New numbers show the New York City Housing Authority has a high rate of challenging orders to fix lead paint problems.

Statistics that the city health department released Sunday evening show that the housing authority, NYCHA, has challenged more than 95 percent of those orders from the health department.

Between 2010 and this year, the city health department instructed NYCHA to remove lead paint hazards 221 times.

The housing authority challenged 211 of those and the health department withdrew 158.

The counts provided below include contestation related to all DOHMH-issued orders to abate/remediate lead paint hazards, and is not limited to orders issued for addresses for children with blood lead levels of 10 mcg/dL or greater

                     
 

NYCHA

Private Building Owners

 

DOHMH Orders Issued

Contestations Received

DOHMH Contestation Decision

DOHMH Orders Issued

Contestations Received

DOHMH Contestation Decision

Year

Granted - Order Withdrawn

Denied in Part

Denied in Whole

Granted - Order Withdrawn

Denied in Part

Denied in Whole

2010

36

35

29

2

4

843

25

4

1

20

2011

25

24

22

2

0

729

15

7

0

8

2012

21

21

17

4

0

620

14

5

5

4

2013

17

17

10

5

2

611

19

7

6

6

2014

12

11

9

2

0

593

27

10

10

7

2015

16

15

11

4

0

464

24

15

4

5

2016

34

32

29

3

0

417

32

19

5

8

2017

30

28

19

7

2

385

15

7

4

4

2018

30

28*

12

3

12

274

5*

1

1

2

                     

* Decision pending

             

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                       

 

Chart source: New York City Department of Health

 

The health department says it will test about 130,000 apartments for lead.

Earlier this year, statistics from the city showed that more than 1,300 children living in public housing had been poisoned by lead paint since 2012.

This comes after a federal judge last Wednesday rejected a $2 billion settlement agreement between the U.S. attorney's office and the city's public housing authority, saying it does not go nearly far enough to protect the more than 400,000 New Yorkers who live in public housing.

It is estimated that $32 billion is needed to fix the problems plaguing the city's public housing system.