Correction
In the December 2001 Tenant/Inquilino,
an article we reprinted from City Limits Weekly, "State Court Paints New Face
on Lead-Poisoning Cases," incorrectly quoted Matthew Chachere, an attorney representing
lead-poisoned children in a class-action suit challenging New York City’s failure
to enforce its lead-paint laws. The article quoted Chachere as saying that the
city’s 1999 lead law "requires that parents explicitly inform the building owner
within a month after moving in that a child is living in the apartment. Chachere
and others say this places too much burden on the parents."
"I have never complained
about the requirement that parents inform owners about the presence of children,"
Chachere says. "What I did say was entirely different: That Local Law 38 basically
exempts landlords from responsibility for lead hazards unless tenants complain
about them, and that this shifting of the burden of knowledge of lead hazard
from landlords to tenants is unfair." Tenant/Inquilino regrets the error.
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