Kan. Admin. Regs. § 28-72-1l - Definitions
In addition to the definitions in K.S.A. 65-1,201 and amendments thereto, each of the following terms shall have the meaning assigned in this regulation:
(a) "Large-scale abatement project" means
lead abatement for 10 or more residential dwellings or multifamily dwellings
for 10 or more units.
(b) "Lead
abatement" means any repair or maintenance activity or set of activities
designed to last at least 20 years or to permanently eliminate lead-based paint
hazards in a residential dwelling, child-occupied facility, or other structure
designated by the secretary.
(1) Lead
abatement shall include the following:
(A) The
removal of lead-based paint and lead contaminated dust, the permanent enclosure
or encapsulation of lead-based paint, the replacement of lead-painted surfaces
or fixtures, and the removal or covering of lead-contaminated soil;
(B) all preparation, cleanup, disposal, and
postabate-ment clearance testing activities associated with these
measures;
(C) any project for which
there is a written contract or other documentation requiring an individual,
firm, or other entity to conduct activities in any structure that are designed
to permanently eliminate lead hazards;
(D) any project resulting in the permanent
elimination of lead hazards that is conducted by lead activity firms;
and
(E) any project resulting in
the permanent elimination of lead hazards that is conducted in response to a
lead hazard control order.
(2)
(A)
Lead abatement shall not include renovation, remodeling, landscaping, and other
activities if these activities are not designed to permanently eliminate lead
hazards, but are designed to repair, restore, or remodel a given structure or
dwelling, even though these activities could incidentally result in a reduction
or an elimination of lead hazards.
(B) Lead abatement shall not include
operations and maintenance activities, and other measures and activities
designed to temporarily, but not permanently, reduce lead-based paint
hazards.
(c)
"Lead abatement supervisor" means an individual certified by the secretary to
perform lead hazard control activities and to prepare occupant protection plans
and abatement reports. Each applicant for a lead abatement supervisor shall
meet all of the requirements specified in K.A.R. 28-72-8.
(d) "Lead abatement worker" means an
individual certified by the secretary and meeting all of the requirements
specified in K.A.R. 28-72-7.
(e)
"Lead activity firm" means an individual or entity that meets all the
requirements listed in K.A.R. 28-72-10.
(f) "Lead-based paint hazard" means any
condition that causes exposure to lead from lead-contaminated dust,
lead-contaminated soil, or lead-based paint that is deteriorated or present in
accessible surfaces, friction surfaces, or impact surfaces and that would
result in adverse human health effects.
(g) "Lead-based paint inspection" means any
effort to identify lead concentrations in surface coatings by means of a
surface-by-surface investigation and the provision of a written report
explaining the results of the investigation. The inspection shall not include
any attempt to determine lead concentrations in soil, water, or dust.
(h) "Lead-based paint inspector" means an
individual certified by the secretary to perform any efforts to identify lead
concentrations in surface coatings by means of a surface-by-surface
investigation. Each applicant for a lead-based paint inspector shall meet all
of the requirements specified in K.A.R. 28-72-5.
(i) "Lead-contaminated dust" means surface
dust in residential dwellings or child-occupied facilities that contains 40
micrograms per square foot or more on uncar-peted floors, 250 micrograms per
square foot or more on windowsills, and 400 micrograms per square foot or more
on window troughs or any other surface dust levels evidenced by research and
determined by the secretary as contaminated.
(j) "Lead-contaminated soil" means bare soil
on residential real property and on the property of a child-occupied facility
that contains lead in excess of 400 parts per million for areas where child
contact is likely and in excess of 1,200 parts per million in the rest of the
yard, or any other lead in soil levels evidenced by research and determined by
the secretary as contaminated.
(k)
"Lead hazard" means any lead source that is readily accessible to humans in,
on, or adjacent to a residential property, including paint, as defined in these
regulations, in any condition, contaminated soils, dust, or any other item that
contains lead in any amount and has been identified through an environmental
investigation or risk assessment as a source of lead that could contribute to
the lead poisoning of an individual.
(l) "Lead hazard control" means any activity
implemented to control known or assumed lead hazards on or in any structure
covered by this act. All implemented lead hazard control activities, at a
minimum, shall utilize lead-safe work practices and shall be subject to work
practice inspections by the KDHE.
(m) "Lead hazard control notice" means the
written notification to compel the owner of a child-occupied facility that has
been identified by the secretary as the major contributing cause of poisoning
an EBL child to eliminate or remediate the lead hazards to make the
child-occupied facility safe from continued exposure to lead hazards.
(n) "Lead hazard screen" means a limited risk
assessment activity that involves limited deteriorated paint and dust sampling
as described in K.A.R. 28-72-13 and K.A.R. 28-72-15 . In target housing or a
child occupied facility, at least two samples shall be taken from the floors
and at least one sample shall be taken from the windows in all of the rooms
where one or more children could have access. Additionally, in multifamily
dwellings and child-occupied facilities, dust samples shall be taken from any
common areas where one or more children have access.
(o) "Lead inspector" means an individual
certified by the secretary to perform a surface-by-surface investigation on a
structure to determine the presence of lead-based paint and provide a written
report explaining the results of the investigation as specified in K.A.R.
28-72-14.
(p) "Lead-safe work
practices" means work practices standards established to work safely with
lead-based surface coatings as presented in the joint EPA-HUD curriculum titled
"lead safety for remodeling, repair, & painting," excluding the appendices,
dated June 2003 and hereby adopted by reference, or an equivalent
KDHE-ap-proved curriculum.
(q)
"Living area" means any area or room equivalent, as defined in the HUD
"guidelines for the evaluation and control of lead-based paint hazards in
housing," which is adopted by reference in K.A.R. 28-72-13 . This term shall
include any porch of a residential dwelling used by at least one child who is
six years of age and under or by a woman of childbearing age.
(r) "Local government" means a county, city,
town, district, association, or other public body, including an agency
comprised of two or more of these entities, created under state law.
Notes
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