Lead in the Walls, Lies in the Lease
The Non-Financial Ledger
Imagine you move into a public housing apartment with your kids because it is the affordable option available to you. You sign the lease. Nobody gives you a pamphlet. Nobody circles anything in the paperwork and says: “This building was constructed before 1978. We have documented reports showing lead-based paint on the baseboards, the ceilings, and the walls of units like yours.” The conversation simply does not happen. You get the keys and you go home.
Your toddler crawls on the floor. She puts her hands in her mouth the way toddlers do. The dust on those floors may contain lead particles disturbed by a maintenance worker who showed up without a hazmat seal on the door, without plastic sheeting taped across the carpet, without any of the legally required containment procedures. That worker was not certified. The company he worked for was not certified. Nobody checked.
Lead poisoning in young children does not announce itself. It is invisible. The damage it does to developing brains and nervous systems is measured years later: in IQ points that did not develop, in attention problems a teacher notices in second grade, in behavioral difficulties that get labeled as something else entirely. There is no antidote once the exposure has occurred. The harm is permanent. It compounds over a lifetime.
The families living in Pennington Court and John W. Hyatt Court were not told that lead inspection reports from 1996 and 1997 had already identified lead paint in their buildings. They were not told about a 2018 inspection report that confirmed the paint was still there. They signed leases between at least January 2020 and March 2022 and received nothing. Not a warning statement. Not a pamphlet. Not a signature line acknowledging the hazard. In some units, the lease itself was missing the legally required lead warning language entirely.
This is the betrayal that no settlement figure translates. The Newark Housing Authority is a government agency. It was created, using public money, to provide safe housing to the people Newark’s private market will not serve. The requirement to disclose lead hazards is not obscure fine print buried in a dense regulatory code. It is a basic consumer protection that has existed since 1992. The residents of these complexes trusted a public institution to treat them with the same honesty it would demand from a private landlord. That trust was broken, systematically, across dozens of apartments, for years.
“Congress passed the Act in response to findings that low-level lead poisoning was widespread among American children… the ingestion of household dust containing lead from deteriorated or abraded lead-based paint is the most common cause of lead poisoning in children.”
Congress wrote that finding into federal law in 1992. Thirty-three years later, a public housing authority in one of the most populated metro areas in the United States was still failing to tell its tenants about the lead in their walls. The system did not fail these residents by accident. It failed them because the disclosure requirements were treated as paperwork, not as a life-or-death obligation to the people sleeping inside those buildings.
Legal Receipts: What the Order Actually Says
These are direct quotes from EPA Docket No. TSCA-02-2025-9170. Read them in the agency’s own words.
“EPA determined that Respondent, between at least January 2020 and March 2022 had repeatedly violated the Lead-Based Paint Disclosure Rule when leasing multiple apartment units in John W. Hyatt Court and Pennington Court complexes, by failing to disclose to lessees the presence of any known lead-based paint, by failing to provide lessees with any records or reports available to the lessor pertaining to lead-based paint…” Source: EPA Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, Paragraph 29, Docket No. TSCA-02-2025-9170
- This confirms the violations were not isolated clerical errors. The word “repeatedly” and the two-year timespan establish a pattern. NHA knew the reports existed and chose not to share them.
- The phrase “any known lead-based paint” is significant: NHA had reports from 1996, 1997, and 2018 confirming lead was present. Knowledge was established. Disclosure was still withheld.
“NHA provided to EPA a table that listed the units where LBP was allegedly abated between 1995 and 2004. However, it was unclear if the abatement actually occurred or what was abated in each unit, as no other records are available.” Source: EPA Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, Paragraph 27, Docket No. TSCA-02-2025-9170
- NHA claimed it cleaned up the lead decades ago. The agency has no records to prove it. A table of alleged work with no documentation is not evidence of remediation; it is a claim without support.
- This matters because NHA potentially used unverified, decades-old “abatement” claims as cover for not re-testing units, while tenants continued to live with the original lead paint and its hazards.
“182 South St, 1B: Failure to post signs clearly defining the work area and warning occupants and other persons not involved in the renovation activities to remain outside the work area. Failure to cover doors with plastic sheeting or other impermeable material… Failure to cover floor surface, including installed carpet, with taped-down plastic sheeting…” Source: EPA Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, Paragraph 31, observed violations on 3/31/2022, Docket No. TSCA-02-2025-9170
- These are violations EPA inspectors observed with their own eyes during a live renovation. Workers were actively disturbing potentially lead-painted surfaces without any of the required containment measures in place.
- Lead dust freed during renovation does not stay at the job site. It settles on surfaces throughout the living space. Without floor coverings, carpet becomes a reservoir for lead contamination that children contact directly.
