Poison for Profit in Denver
A Neighborhood Contaminated
In the quiet residential streets of Denver, Colorado, a renovation project became a public health hazard. In June 2022, Armendariz, LLC, a company owned and managed by Felix Erick Humberto Armendariz, was hired to renovate a home at 1345 Gaylord Street. The house was built in 1918, making it “target housing”—a legal term for homes likely to contain lead-based paint, a potent neurotoxin.
The law is clear. Any firm paid to disturb paint in such a home must follow strict federal safety rules to prevent lead poisoning. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Armendariz, LLC followed almost none of them. An EPA inspector arrived at the site on June 1, 2022, and what they found prompted a formal complaint and a proposed penalty of nearly fifty thousand dollars.
The Non-Financial Ledger
The real cost of this negligence is not measured in dollars. It’s measured in the potential for irreversible brain damage in children. Congress passed the Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act in 1992 for a reason. The government itself found that “low-level lead poisoning is widespread among American children” and that the “ingestion of lead from deteriorated or abraded lead-based paint is the most common cause of lead poisoning in children.”
“…the ingestion of lead from deteriorated or abraded lead-based paint is the most common cause of lead poisoning in children.”
When a company like Armendariz, LLC scrapes old paint and lets the toxic chips scatter across porches, yards, and parking lots, they are creating invisible traps. A child picks up a toy, puts their hands in their mouth, and the poison enters their system. The damage is silent and permanent. This is the “non-financial” cost of a business cutting corners on safety: the stolen potential of a child’s future.
Legal Receipts
The EPA’s complaint, Docket No. TSCA-08-2024-0002, lays out the violations in cold, legal language. Here are the core charges directly from the government’s files.
Count One: Failure to Obtain Firm Certification
“At no time before or during the Gaylord Renovation had Armendariz LLC obtained initial EPA-certification as a firm under 40 C.F.R. § 745.89(a).”
This is the foundational failure. The company was operating illegally from the start, without the basic credentials required to handle a known hazardous substance.
Count Two: Failure to Use a Certified Renovator
“At no time during the Gaylord Renovation was any person performing the renovation activities either a certified renovator or trained by a certified renovator, nor was a certified renovator assigned to the Gaylord Renovation…”
The company sent untrained workers to handle a toxic material. This put the workers, the homeowners, and the entire neighborhood at risk. Certified renovators are trained in how to work safely and contain the poison. Armendariz, LLC skipped this critical protection.
Count Three: Failure to Contain Waste
“During the Gaylord Renovation, Respondent failed to contain dust and debris from renovation activities. The EPA inspector observed uncontained waste, including paint chips scattered around the Property.”
This is the most visceral failure. The company physically spread poison into the community. The EPA’s complaint specifies they were “littering lead paint chips across the front porch of the Property, the neighboring property, and the parking lot behind the Property.” This is not an accident; it is a direct consequence of ignoring safety laws designed to prevent this exact scenario.
Societal Impact Mapping
Environmental Degradation
Lead does not biodegrade. The paint chips littered around the Gaylord Street property seep into the soil and can be washed into storm drains, contaminating the local ecosystem indefinitely. This is a permanent poisoning of a shared public space for private profit.
Public Health
The EPA classifies the failure to contain waste as a “high probability” risk to human health. The agency’s penalty policy states this failure “presents a high probability that occupants of residential units in target housing will be exposed to lead during and/or after the renovation.” The company’s actions created a direct threat to public health.
Economic Inequality
Lead safety rules cost money. They require certification, training, and proper equipment. Armendariz, LLC chose to increase its profit margin by externalizing these costs onto the public. The community now bears the health risks and the environmental cleanup burden, while the company pockets the savings. This is a classic case of privatizing profits and socializing costs.
What Now?
Accountability starts with knowing who is responsible. These are the individuals and agencies on the record.
- Leadership on Notice: Felix Erick Humberto Armendariz (Owner and Manager)
- Corporate Entity: Armendariz, LLC (Brighton, Colorado)
- Regulatory Watchlist: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Region 8
The Resistance
This case is a reminder that the system often only acts when it’s forced to. An EPA inspector’s visit is what brought this to light. For every contractor caught, many more are not.
Real change comes from the ground up:
- Mutual Aid: Share information with your neighbors, especially in older buildings, about the dangers of lead paint and their rights as tenants and homeowners. Create community resources to vet local contractors.
- Local Organizing: Demand that local code enforcement and health departments are fully funded and actively inspecting renovation sites. Support tenant unions that fight for safe and healthy housing.
- Know Your Rights: If you live in a pre-1978 home, any contractor you hire for renovation MUST be EPA lead-safe certified. Ask to see their certificate. If they can’t produce it, report them to the EPA. You have the power to protect your family and your community.
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