EPA Fines Yet *Another* Company $40,000 For Failing to Hand Out Lead-paint Brochure (again).

An EPA press release (3/31/2011) proclaims that they’ve successfully put a hurting on yet another small business, and this one’s in the Midwest.

They’ve inflicted a $40,000+ fine on a Kansas-based construction company for the unspeakably horrific crime of…

“Failure to hand out a governmental brochure to potential customers.”

Good for the EPA. We’ve got way too many small businesses in the Midwest. We don’t need any more employers out in “The Rust Belt” anyway. Those entrepreneurial types who put their own venture capital into businesses and create new jobs need to be closed down and they deserve to suffer heavy penalties, and the EPA is just the agency to do it.

With a few more successes like this, the EPA will soon be completely triumphant in fulfilling their stated purpose: The full-scale ruination of America’s independent contractors, and – as a bonus – the unintended consequence of destroying the value of America’s pre-1978 housing stock.

This one is especially interesting, because the EPA forced the contractor to replace 73 windows at “three group home facilities operated by a non-profit organization.”

Gosh, looks like the EPA found a way to get some free windows for their favorite charity!

Meanwhile, BP hasn’t paid a penny for destroying the Gulf of Mexico. Why beat up one big corporation when there are so many small business that can be eviscerated so easily?

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

(Kansas City, Kan., March 31, 2011) – Window World of St. Louis, Inc., has agreed to pay a $19,529 civil penalty to the United States to settle allegations that it failed to notify owners and occupants of at least 20 St. Louis area residential properties built before 1978 of lead-based paint risks prior to performing renovation work at those locations.

According to an administrative consent agreement filed by EPA Region 7 in Kansas City, Kan., the window replacement company, located in Maryland Heights, Mo., was legally required to provide owners and residents of the properties with an EPA-approved lead hazard information pamphlet before starting renovations at the properties.

Provision of the lead hazard information pamphlet to property owners and occupants is one requirement of the Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act, which Congress passed in 1992 as an amendment of the federal Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).

The regulation is intended to protect owners and occupants of residential properties, child care facilities and schools built before 1978 from health risks associated with lead-based paint. Lead-based paint was banned for residential use in the United States in 1978. Most homes built before 1978 contain some amount of lead-based paint, and subsequent renovation activity of such properties can cause occupants to be exposed to dust, chips and debris that contain lead.

The Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act requires renovators of such properties to obtain certified training, follow safe work practices, and take specific steps to make owners and occupants aware of health risks associated with lead exposure before renovation work occurs.

As part of its settlement with EPA, and in addition to paying the $19,529 civil penalty, Window World of St. Louis has agreed to perform a supplemental environmental project, through which it will spend an estimated $20,048 to replace a total of 73 old windows contaminated with lead paint at three group home facilities operated by the non-profit social services organization Youth in Need. Those facilities are located at 1420 N. 3rd Street, 516 Jefferson Street, and 529 Jefferson Street, in St. Charles, Mo.

Advance copy of a new promotional campaign by the EPA

Advance copy of a new promotional campaign by the EPA

To read another article about the EPA’s insanity, click here.

To go back to reading happy, happy articles about Sears Homes, click here.

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2 Comments

  1. Michelle

    Boy isn’t the EPA great? On top of this they are busy raising the acceptable levels of radiation poisoning to 25,000 the current acceptable levels! Isn’t this a great free country where the government is always on your side, helping you to die faster and poorer?

  2. Sears Homes

    @Michelle
    That’s an excellent point, and one I’d not thought about but you’re right. What’s a little radiation between friends? Meanwhile, let’s destroy any small business that doesn’t hand out our spiffy little brochures. Thanks for your note.