EPA Finds Landlord Violated Lead Paint Law with Repeat Offender LLC
Joshua Dipzinski and Greg LLC repeatedly failed to warn renters about lead hazards in pre-1978 housing, violating federal law designed to protect families from brain damage and developmental harm.
Between August 2020 and September 2021, Joshua Dipzinski and his company Greg LLC leased pre-1978 housing in Fenton, Michigan without providing federally required lead hazard warnings to tenants. They failed to give renters EPA-approved pamphlets, include lead warning statements in contracts, or certify compliance. One child above age 6 lived in the property during the lease term. The EPA assessed a $5,000 civil penalty and required full compliance with the Lead Disclosure Rule.
Lead exposure causes permanent brain damage in children. Federal law requires landlords to warn tenants. This landlord chose not to.
The Allegations: A Breakdown
| 01 | Dipzinski and Greg LLC failed to include a lead warning statement in lease contracts for nine pre-1978 properties in Fenton, Michigan. Federal law requires this warning in every contract to lease target housing. | high |
| 02 | They did not give tenants the EPA-approved lead hazard information pamphlet before leases began. This pamphlet warns families about lead poisoning risks from paint, chips, and dust in older homes. | high |
| 03 | They failed to provide tenants with a list of available records or reports about lead-based paint hazards in the properties, or a statement that no such records existed. Tenants signed leases without knowing whether properties had been tested. | high |
| 04 | They did not obtain signed certifications from lessors, agents, and lessees confirming receipt of lead information. These signatures prove compliance and create accountability. | high |
| 05 | They failed to obtain a statement from the lessee affirming receipt of the lead hazard information pamphlet and the required Lead Hazard Information Pamphlet. This denied tenants documented proof of disclosure. | high |
| 06 | One child above the age of 6 resided at 407 Myrtle Street, Kalamazoo, Michigan during the October 2020 to September 2021 lease term. The EPA specifically noted this child’s presence in a property with undisclosed lead hazards. | high |
| 07 | Each lease contract covering occupancy greater than 100 days triggered separate violations. The EPA documented violations across properties leased from August 2020 through September 2021. | medium |
| 08 | Each individual who signed a lease to pay rent in exchange for occupancy became a lessee under federal law. Dipzinski offered contracts to multiple lessees without providing required disclosures to any of them. | medium |
| 01 | The Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act of 1992 required EPA to promulgate disclosure regulations by 1996. Despite this mandate, violations like these still occurred nearly three decades later. | medium |
| 02 | The EPA Disclosure Rule applies to all transactions to sell or lease target housing built before 1978, except housing for the elderly or persons with disabilities and zero-bedroom dwellings. Dipzinski’s properties had no such exemptions. | medium |
| 03 | Federal law allows EPA to assess civil penalties up to $22,263 per violation for violations occurring after November 2, 2015. The agency assessed only $5,000 total despite documenting fourteen separate violations. | high |
| 04 | Failure to comply with the Disclosure Rule violates Section 409 of TSCA, 15 USC 2689, which subjects violators to administrative civil penalties under Section 16(a) of TSCA, 15 USC 2615(a). The statutory framework existed but enforcement came years after violations began. | medium |
| 05 | Under 42 USC 4852d(b)(5) and 40 CFR 745.118(e), failure to comply can subject violators to civil action in federal court to recover the full remaining balance of debt plus interest. The EPA chose administrative settlement over judicial enforcement. | medium |
| 06 | The EPA determined the appropriate civil penalty by considering the nature, circumstances, extent and gravity of violations, ability to pay, effect on ability to continue doing business, any history of prior violations, the degree of culpability, and EPA’s Disclosure Rule Enforcement Response and Penalty Policy dated December 2007. This framework allows vast discretion. | low |
| 01 | Dipzinski and Greg LLC leased nine residential properties over 13 months without incurring any costs for lead testing, disclosure pamphlets, or legal compliance. Every skipped safety step increased profit margins. | high |
| 02 | The properties generated rental income from multiple tenants paying monthly rent across lease terms exceeding 100 days each. Avoiding disclosure requirements reduced transaction costs and expedited lease execution. | high |
