| Industry’s mantra
in response to the government lawsuits is to proclaim that it took “responsible
action" upon learning that lead-based paint was dangerous in 1955
by “voluntarily” reducing the lead content in paint, a reference
to the American Standards Association (ASA) Standard Z66.1. No one disputes
that the toxicity of lead-based paint poses continuing hazards. To set
the record straight, this standard:
Although all the lead pigment manufacturers knew of the dangers
of lead-based paint since the early 1900s, they concealed
the hazards from the public and promoted lead-based paint
as safe, actually claiming that it promoted health and sanitation.
The industry standard allowed 10,000 parts per million of lead in paint—25
times the current standard for lead at hazardous waste sites.
The lead industry used this standard to thwart the adoption
of more protective and binding regulations. For example, in
New York City, a regulation that would have required lead-based
paint to be labeled as poisonous was modified to exclude the
word “poisonous” upon the establishment of the
ASA subcommittee. Industry persuaded New York, Baltimore,
and other cities to accept the one percent standard in place
of more protective measures.
By 1954, lead-based paints were losing market share to safer,
better alternatives (that had long been available and produced
by some of these very same companies as far back as the 1920s).
The lead industry maintained production, sales, and profits
by promoting and marketing the (equally dangerous) use of
lead in gasoline.
Although the Lead Industries Association acknowledged in 1952
that children could be poisoned by exterior paint and that
parents could inadvertently repaint furniture with exterior
paint, the industry prolonged the continued production of
heavily leaded exterior paints.
An additional 250,000 tons of white lead were manufactured as paint pigment
in the US after 1955. As a result, more than 10 million houses and apartments
built after 1955 are coated with lead-based paint, based on HUD’s
recent national survey. As late as 1971, the New York City Health Department
found heavily leaded interior paints on paint store shelves.
Even when they belatedly adopted this standard in 1955, these companies
continued selling paint with lead in it, at reduced but still harmful
levels. They did not stop until the government forced them to by banning
lead in residential paint in 1978. Since then, the paint companies have
done virtually nothing to prevent children’s exposure to toxic lead
dust from paint, or to help remove lead-based paint hazards from children’s
homes.
Review
several articles pertaining to the history of the lead paint industry,
including "Cater to the Children," by Drs. Gerald Markowitz
and David Rosner
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