EPA Lead Paint Certification

Thursday, January 24, 2013

EPA lead paint certification – Lead renovator training




EPA Lead Certified - Lead Safety Certification Training Classes


Friday, February 1st
8am to 5pm
Universities at Shady Grove
9630 Gudelsky Drive
Rockville, MD 20850
Saturday, February 2nd
8am to 5pm
6 Hale Avenue
White Plains, NY 10601
Wednesday, February 6th
8am to 5pm
3015 Dumbarton Road
Richmond, VA 23228
Friday, February 8th
8am to 5pm
310 Hubert Street
Raleigh, NC 27603
Saturday, February 9th
8am to 5pm
Staybridge Suites
920 Wildwood Park Drive
Harrisburg, PA 17110
Monday, February 11th
7:30am to 5pm
16 Upton Drive
Wilmington, MA 01887
Friday, February 15th
8am to 5pm
1532 Martin Ave.
Cherry Hill, NJ 08002
Saturday, February 23rd
8am to 5pm
16 West 61st Street
New York, NY 10023
Monday, February 25th
7:30am to 5pm
16 Upton Drive
Wilmington, MA 01887

EPA RRP Lead Certification Training Class

EPA RRP Articles

Monday, January 14, 2013

EPA Lead Safety Certification Training Classes

Friday, February 15th
8am to 5pm
1532 Martin Ave.
Cherry Hill, NJ 08002

Saturday, January 26th
8am to 5pm 115 Broad H ollow Road
Melville, NY 11747

Saturday, March 2nd
8am to 5pm
115 Broad H ollow Road
Melville, NY 11747

Saturday, February 9th
8am to 5pm
Staybridge Suites
920 Wildwood Park Drive
Harrisburg, PA 17110

Friday, February 1st
8am to 5pm
2028 Sergeant Street
Hartford, CT 06105

Saturday, February 23rd
8am to 5pm
16 West 61st Street
New York, NY 10023

Friday, February 8th
8am to 5pm
310 Hubert Street
Raleigh, NC 27603

Wednesday, February 6th
8am to 5pm
3015 Dumbarton Road
Richmond, VA 23228

Friday, January 25th
8am to 5pm
Universities at Shady Grove
9630 Gudelsky Drive
Rockville, MD 20850

Wednesday, January 16th
8am to 5pm
Route 31, North Spencer Rd.
Spencer, MA

Saturday, February 2nd
8am to 5pm
6 Hale Avenue
White Plains, NY 10601

Monday, January 28th
7:30am to 5pm
16 Upton Drive
Wilmington, MA 01887

Monday, February 11th
7:30am to 5pm
16 Upton Drive
Wilmington, MA 01887

Monday, February 25th
7:30am to 5pm
16 Upton Drive
Wilmington, MA 01887

Friday, November 23, 2012

EPA Lead Certification Class | RRP Training Course

The new U.S. EPA essentials for lead paint removals came up in doing what appeared to be a abstract attack. Ahead of the handing over of the completely new law, only few individuals were made conscious provide effort for taking EPA lead certification class.

Who needs EPA Lead Certification Course?

Essentially, any contractor that’s postulated in renovating, repairing, or painting a facilities or child occupied place built before 1978 will require the said EPA RRP training course.

The ignite off for the new rule is that if, during the class on the job, a worker will disrupt more than 6 sq ft of target area or even more than 20 square feet on the outside of a structure. Replacing windows will always be covered up by the new EPA rules, even if you’re technically distressing less than 6 sq ft of paint.
Anyone can get in fuss on this new federal certification requirement. This is actually the beneficial announcement for firms that have further than one employee. You don't have to certify your entire pack of your workers, but when you get certified you’ll lead to developing your employees.


EPA Lead Safety


Tuesday, November 6, 2012

EPA RRP Certification Training - Lead Paint Safety Class

ABLE Safety Consulting offers EPA Lead Paint Safety Class to any remodeling firms that desire to work in pre-1978 homes and child-occupied facilities need to apply to EPA and pay a fee in order to become certified.


Under the EPA RRP new rule, started last April 2010, maintenance personnel, companies, as well as others performing renovation, repair and painting projects that disturb lead-based paint in child care facilities, houses, flats, and schools built prior to 1978 must be EPA certified and knowledgeable on lead safety procedures. Child-occupied facilities are laid out as industrial buildings, public or non commercial where kids under age 6 are usually in place a regular basis. The necessaries pertain to RRP actions. The EPA’s RRP rule doesn’t pertain to modest maintenance or repair actions were lower than 6 square feet of lead-based paint is disrupted in a room or where lower than twenty square feet of lead-based paint is disturbed externally. Window replacing isn’t moderate maintenance or repair.

Who requires lead paint safety class?


All firms doing or wishing to perform RRP work should turn into certified. Firms could possibly get accreditation by applying to EPA-authorized remodeling program starting October 22, 2009 and undertake EPA lead safety class.


