Healthy Homes Coalition
LandlordsHomeownersCommunity

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention accepted the recommendations of a Scientific Advisory Board to lower the level of concern for childhood lead poisoning on May 16, 2012. The new reference value, which is based on population blood lead levels, would focus action on those children with the highest blood lead levels (i.e. those above the 97.5th percentile).  Currently, that reference value would set the level of concern at 5.0 ug/dL.

The Healthy Homes Coalition is taking applications for a full-time Outreach Worker position to begin early summer 2012.

In September 2011, a Scientific Advisory Board convened by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency reviewed the evidence to determine if there would be any health benefits to the residents when a municipality replaces old, leaded water service lines to individual homes. What they discovered was counterintuitive. In brief, when only part of a lead service line is replaced, the evidence more often than not suggests that there may be a short term increase in the amount of lead in drinking water.

What does this mean for Grand Rapids?

Get the Lead Out! partners were notified on March 23, 2012 that the City of Grand Rapids has been awarded nearly $2.5 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to re-start the wildly successful Get the Lead Out! Home Repair program.

"A ten-month old baby is at the DeVos Children’s Hospital after a severe case of lead poisoning that was discovered last week in Grand Rapids, " according to FOX-17 reporter Carl Apple.  The Healthy Homes Coalition worked with Carl to get this story out, hoping to alert the community to the fact that lead poisoning is still a very real and present danger in Grand Rapids.



For Homeowners 2012

On March 23, 2012, the City of Grand Rapids and program partners were informed that Grand Rapids will be receiving renewal funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to continue the Get the Lead Out! Program.  It is anticipated that the program will be restarting in late spring or early summer of 2012.

In the meantime, there are many resources available in West Michigan for homeowners looking to repair pre-1978 homes. If you are a homeowner looking to repair your own, pre-1978 home, even if your project isn't centered around repairing paint, and you disturb paint in any project, you must work lead-safe to protect children from irreversible lead poisoning. If you decide to hire contractors to complete the work, the contractors must be certified under the Environmental Protection Agency's Renovation Repair and Painting Rule.

Please visit the Homeowner Resources to view or download our Pre-1978 Home Repair Guide Booklet for additional options and resources, and follow links below for a do-it-yourself video and field guide with instructions on how to work lead-safe.

HUD's Lead Paint Safety Field Guide for Painting, Home Maintenance, and Renovation Work

Don't Spread Lead Video Part 1/2

Don't Spread Lead Video Part 2/2

Support Healthy Homes Coalition

Making sure children grow up in homes that are healthy and safe is everyone’s job!  The Healthy Homes Coalition is a tax-exempt, 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Learn more about specific ways you can help protect children. Connect with us today!