1 | The Health Care Appropriations Committee recommends the |
2 | following: |
3 |
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4 | Council/Committee Substitute |
5 | Remove the entire bill and insert: |
6 | A bill to be entitled |
7 | An act relating to the Lead Poisoning Prevention Screening |
8 | and Education Act; providing a short title; providing |
9 | legislative findings; providing definitions; providing for |
10 | the establishment of a statewide comprehensive educational |
11 | program on lead poisoning prevention; providing for a |
12 | public information initiative; providing for distribution |
13 | of literature about childhood lead poisoning; requiring |
14 | the establishment of a screening program for early |
15 | identification of persons at risk of elevated levels of |
16 | lead in the blood; providing for screening of children; |
17 | providing for prioritization of screening; providing for |
18 | the maintenance of records of screenings; providing for |
19 | reporting of cases of lead poisoning; providing |
20 | contingencies for implementing the screening program and |
21 | educational program under the act; providing an effective |
22 | date. |
23 |
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24 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
25 |
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26 | Section 1. Short title.--This act may be cited as the |
27 | "Lead Poisoning Prevention Screening and Education Act." |
28 | Section 2. Legislative findings.-- |
29 | (1) Nearly 300,000 American children may have levels of |
30 | lead in their blood in excess of 10 micrograms per deciliter |
31 | (ug/dL). Unless prevented or treated, elevated blood-lead levels |
32 | in egregious cases may result in impairment of the ability to |
33 | think, concentrate, and learn. |
34 | (2) A significant cause of lead poisoning in children is |
35 | the ingestion of lead particles from deteriorating lead-based |
36 | paint in older, poorly maintained residences. |
37 | (3) Childhood lead poisoning can be prevented if parents, |
38 | property-owners, health professionals, and those who work with |
39 | young children are informed about the risks of childhood lead |
40 | poisoning and how to prevent it. |
41 | (4) Knowledge of lead-based-paint hazards, their control, |
42 | mitigation, abatement, and risk avoidance is not sufficiently |
43 | widespread. |
44 | (5) Most children who live in older homes and who |
45 | otherwise may be at risk for childhood lead poisoning are not |
46 | tested for the presence of elevated lead levels in their blood. |
47 | (6) Testing for elevated lead levels in the blood can lead |
48 | to the mitigation or prevention of the harmful effects of |
49 | childhood lead poisoning and may also prevent similar injuries |
50 | to other children living in the same household. |
51 | Section 3. Definitions.--As used in this act, the term: |
52 | (1) "Affected property" means a room or group of rooms |
53 | within a property constructed before January 1, 1960, or within |
54 | a property constructed between January 1, 1960, and January 1, |
55 | 1978, where the owner has actual knowledge of the presence of |
56 | lead-based paint, that form a single independent habitable |
57 | dwelling unit for occupation by one or more individuals and that |
58 | has living facilities with permanent provisions for living, |
59 | sleeping, eating, cooking, and sanitation. Affected property |
60 | does not include: |
61 | (a) An area not used for living, sleeping, eating, |
62 | cooking, or sanitation, such as an unfinished basement; |
63 | (b) A unit within a hotel, motel, or similar seasonal or |
64 | transient facility, unless such unit is occupied by one or more |
65 | persons at risk for a period exceeding 30 days; |
66 | (c) An area that is secured and inaccessible to occupants; |
67 | or |
68 | (d) A unit that is not offered for rent. |
69 | (2) "Dust-lead hazard" means surface dust in a residential |
70 | dwelling or a facility occupied by a person at risk which |
71 | contains a mass-per-area concentration of lead equal to or |
72 | exceeding 40 ug/ft2 on floors or 250 ug/ft2 on interior |
73 | windowsills based on wipe samples. |
74 | (3) "Elevated blood-lead level" means a quantity of lead |
75 | in whole venous blood, expressed in micrograms per deciliter |
76 | (ug/dL), which exceeds 10 ug/dL or such other level as |
77 | specifically provided in this act. |
78 | (4) "Lead-based paint" means paint or other surface |
79 | coatings that contain lead equal to or exceeding 1.0 milligram |
