For at least two decades, almost every time a child in its apartments tested positive for high lead levels, Nycha launched a counteroffensive, city records show. From 2010 through July of this year, the agency challenged 95 percent of the orders it received from the Health Department to remove lead detected in Nycha apartments.
Private landlords almost never contest a finding of lead; they did so in only 4 percent of the 5,000 orders they received over the same period, records show.
Nycha’s strategy often worked. The Health Department backed down in 158 of 211 cases in public housing after the authority challenged its finding, the data shows. A Health Department spokesman said that it rescinded its orders because it became convinced that its initial test was a false positive.
“I’m not sure how useful it is to spend all the time and resources going back and forth with testing when maybe we could spend the time and resources making sure the exposure is controlled,” said David Jacobs, who ran the lead poisoning prevention program at the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development from 1995 to 2004.
It is emblematic of disarray in the Housing Authority’s lead policy that stretches back decades, an examination by The Times found.
The Times interviewed more than 100 current and former top city and federal housing officials, maintenance workers, building managers, lead contractors, health experts and public housing residents and reviewed thousands of pages of documents and court records. Taken together, they reveal an agency that assumed lead was no longer a threat, despite not really knowing where it was.
After suing lead paint companies in 1989, the city spent years arguing in court that its public housing buildings were riddled with lead. But as the case wound down, the Housing Authority adopted the opposite position, routinely contesting findings of lead. By 2004, the authority decided that only 92 of its 325 developments contained lead and clung to that position.
It was apparently wrong.
The Gowanus Houses in Brooklyn are not on a list of buildings that the Housing Authority believes have lead. But lead has been found in its apartments at least twice, The Times found.CreditKholood Eid for The New York Times
Inspection failures
Soon after he took office in 2014, Mayor Bill de Blasio, a former regional director for HUD, signaled his support for the public housing system, modeling himself after former Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia, who oversaw the creation of the authority in the 1930s. Mr. de Blasio repeatedly visited the red brick developments in his first year, holding eight news conferences, and he put billions into capital projects, including new lighting and roofs.
Of all the problems afflicting Nycha, lead was thought to be somewhere toward the bottom of the list, former officials said.
Lead paint — which becomes dangerous when it peels into flakes or is ground into dust that people can ingest — was once a pernicious threat in homes, schools and factories all over the country. The substance affects children differently but can stunt growth and cause permanent cognitive and behavioral problems in developing brains.
It has been banned in New York City since 1960 and subject to a federal ban in 1978. Since then, cases of lead poisoning have dropped precipitously in the city and nationwide.
So the Housing Authority just stopped looking for it.
Lead came up in discussions at Gracie Mansion after the metal was found in the water supply in Flint, Mich., in 2015. The consensus among New York officials was that they did not have to worry about a lead problem in the Housing Authority, according to a person with direct knowledge of the conversations.
Word came in late 2015 to City Hall that the Housing Authority was the subject of a sprawling federal investigation that included lead paint.When the inquiry became public the following March, the de Blasio administration played down the problem, even as it began to learn of inspection failures, several former officials said. Administration officials were dismissive of stories about lead exposure that had appeared in The Daily News.
Not long afterward, public housing residents received letters from the authority requesting access for inspections. The authority did not want to create “a panic” among residents, two people with direct knowledge of the conversations said, so the letters said nothing about yearslong lapses in mandatory lead paint checks.
Some members of the authority’s own board were also not informed. “Maybe they just didn’t want us to know,” said Beatrice Byrd, a resident of the Red Hook Houses in Brooklyn and a board member at the time.
Anthony Marshall, who works for a private lead inspection contractor, waited outside an apartment in the Red Hook Houses in Brooklyn in September.CreditKholood Eid for The New York Times
Nycha, like all public housing that receives federal funds, must abide by myriad rules, and since 2000, one of those has been to look around older apartments every year to check for possible lead paint hazards, like peeling or flaking paint.
Once those are spotted, inspectors are supposed to conduct more sophisticated tests to determine whether lead is actually present.
In theory, the authority met that requirement by including those checks in its general apartment inspections, which happened annually until 2012. In reality, The Times found, looking for potential lead hazards was rarely part of the routine even before 2012, according to interviews with maintenance workers, residents and officials.
“We’re maintenance. We’re doing the inspections. We’re not mainly checking for lead,” said Tyree Haslip, a retired building superintendent who worked in the Queensbridge Houses. “The only thing we may mark down is if the paint is peeling off the walls or off the ceiling.”
That did not mean someone came to test or fix the potential hazard. Lead abatement teams worked mostly in buildings that Nycha believed to contain lead and usually only after a resident moved out, its workers said.
In the summer of 2012, the authority stopped making its annual maintenance rounds entirely, in response to a federal rule change.
The decision to stop those apartment inspections came under former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg. The authority was eager to direct its maintenance workers to conduct repairs rather than perform so many inspections, two former officials said, to clear a ballooning backlog of open work orders, often called tickets.
“There was such pressure to get tickets completed,” said Paul D’Ambrosi, a former paint inspector who retired in 2012.
Officials are still unsure when lead inspections were last done, The Times found.
Olivia Lapeyrolerie, a spokeswoman for Mr. de Blasio, said in response to questions from The Times that City Hall could not find evidence that inspections even before 2012 were in compliance with local and federal laws.
“At this point, we have no confidence in Nycha’s annual inspections that took place before our administration began,” Ms. Lapeyrolerie said in a statement.
The inspection failures began coming to light inside the authority in 2015, according to a report by the city Department of Investigation. By the time the de Blasio administration began quietly starting to check for lead paint hazards in 2016 and 2017, it had been years since anyone had done so.
The neglect showed.
In a two-month stretch at the end of 2017, contractors hired by the city visited 8,300 apartments and found potential lead paint hazards — peeling or flaking paint, or dust — in 80 percent of them, according to records produced as part of a lawsuit in state court.
The suit, filed by a tenant group, is one of several the authority currently faces over lead, including a state court suit by Mikaila’s mother, Shari Broomes, and a separate action in federal court by the families of dozens of children who have tested positive for lead in recent years.
“You all have Band-Aids that you put on everything in the projects, but you all could not put a Band-Aid on something that was harmful to my daughter?” Ms. Broomes said. “It didn’t come from me, it came from my place of dwelling, and I can’t help the fact that we live here.”