The director shall promulgate regulations to establish a program of interim control measures that are eligible to be used in emergency lead management plans to address urgent lead paint hazards that include, but are not limited to, paint containing a dangerous level of lead that is chipping, peeling or flaking, and highly lead-contaminated dust. Interim control measures shall be used to address said urgent lead hazards until a letter of full compliance has been obtained pursuant to subsection (c), and all emergency lead management plans shall include full compliance in accord with subsection (c) as their ultimate goal. Only in the instance of a waiver by the department, shall an owner be eligible for an emergency lead management plan and letter of interim control for premises in which a lead-poisoned child resides. The owner of premises containing a dangerous level of lead may obtain approval for an emergency lead management plan from an inspector licensed under section one hundred and ninety-seven B after an inspection and assessment of the premises by said inspector, and for a letter of interim control by such a licensed inspector certifying compliance with the emergency lead management plan and regulations promulgated by the director under this section. Said regulations shall, at minimum, include the following:
A letter of interim control shall expire at the end of one year from the date of its issuance, and may be renewed once, for an additional one-year period, upon reinspection and recertification pursuant to this section by a licensed lead inspector, in accordance with regulations promulgated by the director. The revocation and subsequent recertification of a letter of interim control shall not extend the initial letter of interim control beyond the time period allowed by this section. An emergency lead management plan and letter of interim control shall be issued for the premises, not its owner, and shall remain in effect should ownership of the premises be transferred during the existence of the emergency lead management plan and the letter of interim control. A subsequent owner of premises under a pre-existing emergency lead management plan and letter of interim control shall be responsible for complying with the terms of said plan and letter. In no case shall premises be subject to an emergency lead management plan and letter of interim control for longer than two years.
A letter of interim control shall be revocable by operation of law upon occurrence of either of the following conditions: (i) expiration by its own term; (ii) upon the failure of the owner to bring the unit into compliance, or keep the unit in compliance, as required by this paragraph. If a licensed lead inspector finds that the premises contains peeling paint or otherwise fails to meet the standards of the emergency lead management plan and the letter of interim control, said inspector shall notify the owner of the premises, the director, the local code enforcement agency or board of health of said failure. The owner shall bring the premises into compliance with the emergency lead management plan and the letter of interim control within fourteen days of being notified to do so by the director, local code enforcement agency or board of health or licensed lead inspector, or within such greater period of time as may be allowed by the director, local code enforcement agency or board of health, or by judicial order.
No claim for strict liability may be brought under section one hundred and ninety-nine against the owner by an occupant or former occupant of premises for which a letter of interim control has been issued for damages caused by exposure to dangerous levels of lead during such period that the letter of interim control is in effect or within the fourteen day period after being notified to bring the premises into compliance discussed in the previous paragraph. During the period a letter of interim control is in effect, such owner shall take reasonable care to ensure that the premises are in compliance with the requirements of this subsection and the letter of interim control, and shall be liable for all damages caused by his breach of that duty of reasonable care.
All containment or abatement for full compliance subject to this chapter shall, pursuant to regulations promulgated by the director to ensure the safety of occupants, be performed as follows:
Upon the determination of a licensed inspector that the premises fully comply with the requirements of this subsection, said inspector shall issue a letter of full compliance for said premises. The director shall prepare one or more standard formats for letters of full compliance which may be revised from time to time as appropriate. All licensed inspectors shall use such standardized formats in issuing letters of full compliance.
Premises for which a letter of compliance has been issued prior to January first, nineteen hundred and ninety-four, pursuant to previous versions of this section and regulations promulgated thereunder, shall be deemed to be in full compliance with the provisions of this subsection, and shall be deemed to have been issued a letter of full compliance in accord with this subsection for all purposes of sections one hundred and eighty-nine A through one hundred and ninety-nine B, inclusive. Owners of such premises shall not be required to comply with any additional requirements of this subsection or of rules and regulations promulgated pursuant to said sections.
If a tenant believes that the premises fail to meet the standards of the letter of compliance or a licensed lead inspector finds that the premises fails to meet the standards of the letter of full compliance, said tenant or inspector shall notify the owner of the premises, the director, the local code enforcement agency or board of health of said failure. The owner shall ensure that the condition of the premises meets the standards required by the letter of full compliance within fourteen days of being notified to do so by the director, local code enforcement agency or board of health or licensed lead inspector, or within such greater period of time as may be allowed by the director, local code enforcement agency or board of health, or by judicial order.
No claim for strict liability may be brought under section one hundred and ninety-nine against an owner by an occupant or former occupant of premises for which a letter of full compliance has been issued and is in effect in accordance with this subsection.
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 111, § 197