80 | per square centimeter, 0.5 percent by weight, or 5,000 parts per |
81 | million (ppm) by weight. |
82 | (5) "Lead-based-paint hazard" means paint-lead hazards and |
83 | dust-lead hazards. |
84 | (6) "Owner" means a person, firm, corporation, nonprofit |
85 | organization, partnership, government, guardian, conservator, |
86 | receiver, trustee, executor, or other judicial officer, or other |
87 | entity which, alone or with others, owns, holds, or controls the |
88 | freehold or leasehold title or part of the title to property, |
89 | with or without actually possessing it. The definition includes |
90 | a vendee who possesses the title, but does not include a |
91 | mortgagee or an owner of a reversionary interest under a ground |
92 | rent lease. The term includes any authorized agent of the owner, |
93 | including a property manager or leasing agent. |
94 | (7) "Paint-lead hazard" means any one of the following: |
95 | (a) Any lead-based paint on a friction surface that is |
96 | subject to abrasion and where the dust-lead levels on the |
97 | nearest horizontal surface underneath the friction surface, such |
98 | as the windowsill or floor, are equal to or greater than the |
99 | dust-lead-hazard levels defined in subsection (2); |
100 | (b) Any damaged or otherwise deteriorated lead-based paint |
101 | on an impact surface that is caused by impact from a related |
102 | building material, such as a door knob that knocks into a wall |
103 | or a door that knocks against its door frame; |
104 | (c) Any chewable lead-based painted surface on which there |
105 | is evidence of teeth marks; or |
106 | (d) Any other deteriorated lead-based paint in or on the |
107 | exterior of any residential building or any facility occupied by |
108 | a person at risk. |
109 | (8) "Person at risk" means a child under the age of 6 |
110 | years or a pregnant woman who resides or regularly spends at |
111 | least 24 hours per week in an affected property. |
112 | (9) "Secretary" means the secretary of the Department of |
113 | Health or a designee chosen by the secretary to administer the |
114 | Lead Poisoning Prevention Screening and Education Act. |
115 | (10) "Tenant" means the individual named as the lessee in |
116 | a lease, rental agreement, or occupancy agreement for a dwelling |
117 | unit. |
118 | Section 4. Educational programs.-- |
119 | (1) LEAD POISONING PREVENTION EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM |
120 | ESTABLISHED.--In order to achieve the purposes of this act, a |
121 | statewide, multifaceted, ongoing educational program designed to |
122 | meet the needs of tenants, property owners, health care |
123 | providers, early childhood educators, care providers, and |
124 | realtors is established. |
125 | (2) PUBLIC INFORMATION INITIATIVE.--The Governor, in |
126 | conjunction with the Secretary of Health and his or her |
127 | designee, shall sponsor a series of public service announcements |
128 | on radio, television, the Internet, and print media about the |
129 | nature of lead-based-paint hazards, the importance of standards |
130 | for lead poisoning prevention in properties, and the purposes |
131 | and responsibilities set forth in this act. In developing and |
132 | coordinating this public information initiative, the sponsors |
133 | shall seek the participation and involvement of private industry |
134 | organizations, including those involved in real estate, |
135 | insurance, mortgage banking, and pediatrics. |
136 | (3) DISTRIBUTION OF LITERATURE ABOUT CHILDHOOD LEAD |
137 | POISONING.--By January 1, 2007, the Secretary of Health or his |
138 | or her designee shall develop culturally and linguistically |
139 | appropriate information pamphlets regarding childhood lead |
140 | poisoning, the importance of testing for elevated blood-lead |
141 | levels, prevention of childhood lead poisoning, treatment of |
142 | childhood lead poisoning, and, where appropriate, the |
143 | requirements of this act. These information pamphlets shall be |
144 | distributed to parents or the other legal guardians of children |
145 | 6 years of age or younger on the following occasions: |
146 | (a) By a health care provider at the time of a child's |
147 | birth and at the time of any childhood immunization or |
148 | vaccination unless it is established that such information |
149 | pamphlet has been provided previously to the parent or legal |
150 | guardian by the health care provider within the prior 12 months. |
151 | (b) By the owner or operator of any child care facility or |
