Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 63A— - RESIDENTIAL LEAD-BASED PAINT HAZARD REDUCTION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - LEAD-BASED PAINT HAZARD REDUCTION › § 4852
The Secretary can give grants to states and local governments to find and fix lead paint dangers in private housing that is not public, federally owned, or federally assisted. To apply, the state or local government must have an approved housing plan. For rental housing, at least 50% of the helped units must go to families earning 50% or less of the area median income, and the rest to families earning 80% or less, with priority to families who have a child under six for at least 3 years after work is done (buildings with five or more units may have up to 20% of units rented to higher-income families). For owner-occupied homes, helped units must be the main home of families earning 80% or less of area median income, and at least 90% of those homes must have a child under six living there or visiting often. Round II grantees may use funds for priority housing even if these limits would otherwise apply. Applicants must send the part of their housing plan the Secretary requires and explain how much money they want, what they will do with it, how money will be given to owners or residents, and show they can run the program. Grants are chosen by how well they protect children under six, how bad the lead problem is, how well the applicant can add other funds, and the applicant’s ability to do the work. Grants can pay for inspections, risk assessments, temporary fixes, full removal of lead hazards, extra costs for safe renovations, certified contractors, worker blood-lead monitoring, temporary relocation, public education, post-work testing, and other approved activities. Recipients must match at least 10% of the grant, may not use more than 10% for admin, must keep financial records and report yearly on work done, and cannot replace existing state or local funds. The Secretary must announce funding availability within 120 days after money is appropriated. Training grants of up to $200,000 were allowed in 1993–1994, with $3,000,000 set aside each year. The law authorized $125,000,000 for fiscal year 1993 and $250,000,000 for fiscal year 1994.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 4852
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73