“Newark Housing Authority, 500 Broad Street, Newark, NJ 07102: Failure to obtain RRP Firm Certification.” Source: EPA Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, Paragraph 31, Docket No. TSCA-02-2025-9170
- This is the foundational violation. NHA’s central office did not hold a valid EPA certification to perform renovation work in its own housing stock. Every renovation NHA conducted in-house during the violation period was therefore unlicensed work in lead-contaminated buildings.
- The certification requirement exists precisely so that renovation firms have trained, accountable personnel responsible for lead-safe work practices. Without the certification, there was no framework ensuring anyone in charge knew the rules.
“Respondent has submitted corporate financial information and documentation to EPA on October 21, 2024, demonstrating financial difficulty and supporting a reduction in the size of the civil penalty that potentially could be assessed for the violations alleged by EPA and HUD in this civil administrative proceeding.” Source: EPA Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, Paragraph 34, Docket No. TSCA-02-2025-9170
- NHA successfully argued it was too broke to pay a larger penalty. The $170,000 figure already reflects a downward adjustment from what could have been assessed per individual violation across dozens of apartments and dozens of work orders.
- The same financial difficulty NHA cited to reduce its fine exists alongside the years it spent not training workers and not disclosing hazards, both of which cost money to do correctly but less than the cumulative cost of lead remediation, litigation, and enforcement that follows negligence.
“EPA agrees to remit the entire penalty and issue a remittance notice upon Respondent’s completion, to EPA’s satisfaction… of the final quarterly report demonstrating compliance with the Lead Disclosure Rule and the Renovation, Repair and Painting Rule.” Source: Consent Agreement, Paragraph 66, Docket No. TSCA-02-2025-9170
- The $170,000 penalty can be reduced to zero. If NHA submits satisfactory compliance reports and education certifications, EPA forgives the entire fine. The monetary consequence for years of violations affecting dozens of households is contingent on future paperwork.
- This structure is standard in EPA administrative settlements, but it means accountability for past harm is traded for promises about future behavior. The residents who lived with undisclosed lead between 2020 and 2022 receive no compensation whatsoever from this order.
Societal Impact Mapping
Public Health
Lead exposure in children has no safe threshold, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Every documented violation in this order represents a household where the risk of exposure was elevated and unreported.
- Lead-based paint inspections from 1996 and 2018 confirmed the presence of lead on baseboards, ceilings, and walls in Hyatt Court and Pennington Court units. These are interior surfaces in living spaces where children spend the majority of their time.
- Between January 2020 and March 2022, new tenants were signed into at least 29 addresses across the two complexes without receiving required lead hazard disclosure. Any child under age six in those units entered a lead-risk environment without their family’s knowledge or consent.
- Renovation work disturbing painted surfaces was conducted without floor coverings, door seals, or work area signs. Renovation in lead-paint environments without containment generates lead dust that settles into carpets, furniture, and household surfaces, increasing ingestion risk for toddlers.
- Workers performing the renovations were themselves unprotected. The absence of certified supervision and proper containment procedures exposes maintenance staff to occupational lead hazards in addition to residents.
- Congress established the entire lead disclosure and renovation regulatory framework specifically because ingestion of lead-contaminated household dust is the most common cause of childhood lead poisoning in the United States. NHA’s violations removed every layer of protection from that framework for affected residents.
Economic Inequality
Public housing residents are among the most economically vulnerable people in their cities. They live in these buildings because the private market has priced them out. The lead exposure risk they carry from these violations is not shared equally across society.
- NHA’s 11 subject properties are pre-1978 housing stock. Residents who qualify for public housing in Newark are, by federal income definition, low-income. They face the greatest exposure to a preventable neurotoxin while having the fewest resources to address its health consequences.
- Lead-related cognitive and developmental harm in children translates directly into reduced educational outcomes and lifetime earning potential. A toxin concentrated in low-income housing creates an economic disadvantage that outlasts the childhood exposure itself by decades.
- The penalty structure rewards NHA’s financial hardship. NHA submitted financial difficulty documentation in October 2024, which EPA accepted as justification for the penalty size. The agency most responsible for the harm faced the least financial accountability because it claimed it could not afford to pay.
- Residents receive no compensation from this settlement. The consent order creates compliance obligations for NHA going forward but provides nothing retroactive for the families who lived in undisclosed lead-hazard units between 2020 and 2022. Economic harm from health impacts during that period falls entirely on the affected households.
- The $170,000 penalty can be fully remitted. If NHA files satisfactory quarterly reports, it pays nothing. For reference, a private slumlord charged with the same violations in the same jurisdiction would face penalties per individual violation across dozens of counts, with no institutional sympathy discount.
