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The Anatomy of a Public Health Failure in South Carolina’s Rental Market

EPA Enforcement • TSCA • Lead Paint • South Carolina

They Rented You A Poisoned House And Never Said A Word

The Non-Financial Ledger: What A Fine Can’t Measure

Imagine you sign a lease on a new place. You’re told what the rent is, when it’s due, what happens if you break the lease early. Standard stuff. What you are not told is that the house was built in 1954, seven decades before you arrived, and that somewhere underneath the fresh coat of paint someone slapped on the walls is lead. Old lead. The kind that doesn’t announce itself. The kind that turns to dust when the paint chips, that settles into the carpet, that gets on a toddler’s hands and then into their mouth before you even notice.

Federal law figured this out in 1992. Congress passed a law that said: if you rent a house built before 1978, you have to tell the tenant. You have to give them a pamphlet that explains exactly what lead poisoning does to a child’s developing brain. You have to attach a legally specific warning to the lease, in writing, before they sign. This is not complicated. It is a piece of paper. It is a pamphlet. It is a checkbox. The law has been in place for over thirty years.

The tenants who moved into 5 Brennon Street in Charleston, a house built in 1954, never got that pamphlet. The tenants who moved into 1308 Old Colony Road in Mount Pleasant, built in 1967, never got that warning statement in their lease. PSPA, LLC, doing business as Palmetto State Properties & Associates, did not give it to them. A property management company with a professional office at 884 Johnnie Dodds Boulevard, Suite 201, a company with managing members and attorneys and real estate licenses, could not manage to include a piece of paper that the federal government has required for three decades.

What that omission costs cannot be calculated in the $5,718.00 penalty PSPA agreed to pay. If a child lived in either of those homes, if they crawled on those floors, chewed on those windowsills, breathed that dust, the damage is neurological. Lead poisoning lowers IQ. It shortens attention spans. It increases the risk of behavioral problems and learning disabilities. These effects are irreversible. There is no treatment that removes them once they take hold. The window where prevention actually works is before the exposure happens. That window is exactly what the disclosure law was designed to protect.

Nobody at PSPA will lose sleep over a $5,718 check. The tenants who were kept in the dark about the age and potential hazards of the homes they were renting do not get to pay a fine and move on. They were adults trying to find a place to live in a tight market, trusting that the professionals managing the property were doing their jobs. They were not.

Legal Receipts: What The Government Document Actually Says

The following are direct quotes from EPA Consent Agreement and Final Order, Docket No. TSCA-04-2025-6112(b), filed September 23, 2025. These are the government’s own words, on the record.

“The records provided by Respondent to the EPA inspector failed to demonstrate that prior to entering into the leases referenced in Paragraph 22, Respondent had: (a) Included as an attachment or within the contracts to lease target housing the appropriate Lead Warning Statement, as required by 40 C.F.R. § 745.113(b)(1); and (b) Included as an attachment or within the contracts to lease target housing, a statement by the lessee affirming receipt of the information required under 40 C.F.R. § 745.113(b)(2)-(3), and the lead hazard pamphlet required under 15 U.S.C. § 2686, in accordance with 40 C.F.R. § 745.113(b)(4).”

— CAFO Paragraph 23
  • This paragraph is the EPA’s formal finding of fact. The agency reviewed the actual lease records PSPA submitted and confirmed: no Lead Warning Statement was included, and no tenant acknowledgment of receiving lead hazard information was included. Both are mandatory. Both were missing.
  • The phrase “failed to demonstrate” is legal language for: the documents PSPA handed over as proof of compliance did not show compliance. The absence of the required paperwork is itself the violation.
  • Two separate legal requirements are named here. PSPA did not fail one disclosure rule. They failed at least two distinct disclosure requirements across two different properties and two separate lease transactions in 2024.
“On June 25, 2024, an inspector with the EPA conducted an inspection at Respondent’s place of business located at 884 Johnnie Dodds Boulevard, Suite 201, Mount Pleasant, South Carolina 29464, for the purpose of evaluating Respondent’s compliance with the requirements of 40 C.F.R. Part 745, Subpart F.”

— CAFO Paragraph 19
  • The EPA came to PSPA’s professional office specifically to check lead paint disclosure compliance. This was a targeted compliance inspection, not an incidental inquiry.
  • PSPA subsequently submitted lease records for review on July 15, 2024, and those records are what confirmed the violations. PSPA provided the evidence of its own noncompliance.
“Respondent is, and was at all times relevant to this CAFO, an ‘agent’ that offered contracts to lease ‘residential dwellings’ that are ‘target housing’ on behalf of a ‘lessor’ as those terms are defined at 40 C.F.R. § 745.103.”

