A bill to help tackle household lead hazards in New Hampshire passed the House with overwhelming support Wednesday in a 266-87 vote that brings a yearlong process near to a close.
Senate Bill 247 would establish universal blood testing for 1- and 2-year-olds, mandating that all providers offer the tests to parents. The bill would also broaden the requirements for landlords to carry out repairs on houses that have lead hazards that may harm children. Lead paint โ which was banned in 1978 โ contains neurotoxins that can cause developmental problems for children who ingest it; New Hampshire has a high proportion of older homes that may contain paint hazards.
The Houseโs version of the bill will now head back to the Senate for review.
In a statement praising the vote, Tom Irwin, director of the New Hampshire office of the Conservation Law Foundation, said that lead poisoning disproportionately affects low-income families who have fewer affordable choices for housing, and he said lead hazards are a โbarrier for families trying to break the cycle of poverty.โ
โToday, the House took an important step towards better protecting New Hampshireโs children and families,โ Irwin said.
Some landlord groups were less ecstatic. Gerry OโConnell, president of the New Hampshire Association of Realtors, said that while the group applauds the overall effort, it has concerns with a change to the funding structure to help landlords remove the lead hazards. The Senate version included a $6 million grant program; the House turned that into a guaranteed loan program. OโConnell said that change could make the repairs costlier for landlords, which could be passed on to tenants.
โWhile the finish line is in sight, we hope the Senate takes its time to ensure the intent behind the bill is fulfilled and that tenants are protected from not only lead paint hazards, but rising rental costs as well,โ OโConnell said in a statement.
But legislators who had stuck with the billโs negotiations from the start said they were pleased with its passage in the Senate.
โThis is a bipartisan, bicameral priority to finally deal in a comprehensive and significant way with the problem of both childhood lead poisoning from both paint and from water,โ said Sen. Dan Feltes, who sponsored the bill from the start.
Gov. Chris Sununu also lauded the bill, urging the Senate in a statement to โwork with the House to get this measure on my desk.โ
(Ethan DeWitt can be reached at edewitt@cmonitor.com, or on Twitter at @edewittNH.)
