Home improvement chain to pay more than $20M over Lead RRP rule
A national DIY chain settled with EPA and the Department of Justice by agreeing to pay a whopping $20.7 million over alleged violations of EPA’s Lead Renovation Repair and Painting (Lead RRP) rule. This is the highest penalty ever assessed under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA). The Lead RRP rule requires contractors performing renovations, repair, and painting projects in most pre-1978 homes, child-care facilities, and schools, to obtain training and certification and follow lead-safe work practices.
The complaint, which covers the store’s activities across the country, requires the chain to implement a comprehensive, corporate-wide program to ensure the firms and contractors it hires to perform work are certified and trained to use lead-safe work practices.
According to the Department of Justice, five customers had complained about the store’s renovations in Illinois, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. The investigation revealed the chain routinely subcontracted work to firms that in some cases did not use lead-safe work practices, perform required cleaning, provide the required informative paint pamphlets to occupants, or maintain required records.
To ensure its contractors comply with the RRP rule, the retailer agreed to:
- Implement an electronic compliance system to verify that the contractors it hires are properly certified;
- Require contractors to use a detailed checklist to document compliance and provide the completed checklist to customers;
- Conduct thousands of on-site inspections of work performed by contractors;
- Investigate and respond to customer complaints;
- In instances where the contractor did not comply with the lead-safe work practices, perform an inspection for dust lead hazards and provide specialized cleaning when required; and
- Provide information about following lead-safe work practices to professional and do-it-yourself customers in its stores, website, on YouTube, and in workshops.
EPA will monitor the store’s responses to customer complaints.