Cambridge Community Development Department
Toni Snow
Program Manager
tsnow@cambridgema.gov
Phone: 617/349-6010
344 Broadway
Cambridge, MA 02139
Department Phone: 617/349-4600
Department TTY: 617/349-4621
Department FAX: 617/349-4669
Monday: 8:30 A. M. - 8:00 P. M.
T/W/Th: 8:30 A. M. - 5:00 P. M.
Friday: 8:30 A. M. - 12:00 P. M.
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Lead-Safe Cambridge

Lead-Safe Cambridge Program Receives HUD Grant Award

On November 8, 2007, representatives from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) awarded a lead hazard control grant in the amount of $770,000 to Lead-Safe Cambridge, a program of the Cambridge Community Development Department. The funding will enable the City to continue its valuable lead paint abatement and lead poisoning prevention program through September 2009.

Lead Contaminated Toy Recalls

See these important notices from the Consumer Products Salety Commission and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about the recall of Fisher-Price and Mattel toys contaminated with lead:

What is Lead-Safe Cambridge?

Lead-Safe Cambridge (LSC) is a program of the City of Cambridge Community Development Department. We are dedicated to providing deleading assistance and increasing awareness about the dangers posed by lead for children in the community of Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Click link toGo to information about the LSC Lead Paint Removal Program.

Click link toGo to information about the LSC Safer Soil Program.

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What is Lead? Why is it a Serious Problem?

Lead is a metal that historically was used in paint, gasoline, and plumbing. It is very dangerous for children under the age of six because lead is absorbed more readily into their blood and stored more easily in their bones and internal organs. It can damage the brain and other developing organs. Lead poisoned children can suffer from permanent learning disabilities, behavioral problems, hearing problems, developmental delays and other serious health conditions.

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How Do Children Get Exposed to Lead?

The most common source of childhood lead poisoning is ingestion (through normal hand-to-mouth behavior) of the fine dust that is created by deteriorating lead paint. Lead paint is common in homes built before it was banned for residential use in 1978. It becomes dangerous when it begins to chip and peel with age, or with wear and tear on lead painted friction surfaces. For example, children are often exposed by touching and ingesting fine lead dust produced from opening and closing lead painted windows and doors. Children certainly can become poisoned by eating paint chips or chewing directly on surfaces covered with lead-based paint, but this is not the most common source of exposure. Children can also be exposed to lead by playing in the soil around their homes. Lead is also released into the water from lead pipes or solder.

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What Can I Do to Prevent Lead Poisoning?

The best way to prevent lead paint poisoning is to ensure that lead paint is properly removed from your house or apartment by a certified lead paint abatement contractor. Removal of lead paint by an untrained person could result in toxic levels of lead dust in your home, which is extremely dangerous for children, pets, and adults. Here are a few simple things you can do for now:

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What is the Massachusetts Lead Law?

In accordance with Massachusetts law, any unit or single family home with an occupant who is less than six years old must be deleaded. The Massachusetts Department of Public Health Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program (CLPPP) defines deleading as the "removal or covering of lead violations." Not all lead paint must be removed or covered. After deleading is completed, homes are "lead-safe", not "lead-free."

Click link toSee the Massachusetts Department of Public Health Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program (CLPPP) web site for more specific information on the Lead Law.

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How Can Lead-Safe Cambridge Help?

LSC offers funding to assist private property owners in deleading their units. The program provides:

Property owners who participate in LSC's program are also eligible to receive funding through the Safer Soil Program to lessen lead hazards in their yards and gardens.

Click link toGo to information about the LSC Lead Paint Removal Program.

Click link toGo to information about the LSC Safer Soil Program.

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The Massachusetts Lead Paint Housing Registry

The Massachusetts Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program (CLPPP) maintains a registry of deleaded apartments and homes in Massachusetts. The purpose of the registry is to assist people in determining whether their home or prospective home has been deleaded.

To use the registry, select your city of choice from the drop down menu. Enter the street number and name to find a particular location.

Click link toGo to the Massachusetts Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Programs Lead Safe Homes Database.

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On Line Resources

Lead-Safe Cambridge maintains a list of on-line resources that provide information about lead programs in Massachusetts, federal resources, local resources and lead contamination in the garden.

Click link toGo to On-Line Lead Related Resources.

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For More Information

For more information about Lead-Safe Cambridge, please call the Lead Line at 617/349-LEAD (5323) or email Toni Snow, Program Manager, at tsnow@cambridgema.gov. The Community Development Department TTY line is 617/349-4621.

Click link toGo to Lead-Safe Cambridge Staff Contact List

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Click link toGo to Environmental and Transportation Planning Division

Click link toGo to Housing Division

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