EPA Lead Certification - Lead Safety Training Updates

EPA Lead-base Paint Certification Training Course
EPA RRP Lead Safe Certified Renovator Initial Training
EPA Lead Base Paint Certification Training Class
EPA Lead Safe Certified: Lead-based Paint Training Class
EPA Lead Paint Certification Training Classes
EPA lead paint certification training course

Thursday, August 23, 2012

EPA Lead Certification Training Course

EPA Lead Certification Training Course is crucial because traditional remodeling can now create significant risks for lead dust if lead paint is present and disturbed.

Lead dust cause by traditional renovations can lead poisoning in children. You can also poison the pregnant woman, you, your children, other workers and even pets. Practical changes in work practices can minimize the contain lead dust. The use of lead safe work practices makes the workplace safer and reduces individual exposure to liability.

EPA Renovation, Repair and painting of Final Rule (40 CFR 745) requires that the restorations made by way of compensation, must be carried out using a type certificate Certified renovators. Companies who want to work for renovation in the pre-1978 housing and children's use of the premises must apply to the EPA and do some payment in order to obtain certification. Renovators want to become an EPA certified must pass over the EPA accredited course. This course is model for EPA Certified renovators, and as such meets all 40 CFR 745.90.

This course will teach you to comply with EPA renovation, repair and painting of the rule and HUD lead safe housing rule, and how to perform lead-safe work practices safely and efficiently.

Why the EPA lead certification is is required?



EPA encourages all companies involved in the EPA rule to begin to prepare to be trained and certified by the EPA as soon as possible carry. Not only will you be doing their failure to protect our children, but you will build your customers a better service. Failure to comply may face significant economic consequences. A company can also be brought to legal liability if a child is making contact with dust from lead paint or lead poisoning as a result suffer because a company is not following the safe work practices lead. The EPA has developed a compliance guide for workers in the construction industry and contractors whose points all the requirements of the new EPA standard.

EPA Lead Based Paint Certification - Lead Safety Training

EPA Lead Certification Training Course


Monday, August 6, 2012

EPA Lead-Safe Renovator Certification Training


If you’re a landlord, contractor or a painter….or anyone who makes profit the renovation or remodeling of older homes, you’ve probably heard about a new EPA lead safety training certification law. There are a lot of gossips out there concerning the EPA’s new lead safety training certification law and sometimes it can be difficult to sort out the reality. As a certified EPA/HUD Principal RRP Certification Instructor and Lead Safety Training Program Manager as well as a Project Manager for the Housing Rehab and Lead Hazard Control for one of New U.S. largest cities, I will be able to clear up some of the secrets behind this new law.

If you’re doing any work in a residence, or child occupied facility, built prior to 1978, you must have EPA RRP certification (renovate repair and paint certification). This is a one day EPA Lead-Safe Renovator Certification Training program that helps you how to work safely close to lead based paint. Get certified, and do it now! It is the law, and the fines are steep if you get caught.


EPA Lead-Safe Renovator Certification Training Classes

Albany, NY
Saturday, August 18th
8am to 5pm
37 Route 9W Glenmont, NY 12077

Copiague, NY (Long Island) Saturday, August 25th
8am to 5pm 65 Elm Street Copiague, NY 11726

Harrisburg, PA
Saturday, August 11th
8am to 5pm
Staybridge Suites 920 Wildwood Park Drive
Harrisburg, PA 17110

Raleigh, NC
Friday, August 10th
8am to 5pm
310 Hubert Street
Raleigh, NC 27603

Richmond, VA
Monday, August 13th
8am to 5pm
3015 Dumbarton Road
Richmond, VA 23228
Roanoke, VA
Monday, August 20th
8am to 5pm
1734 Seibel Drive NE
Roanoke, VA 24012

Wilmington, MA
Saturday, August 4th
7:30am to 5pm
16 Upton Drive
Wilmington, MA 01887

Wilmington, MA
Tuesday, August 14th
7:30am to 5pm
16 Upton Drive
Wilmington, MA 01887

Wilmington, MA
Monday, August 27th
7:30am to 5pm
16 Upton Drive
Wilmington, MA 01887
EPA Lead-Safe Renovator Certification Training

Articles prior to EPA lead

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

RRP Cost Calculator - How Much Will the RRP Cost?

Everyone agrees that the RRP rule will increase the cost of remodeling, but there is not much consensus on how big that increase will be. Certain costs are fixed, such as the fees for EPA company certification ($300) and individual training ($200 - $400 per person). But EPA estimates of other costs are unrealistically low.

