The skanner. (Portland, Or.) 1975-2014, May 13, 2015, Page 12, Image 12

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    News
Independence
Day
PHOTO BY JERRY FOSTER
Togo Independence Day was celebrated April 25
by the Togo Community in Oregon at Lu’s event
room in Tigard. From left, Raphael Toku, koffi
“Jean-Pierre” Dessou, Mutari Ali, Massan “Brigitte”
Alinon-Dessou, Hilda Dzifa Asemsro-Amegandji,
Dosseh Attiogbe, and komi Claude Amegandji.
Find out more about their activities at
www.togocore.org.
Demolitions
continued from page 3
two substances are regulated by two different agencies.
The Oregon Health Authority is responsible for lead
paint; asbestos is regulated by the Oregon Department of
Environmental Quality.
Asbestos is required to be abated — which means wet-
ting, bagging and dumping it at a disposal site certified to
receive asbestos waste.
DEQ requires all commercial, industrial and residential
homes with more than four units to have a survey done to
determine if there is asbestos present, said Audrey O’Brien,
program manager at Oregon DEQ.
Single-dwelling homes do not require an asbestos survey,
although DEQ recommends they be done. This leaves a
loophole where people are required to abate asbestos if
present, but they aren’t required to actually check for it.
The lead paint rules followed by the Oregon Health
Authority and the Construction Contractor Board stem from
EPA rules. The enforcement of proper lead paint disposal is
outlined in the EPA’s Renovation, Repair, and Painting
(RRP) Rule. This policy covers the types of housing likely
to have lead, contractor certification requirements and the
creation of a lead-safe workplace.
According to the EPA, the RRP rule does not cover dem-
olitions, only renovations. If one half of a building was
being torn down, the lead-safe rules would apply. But if the
entire building was demolished, the RRP rules would not.
OSHA requires the demolition crews that work around
lead paint and asbestos be protected from harm, but those
protections do not carry over to neighbors.
Ben Maynard, an environmental health specialist with
OHA, said lead paint dust is still a health hazard even in a
demolition.
“The exemption from the rule is a problem,” Maynard
said. “It’s under-regulated and agencies are working on this
issue.”
Most recently, Oregon Senate Bill 705 was supposed to
direct OHA to complete a study and report on the demoli-
tion of residential structures that may contain lead-based
paint and asbestos. In a later version of the bill, OHA’s
responsibility and lead paint requirements were dropped.
The new legislation empowers the Environmental Quality
Commission to require contractors to perform asbestos sur-
veys on homes prior to demolition.
Filing a complaint
As agencies, BDS, OHA, DEQ, OSHA, operate through a
“complaint-driven process.” They do not go out looking for
construction violations, but rely on complaints to be filed
before starting an investigation.
When calling in a complaint, it is helpful to have informa-
tion such as the address and a description of the work being
done. It is also useful to have pictures of the code violations
and to call in the complaints as soon as one sees them.
Liefeld said it is important for people to call if they have
questions or concerns. BDS also lists the kinds of code vio-
lations they enforce on their website.
“There’s no harm in calling the city, its free, we enjoy
calls, we’re here to serve, we don’t know what’s going on
until people who call us and let us know what’s going on or
what concerns they see out there,” he said.
Page 12 The Portland and Seattle Skanner May 13, 2015