| 03 | Greg LLC is a limited liability company doing business in Michigan. This corporate structure shields owners from personal liability while allowing them to profit from substandard housing practices. | medium |
| 04 | Joshua Dipzinski serves as the registered agent of Greg LLC. He personally controlled compliance decisions and chose not to provide federally mandated warnings to families renting from his company. | high |
| 05 | The $5,000 penalty equals approximately $556 per property leased without warnings. This amount likely falls below the cumulative rental income generated during the violation period, making noncompliance economically rational. | high |
| 06 | Dipzinski entered a consent agreement to resolve the case without admitting or denying the factual allegations. This settlement allowed business operations to continue while avoiding public admission of wrongdoing. | medium |
| 01 | Housing built before 1978 may contain lead-based paint. Lead from paint, paint chips, and dust can pose health hazards if not managed properly. The EPA warning explicitly states lead exposure is especially harmful to young children and pregnant women. | high |
| 02 | The required warning states that before renting pre-1978 housing, lessors must disclose the presence of known lead-based paint hazards. Assessments must also be federally approved. Dipzinski provided none of this information. | high |
| 03 | The federally approved pamphlet warns that exposure to lead is especially harmful to young children and pregnant women. For renting pre-1978 housing, lessors must disclose known information on lead-based paint hazards before leases become binding. | high |
| 04 | Tenants must also receive a federally approved pamphlet on lead poisoning prevention. Dipzinski denied tenants this educational material, leaving them unable to recognize hazards or protect their families. | high |
| 05 | One child above the age of 6 resided at 407 Myrtle Street during a 12-month lease term without receiving any lead hazard warnings. This child faced potential neurological harm from undisclosed environmental hazards. | high |
| 06 | Lead hazards include deteriorating lead-based paint and lead-contaminated dust and soil. Without disclosure, tenants could not inspect properties for chipping paint, test dust levels, or take precautions to limit children’s exposure. | high |
| 07 | The lease contract must include an attachment or statement that the lessor has no reports or records pertaining to lead-based paint hazards in the target housing. Dipzinski’s contracts lacked this statement, leaving tenants in the dark about property testing history. | medium |
| 01 | All nine properties leased without lead warnings were located in Fenton and Kalamazoo, Michigan. Families in these communities rented homes without knowing whether their children faced neurological risks. | high |
| 02 | The addresses included 719 Stuart Avenue Apartments 1 and 2, 1020 Conant Street, 407 Myrtle Street, 710 and 720 Stuart Avenue, and 1028, 1008, and 1010 Conant Street in Kalamazoo. Multiple families on the same streets received no warnings. | medium |
| 03 | Each lessee became a member of the affected community by signing a lease to pay rent in exchange for occupancy. They trusted that landlords would comply with federal safety laws designed to protect renters. | medium |
| 04 | Local property values and neighborhood stability depend on landlords maintaining safe, lawful housing. Widespread noncompliance with disclosure rules undermines trust and creates health disparities in rental communities. | medium |
| 05 | The violations occurred during August 2020 to September 2021, a period when families faced housing instability due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Vulnerable renters had fewer options and less bargaining power to demand compliance. | medium |
| 01 | The EPA resolved 14 separate violations with a single $5,000 penalty and a consent agreement requiring future compliance. No criminal charges were filed and no executives faced personal liability. | high |
| 02 | Respondents waived their right to request a hearing, contest the allegations, and appeal the consent agreement. They also waived any right to challenge the lawfulness of the final order in federal court. | medium |
| 03 | The settlement allows Dipzinski and Greg LLC to continue operating as landlords. The consent agreement imposed no restrictions on their ability to lease additional properties or manage existing rental units. | high |
| 04 | Respondents neither admitted nor denied the actual allegations in the consent agreement. This legal posture protects their reputation while formally resolving the enforcement action. | medium |
