor report and act
immediately.
NYCHA released a statement saying, “NYCHA is aggressively working to identify apartments where there are children under 6 years old, and our monumental efforts to overhaul our lead program have resulted in the nation’s most comprehensive assessment of public housing apartments presumed to have lead-based paint. We are inspecting and remediating every day, and will continue to make apartments with children under six our chief priority.”