152 | preschool or kindergarten class on or before October 15 of the |
153 | calendar year. |
154 | Section 5. Screening program.-- |
155 | (1) The secretary shall establish a program for early |
156 | identification of persons at risk of having elevated blood-lead |
157 | levels. Such program shall systematically screen children under |
158 | 6 years of age in the target populations identified in |
159 | subsection (2) for the presence of elevated blood-lead levels. |
160 | Children within the specified target populations shall be |
161 | screened with a blood-lead test at age 12 months and age 24 |
162 | months, or between the ages of 36 months and 72 months if they |
163 | have not previously been screened. The secretary shall, after |
164 | consultation with recognized professional medical groups and |
165 | such other sources as the secretary deems appropriate, |
166 | promulgate rules establishing: |
167 | (a) The means by which and the intervals at which such |
168 | children under 6 years of age shall be screened for lead |
169 | poisoning and elevated blood-lead levels. |
170 | (b) Guidelines for the medical followup on children found |
171 | to have elevated blood-lead levels. |
172 | (2) In developing screening programs to identify persons |
173 | at risk with elevated blood-lead levels, priority shall be given |
174 | to persons within the following categories: |
175 | (a) All children enrolled in the Medicaid program at ages |
176 | 12 months and 24 months, or between the ages of 36 months and 72 |
177 | months if they have not previously been screened. |
178 | (b) Children under the age of 6 years exhibiting delayed |
179 | cognitive development or other symptoms of childhood lead |
180 | poisoning. |
181 | (c) Persons at risk residing in the same household, or |
182 | recently residing in the same household, as another person at |
183 | risk with a blood-lead level of 10 ug/dL or greater. |
184 | (d) Persons at risk residing, or who have recently |
185 | resided, in buildings or geographical areas in which significant |
186 | numbers of cases of lead poisoning or elevated blood-lead levels |
187 | have recently been reported. |
188 | (e) Persons at risk residing, or who have recently |
189 | resided, in an affected property contained in a building that |
190 | during the preceding 3 years has been subject to enforcement for |
191 | violations of lead-poisoning-prevention statutes, ordinances, |
192 | rules, or regulations as specified by the secretary. |
193 | (f) Persons at risk residing, or who have recently |
194 | resided, in a room or group of rooms contained in a building |
195 | whose owner also owns a building containing affected properties |
196 | which during the preceding 3 years has been subject to an |
197 | enforcement action for a violation of lead-poisoning-prevention |
198 | statutes, ordinances, rules, or regulations. |
199 | (g) Persons at risk residing in other buildings or |
200 | geographical areas in which the secretary reasonably determines |
201 | there to be a significant risk of affected individuals having a |
202 | blood-lead level of 10 ug/dL or greater. |
203 | (3) The secretary shall maintain comprehensive records of |
204 | all screenings conducted pursuant to this section. Such records |
205 | shall be indexed geographically and by owner in order to |
206 | determine the location of areas of relatively high incidence of |
207 | lead poisoning and other elevated blood-lead levels. |
208 |
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209 | All cases or probable cases of lead poisoning found in the |
210 | course of screenings conducted pursuant to this section shall be |
211 | reported to the affected individual, to his or her parent or |
212 | legal guardian if he or she is a minor, and to the secretary. |
213 | Section 6. The establishment of a screening program for |
214 | early identification of persons at risk of having elevated |
215 | blood-lead levels shall be implemented to the extent funding is |
216 | provided in the General Appropriations Act. |
217 | Section 7. The lead poisoning prevention education program |
218 | shall be implemented only to the extent that the requirements in |
219 | this act are consistent with the requirements of any federal |
220 | childhood lead poisoning prevention grant awarded to the |
221 | Department of Health and to the extent that federal funds |
222 | awarded with any such grant are permitted to be used to |
223 | implement the requirements in this act. |
224 | Section 8. This act shall take effect July 1, 2006. |