- NHA’s Bradley Court complex alone contains approximately 301 apartments in 10 buildings plus 18 single-family townhouses. The scale of NHA’s holdings means that systemic non-compliance affects a large number of low-income households simultaneously, with no individual tenant having the market power to demand better conditions or move elsewhere easily.
The “Cost of a Life” Metric
The civil penalty assessed against NHA for years of documented lead hazard violations affecting dozens of households is a number worth examining in context.
What Now? The Watchlist and Your Next Move
The consent order is now binding. The clock on every compliance deadline started September 29, 2025. These are the pressure points where accountability can be applied.
NHA Leadership on Record
- Leonard J. Spicer, Executive Director, Newark Housing Authority, 500 Broad Street, Newark, NJ 07102. Contact: lspicer@newarkha.org. He is the designated recipient for all compliance correspondence under this order.
- Emilia Perez, Esq., General Counsel, Newark Housing Authority. Contact: eperez@newarkha.org. She is co-designated for all legal compliance communications under the consent agreement.
- The final year-one certification of mitigation compliance must be signed by the Chief Executive Officer of NHA under penalty of perjury per Paragraph 63 of the order.
Regulatory Watchlist
- U.S. EPA Region 2: Primary enforcement authority. Contact point: Meghan LaReau (LaReau.Meghan@epa.gov) and Bruce Aber (Aber.Bruce@epa.gov). These are the EPA staff named in the order to receive all quarterly reports. They are the individuals who must approve or flag NHA’s compliance.
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD): Running a parallel consent agreement with NHA. HUD Office of Healthy Homes and Lead Hazard Control: Bruce Haber (Bruce.P.Haber@hud.gov). HUD has final approval authority over the Abatement Plan, Occupant Protection Plan, and Operations and Maintenance Plan.
- EPA National Lead Enforcement: TSCA Section 16 civil penalty authority. The EPA can initiate criminal investigation under 18 U.S.C. § 1001 if NHA is found to have submitted inaccurate certifications in its quarterly reports.
- State of New Jersey: NHA is formed under New Jersey law. New Jersey Department of Community Affairs and the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection hold concurrent jurisdiction over lead hazards in residential housing.
Key Compliance Deadlines to Watch
- Within 90 days of Sept. 29, 2025: NHA must complete 100% lead-based paint inspection of untested units at Hyatt Court and Pennington Court, and conduct inspections at the other 9 complexes. The first quarterly compliance report is also due. The first lessee education session and first worker training session must occur.
- Within 6 months of Sept. 29, 2025: NHA must submit an Abatement Plan for all properties found to contain lead-based paint. The plan must be prepared by a certified Lead Abatement Supervisor and approved by HUD before any work begins.
- Within 1 month of Abatement Plan approval: NHA must submit an Operations and Maintenance Plan for ongoing hazard control in all units where lead was found and not fully removed.
- Within 2 years of Abatement Plan approval: Full abatement work, including replacement of doors, door frames, windows, windowsills, baseboards, crown molding, and enclosure of walls and ceilings, must be completed across all subject properties.
- Within 1 year of Sept. 29, 2025: NHA’s CEO must certify in writing, under penalty of perjury, that all lessee education sessions, worker training sessions, and information distribution requirements have been completed.
Grassroots and Mutual Aid Action
- If you or someone you know lives in NHA properties, specifically Pennington Court, Hyatt Court, Bradley Court, Stephen Crane, Kretchmer, Seth Boyden, or Baxter developments, you have the right to attend the three lessee education sessions NHA is now required to hold. Show up. Bring your neighbors. Ask questions on the record.
- Request copies of the lead inspection reports for your specific unit. Under the Lead Disclosure Rule, NHA is now legally required to provide these. If they cannot or will not produce a report, that is itself a compliance issue reportable to EPA Region 2.
- Connect with tenant organizing groups in Newark. NHA’s compliance is now on a formal government-monitored timeline. Organized tenant pressure can enforce that timeline from the ground up. Groups like Ironbound Community Corporation and Greater Newark HUD Tenant Alliance have historically been active in local housing accountability campaigns.
- If a child in your household has been tested for blood lead levels and results were elevated, consult a legal aid attorney. The consent order does not prevent individual civil claims. EPA’s enforcement action is administrative; it does not preclude separate tort litigation by affected residents.
- Watch the quarterly reports. They will be submitted to the EPA and HUD staff named in this order. Public records requests (FOIA) can be filed with EPA Region 2 to obtain copies. If NHA’s self-reported compliance does not match conditions on the ground, that information is actionable.
The source document for this investigation is attached below.
You can see the above CAFO on the EPA’s website by visiting this following link: EPA Region 2 and Newark Housing Authority Consent Agreement signed by Respondent.pdf
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