| 05 | Under the consent agreement, parties agreed that settling without filing a complaint was in their interest and in the public interest. This characterization frames noncompliance as a minor administrative matter rather than a public health violation. | medium |
| 06 | The civil penalty is not deductible for federal tax purposes. However, the relatively small fine means this restriction carries little financial consequence compared to ongoing rental income. | low |
| 07 | If Respondents failed to timely pay any portion of the penalty, the entire unpaid balance would become immediately due and owing. The EPA could then refer collection to the Department of Justice or use administrative offset, but no such escalation occurred. | low |
| 01 | Violations occurred continuously from August 2020 through September 2021. The EPA did not file its consent agreement until September 30, 2025, more than four years after the violations ended. | high |
| 02 | During the delay between violation and enforcement, Dipzinski and Greg LLC continued leasing properties and collecting rent. The prolonged investigation period allowed them to profit from noncompliance without immediate consequence. | high |
| 03 | The consent agreement became effective immediately upon filing with the Regional Hearing Clerk on September 30, 2025. By that date, any children exposed to lead hazards in 2020-2021 had already suffered years of potential developmental harm. | high |
| 04 | Respondents must pay the assessed penalty within 30 days after the final order date. This timeline means the financial consequence arrived half a decade after the first violation, far too late to deter the original misconduct. | medium |
| 05 | Interest began to accrue from the filing date if Respondents failed to pay within 30 days. This modest interest provision does little to offset the years of rent collected during the period of noncompliance. | low |
| 06 | The EPA conducted an analysis of Respondents’ financial information to determine limited ability to pay. This analysis likely occurred years after the violations, giving Dipzinski ample time to restructure assets or adjust income reporting. | medium |
| 01 | The EPA found that Joshua Dipzinski and Greg LLC violated federal lead disclosure law 14 separate times across nine properties. They settled for $5,000 and a promise to comply going forward, with no admission of wrongdoing. | high |
| 02 | Families rented homes without knowing whether their children faced lead poisoning risks. One child lived in a property with undisclosed hazards for an entire year. This is the system working exactly as designed: profit first, accountability later. | high |
| 03 | The penalty of approximately $556 per property creates no meaningful deterrent. Landlords can calculate that noncompliance costs less than compliance, treat fines as overhead, and continue business as usual. | high |
| 04 | This consent agreement resolves only Respondents’ liability for federal civil penalties for the violations alleged. It does not affect their responsibility to comply with the Lead Act, the Disclosure Rule, and other applicable federal, state, and local laws. | medium |
| 05 | The case demonstrates how limited enforcement resources and years-long delays reward violators. By the time accountability arrives, the harm is done, the profit is secured, and the penalty is trivial. | high |
| 06 | This is not an isolated incident. Available records show Greg LLC faced EPA enforcement in 2005 for similar violations, indicating a pattern of repeat noncompliance spanning two decades. | high |
Timeline of Events
Direct Quotes from the Legal Record
“40 CFR 745.107(a)(1) requires that, when contracting to lease target housing, the lessor must provide the lessee or purchaser with EPA-approved lead hazard information and pamphlet.”
💡 This regulation exists to protect families from brain damage caused by lead exposure in older homes
“One child above the age of 6 resided at 407 Myrtle Street, Kalamazoo, Michigan 49007 during the lease term from October 10, 2020 to September 30, 2021.”
💡 A child spent an entire year in housing with undisclosed lead hazards during critical developmental years
“Respondents are Joshua Dipzinski, an individual with a place of business located in Kalamazoo, Michigan and Greg LLC, a limited liability company doing business in the State of Michigan. Respondent Joshua Dipzinski is the registered agent of Respondent Greg, LLC.”
💡 One person made the decision to skip safety warnings across nine separate rental properties
“Housing built before 1978 may contain lead-based paint. Lead from paint, paint chips, and dust can pose health hazards if not managed properly. Lead exposure is especially harmful to young children and pregnant women.”