In an interview with Remodeling (“An EPA Q and A on Lead Paint,” by Leah Thayer), the EPA estimated that the “costs of containment, cleaning, and cleaning verification will range from $8 to $167 per job, with the exception of exterior jobs where vertical containment would be required.” This is based on EPA research showing that “many contractors already follow some of the work practices required by the rule, such as using disposable plastic sheeting to cover floors and objects in the work area,” and that extra cost would only come from additional steps required by the rule. The EPA also made a deliberate effort to hold down the cost of paperwork, and states that “the record-keeping requirements specific to the RRP rule are designed to be completed by a typical renovator in 5 minutes or less.”

Based on conversations with working remodelers and our research into business benchmarks, REMODELING believes that project cost increases will be as much as 10 times higher than what the EPA estimates. Although actual costs to implement the RRP rule will vary depending on the type of job, the number of workers involved, and the number of projects where lead-safe practices must be employed, every company will pay more to implement the rule – more in overhead and more in direct job costs.


Overhead Expenses


Training. While certification costs for individuals can be amortized over the 5 years before they need to be renewed, the $300 average per person cost for the 8-hour class isn’t the only employer expense. Many remodelers pay employees their daily wage while they undertake training; at a burdened cost of between $25 and $65 per hour, and adding 1 hour travel time and lunch, certification training works out to something closer to between $535 and $895 per person. Some employers’ burdened costs are higher, and some may incur overtime charges as well. These expenses would be prorated over a 5-year period, after which EPA requires recertification.

Legal and Professional. Virtually every remodeling company will need to consult with an attorney to modify or add language in contracts, change orders, and additional work orders, as well as to bring job descriptions and other elements of employee manuals up to date. Not including a company owner’s lost opportunity time participating in these meetings, and in similar meetings while shopping for pollution insurance, fees could range between $500 and $2,000. This could be an annual expense depending on whether states adopt administration of RRP and modify the requirements.

Insurance. Few, if any, general liability policies cover lead-related illness or injury, and those that do will probably be modified to exclude lead, much the way mold was excluded when liability increased. Estimates quoted by insurance agents in a Replacement Contractor article (“Are You Insured for Lead?” by Jim Cory) pegged the average cost of a lead-pollution policy at $2,500. The full range quoted was between $1,800 and $5,000, depending on the number of employees, the number of jobs where lead is present, and the policy coverage amount. This is an annual expense that will likely increase regularly.

Other Overhead. The cost of securing, copying, and storing documentation could be as much as $500 annually. Given that lead can remain in the human body for as long as 30 years, a contractor would be well-advised to store certification and testing documents for longer than the 3 year minimum required by the EPA. This may involve a lock box at the bank, a fire-proof safe in the office, or a digital imaging system. And while the EPA doesn’t require it, photographic documentation of on-site lead-safe practices would provide extra documentation should a liability lawsuit occur. These are annual expenses.

All together, overhead costs for an average company with three field employees paid an average burdened wage of $40 per hour could be about $3,000. At the high end, with costlier legal fees and insurance premiums and higher-paid employees, the overhead expense could reach $9,000 or more.
Because these overhead costs would typically be spread over all projects completed in a year, their affect on the cost of individual projects varies with company size. For a company with annual revenue of $500,000, the upper-end overhead expense estimate would add about 2% to overhead; on a $10,000 project, 2% additional overhead would be about $200. (Overhead expenses would be less than 1% for a $1 million company, less than 0.5% for a $2 million company, and so on, unless the assumptions change.)


Job Costs


But increased overhead is the least expensive part of implementing the RRP rule. Additional time and materials consumed at the job site add cost quickly, and some types of projects add more cost than others. (Replacing a window in two separate rooms, for example, will double costs because testing, room isolation and protection, lead-safe procedures, and cleaning are required twice. Working in three rooms would triple the cost, and so on.)

Just how much direct cost the RRP rules will add won’t be known until contractors begin to use the procedures and document costs. But REMODELING has consulted with several working remodelers in a systematic attempt to figure it out. What follows in the tables below is based on a gut remodel of a typical 6x8, circa 1920 lath, plaster, and tile bathroom.

We have listed a low and high estimate for only the additional labor and materials required to comply with the RRP rule. The variations depend on differing estimates of how many people are involved in the work, and how long the RRP portion of the work takes. The data below are good guesses, but more reliable data will be available as soon as companies begin to implement the lead-safe practices.

Adding it all up. Assuming that direct costs for a typical bathroom are about $10,000, the RRP adds between 5.3% and 11.2% to direct job costs, plus an additional percentage point or two for overhead. At the low end, the selling price (at 35% margin, 2% higher than standard to account for increased overhead) increases from $14,925 to $16,205, a bump of $1,280. At the high end, the selling price increases $2,180, to $17,105. (Where multiple rooms are involved, the cost will be higher.) To the homeowner, that represents a net increase of between 8.6% and 14.6% in the overall cost of the job.
It also represents the amount a remodeler not using lead-safe practices can undercut the price of a remodeler who is.

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