— CAFO Paragraph 18
  • This confirms PSPA’s legal role. As an “agent,” PSPA had a specific affirmative obligation under 40 C.F.R. § 745.113(b)(5) to inform the property owner (lessor) of their disclosure duties and to actively ensure those duties were carried out. PSPA did not simply fail to pass along paperwork; they failed at the core job they were hired to perform.
  • In plain terms: the property owner hired PSPA to handle this. PSPA is the professional in the transaction. The regulation puts the compliance burden squarely on the agent, not on the property owner alone.
“Respondent certifies to the best of its knowledge that Respondent is currently in compliance with all relevant requirements of 40 C.F.R. Part 745, Subpart F, and the Act, and that all violations alleged herein, which are neither admitted nor denied, have been corrected.”

— CAFO Paragraph 27(f)
  • PSPA neither admits nor denies the underlying factual allegations as a matter of legal strategy. They do certify that any violations have been corrected going forward. This is standard consent agreement language, but it means the tenants in those two specific leases never received retroactive disclosure or remediation.
  • The phrase “neither admitted nor denied” means no court ever adjudicated whether PSPA’s conduct was unlawful. PSPA wrote a check and the case closed.
“Housing built before 1978 may contain lead-based paint. Lead exposure is especially harmful to young children and pregnant women.”
— The exact Lead Warning Statement federal law required PSPA to include in every lease. They did not include it.
Visual 1: Timeline of the PSPA Lead Disclosure Case Apr 22, 2024 Brennon St. lease signed (1954 home) No disclosure ~ 44 days Jun 5, 2024 Old Colony Rd. lease signed (1967 home) No disclosure ~ 20 days Jun 25, 2024 EPA inspection at PSPA offices ~ 20 days Jul 15, 2024 PSPA submits lease records; violations confirmed by EPA ~14 months Sep 23, 2025 CAFO filed; $5,718 penalty ordered

Societal Impact Mapping: Who Gets Hurt When Disclosures Get Skipped

Public Health

Lead poisoning is a pediatric emergency that has been building for generations in America’s older housing stock. When a property manager skips the required disclosure, they strip tenants of the only tool the law gives them: information.

  • The two PSPA properties in question were built in 1954 and 1967, both well before the 1978 federal ban on residential lead paint. Lead-based paint was standard in that era, particularly on doors, windows, trim, and exterior surfaces. Age-related deterioration turns that paint into dust, the most common route of childhood exposure.
  • Lead exposure in children under six causes irreversible neurological damage. Effects include reduced IQ, shortened attention span, impaired hearing, and increased risk of behavioral disorders. The federal disclosure law exists specifically because the exposure window is narrow and the damage is permanent. A child harmed before a parent is warned has no legal remedy for that harm.
  • Pregnant women are a second named protected class in the federal Lead Warning Statement that PSPA was required to include. Lead crosses the placental barrier. Prenatal exposure is linked to premature birth, reduced fetal growth, and neurological deficits in newborns. A tenant who is pregnant and moves into a pre-1978 home without being warned has no opportunity to request inspection, request remediation, or make an informed choice.
  • The disclosure pamphlet that PSPA failed to provide, required under 15 U.S.C. § 2686, tells tenants how to identify deteriorating paint, how to protect children during renovation, and how to request a lead inspection. Without it, tenants have no framework for recognizing or responding to the hazard.
Visual 2: Required Disclosure Process vs. What PSPA Actually Did REQUIRED BY FEDERAL LAW WHAT PSPA ACTUALLY DID STEP 1 Attach Lead Warning Statement to lease [40 C.F.R. § 745.113(b)(1)] ✗ SKIPPED No Lead Warning Statement found in lease records for either property STEP 2 Disclose known lead paint/hazards [40 C.F.R. § 745.113(b)(2)-(3)] Not addressed in available CAFO findings STEP 3 Provide EPA lead hazard info pamphlet [15 U.S.C. § 2686] ✗ SKIPPED No evidence pamphlet was provided in either lease transaction STEP 4 Obtain tenant acknowledgment of receipt [40 C.F.R. § 745.113(b)(4)] ✗ SKIPPED No tenant acknowledgment found in PSPA lease records Tenants informed. Hazard disclosed. Law followed. Tenants uninformed. $5,718 fine. Case closed.

Economic Inequality

Lead paint disclosure failures are disproportionate in their impact. They land hardest on the people who can least afford to absorb the consequences.