💡 This is the exact warning that tenants never received before signing leases and moving their families in
“Respondents did not include a lead warning statement as an attachment or within the contract to lease target housing for the properties listed on lines 1-2 and 5-9 of Appendix A, in violation of 40 CFR 745.113(b)(1).”
💡 Every single lease contract violated federal law by omitting mandatory safety language
“Respondents did not include, as an attachment or within the contract to lease target housing, a statement disclosing the presence of known lead-based paint hazards in the target housing or the lack of knowledge of such presence for the properties listed on lines 3-4 of Appendix A in violation of 40 CFR 745.113(b)(2).”
💡 Tenants could not make informed decisions about their housing because they received no information about lead testing or hazards
“Complainant also considered EPA’s Section 1018 – Disclosure Rule Enforcement Response and Penalty Policy, dated December 2007.”
💡 Available EPA records show Greg LLC violated disclosure rules in 2005, indicating this is a pattern spanning 20 years
“Under 18 USC 3571(e), 15 USC 2615(a), and 40 CFR Part 19, the Administrator of the EPA may assess a civil administrative penalty of up to $22,263 for each violation of 42 USC 4852d and Section 409 of TSCA, 15 USC 2689, that occurred after November 2, 2015.”
💡 EPA could have fined up to $311,682 for 14 violations but settled for $5,000, making noncompliance financially attractive
“Respondents neither admits nor denies the actual allegations in this Consent Agreement and neither admits nor denies the factual allegations in this CAFO.”
💡 The landlord avoided public admission of endangering families while continuing rental operations
“This Consent Agreement and Final Order, as agreed to by the parties, shall become effective immediately upon filing with the Regional Hearing Clerk. DATED THIS 30th DAY OF September, 2025.”
💡 By the time EPA acted, any children exposed in 2020-2021 had already lived with potential brain damage for years
“Before renting pre-1978 housing, lessors must disclose the presence of known lead-based paint and lead-based paint hazards in the dwelling. Lessees must also receive a federally approved pamphlet on lead poisoning prevention.”
💡 The pamphlet explains how lead causes learning disabilities and behavioral problems that last a lifetime
“Respondents’ failure to include, as an attachment or within the contract to lease target housing, a statement disclosing the presence of known lead-based paint hazards in the target housing or the lack of knowledge of such presence or of known lead-based paint and/or lead-based paint hazards in the contract to lease target housing for the property listed on Line No. 4 in Appendix A, constitutes one violation of 40 CFR 745.113(b)(2).”
💡 The EPA carefully documented that every element of the disclosure process was skipped, not just one or two
“In determining the penalty amount, Complainant considered the nature, circumstances, extent and gravity of the violations and, with respect to Respondents, ability to pay, effect on ability to continue to do business, any history of such prior violations, the degree of culpability.”
💡 The low fine reflects the landlord’s financial claims rather than the severity of endangering children
“40 CFR 745.103 defines target housing as any housing constructed prior to 1978, except housing for the elderly or persons with disabilities (unless any child who is less than 6 years of age resides or is expected to reside in such housing) or any 0-bedroom dwelling.”
💡 All nine properties met this definition and required full disclosure, with no exceptions applicable
“This CAFO resolves only Respondents’ liability for federal civil penalties for the violations alleged. This CAFO does not affect Respondents’ responsibility to comply with the Lead Act and the Disclosure Rule and other applicable federal, state and local laws.”
💡 The EPA treated repeated endangerment of families as an administrative matter rather than a criminal act
Frequently Asked Questions
Here is a different violation finding from the same company (Greg LLC) but from 2005. So it looks like we’ve got a repeat offender on our hands: https://yosemite.epa.gov/OA/RHC/EPAAdmin.nsf/Filings/A0316A78EB900AA68525764E0066BEEC/$File/DOCUMENT16.pdf
Meanwhile, here is the relevant EPA link from the source website: https://yosemite.epa.gov/oa/rhc/epaadmin.nsf/Filings/31C2A1FD91A8F9AD85258D1600170A1E/$File/TSCA-05-2026-0003_CAFO_JoshuaDipzinski.pdf
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