  • Older housing stock, the exact category covered by the 1978 lead paint ban, is concentrated in the most affordable price segments of the rental market. Tenants renting in these properties are typically lower-income households who have fewer options and less negotiating power with property managers.
  • When a tenant is not given the required lead hazard pamphlet or warning statement, they cannot make an informed choice about whether to accept the lease or negotiate for lead inspection or remediation as a condition of moving in. That leverage disappears entirely when the disclosure is withheld.
  • If a child in one of these homes is later diagnosed with elevated blood lead levels, the financial consequences fall on the family: medical appointments, developmental specialists, special education services, behavioral support. None of that is compensated by the EPA’s $5,718 penalty against PSPA. PSPA does not pay those costs. The tenant does.
  • Professional property management companies like PSPA exist specifically to handle the legal and administrative side of rental transactions. Property owners hire agents precisely because they are supposed to know and execute these requirements. When the agent fails, the burden of that failure is absorbed entirely by the tenant and their family, not by the professionals who were paid to handle it.
  • The structure of the penalty itself is a statement about whose interests the system prioritizes. A $5,718 fine for a company managing multiple rental properties across South Carolina is a rounding error, not a deterrent. It is certainly less than the medical costs of treating one child’s lead poisoning.
Visual 3: Who Bears the Cost When Disclosure Is Skipped COST DISTRIBUTION: DISCLOSURE FAILURE $5,718 PSPA pays (EPA fine, one-time) vs. Potential tenant costs (ongoing, uncapped): Blood lead level testing per child Developmental pediatric specialists Special education services (years) Behavioral support therapy Lost earnings (lifetime, if IQ impacted) Relocation costs if hazard discovered Legal fees if pursuing civil action Amount: Unquantified. Uncovered. Unreimbursed. TENANTS AND THEIR CHILDREN pay (no compensation mechanism in this settlement)

The “Cost of a Life” Metric

What Now: Pressure Points, Watchlists, And What You Can Do

PSPA has paid its fine and certified compliance. The case is formally closed. But the people and systems that enabled this outcome are still in place and worth watching.

PSPA Leadership Named In This Case

  • Chris Alfonso, Managing Member, PSPA, LLC. Signed the Consent Agreement on September 18, 2025. Address on file with the EPA: 2050 Spaulding Dr. #4A, North Charleston, SC 29406. Contact on file: calfonso@palmettost.com / 843-323-7136.

Regulatory Watchlist

  • U.S. EPA Region 4 Enforcement and Compliance Assurance Division: The agency that brought this case. Director Keriema S. Newman signed the Consent Agreement for the government. The EPA has the authority to conduct follow-up inspections and to treat this CAFO as prior compliance history in any future enforcement action against PSPA.
  • U.S. EPA Office of Inspector General: If you believe enforcement actions like this one are being settled at inadequate penalty levels given the public health stakes, the OIG accepts public input on enforcement adequacy.
  • South Carolina Real Estate Commission: PSPA operates as a licensed property management company in South Carolina. State real estate licensing boards can investigate and act on documented federal regulatory violations by licensees. A federal EPA enforcement action on the public record is relevant to their oversight function.
  • HUD Office of Lead Hazard Control and Healthy Homes: HUD co-enforces lead disclosure requirements and maintains separate authority over housing programs. They accept complaints about lead hazard violations in residential housing.
  • South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (DHEC): State authority over environmental and public health hazards in residential settings, including lead contamination. Relevant if tenants in the affected properties report health concerns.

For Tenants and Communities: Direct Action Steps

  • If you are renting a home built before 1978, your landlord or their agent is legally required to give you a Lead Warning Statement in your lease, disclose any known lead hazards, and hand you the EPA’s lead hazard information pamphlet before you sign. If you did not receive these, you have grounds for a formal complaint. File directly with EPA Region 4 at the contact information in this document.
  • Request the EPA pamphlet yourself. It is free. Search “Protect Your Family From Lead In Your Home EPA” to download the federally required document. Do not wait for your landlord to provide it.
  • Organize with your neighbors. If you live in a pre-1978 rental building managed by a property management company, compare your lease paperwork with others in your building. A pattern of missing disclosures across multiple units strengthens an EPA complaint considerably. Local tenant unions and housing justice organizations can help coordinate this.
  • Get your children tested. The CDC recommends blood lead level testing for all children at ages one and two, and for older children who have not been previously tested and live in older housing. Contact your pediatrician or county health department. In South Carolina, Medicaid covers this testing for eligible children.
  • Contact your state legislators. South Carolina does not currently have state-level lead disclosure enforcement beyond the federal baseline. Pushing for stronger state penalties and mandatory lead inspection requirements in rental properties older than 1978 would give tenants an additional layer of protection that federal fines alone clearly do not provide.

The source document for this investigation is attached below.

Please visit this following link on the EPA’s website for the above consent agreement: https://yosemite.epa.gov/OA/RHC/EPAAdmin.nsf/Filings/B2A89432EA1F08A085258D0F001721AB/$File/PSPA,%20LLC%20dba%20Palmetto%20State%20Properties%20CAFO%209-23-25%20TSCA-04-2025-6112(b).pdf

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Aleeia
Aleeia

I'm Aleeia, the creator of this website.

I have 6+ years of experience as an independent researcher covering corporate misconduct, sourced from legal documents, regulatory filings, and professional legal databases.

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