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Fairness requires holding the lead industry accountable for the costs of cleaning up the problem it created. Although the lead pigment manufacturers were aware of the dangers of lead-based paint, they aggressively promoted it as safe for use in homes, schools, hospitals, and nurseries, claiming that lead-based paint promoted health and sanitation. Indeed, the industry internally acknowledged the hazards of lead-based paint early in the 1900s, but concealed them from the public. For example, Sherwin-Williams published an article in 1904 warning that lead-based paint was poisonous both for workers and inhabitants of homes, and then began manufacturing and selling lead-based paint in 1910 after purchasing an interest in a lead mine.

Faced with mounting evidence during the first half of the 20th century of the hazards of lead-based paint, lead industry leaders attempted to rebut adverse research findings and continued to aggressively market lead-based paint. In addition, the lead industry lobbied heavily to thwart governmental efforts to regulate lead-based paint and require warnings. Similar to the tobacco companies, the lead industry targeted children through its advertising, producing and distributing Dutch Boy painting booklets and souvenirs, and urging paint store owners not to “forget the children.”

Industry attempted to blame parents for failing to protect their children adequately from lead hazards through the 1950s. In 1957, the Lead Industries Association’s health and safety director attributed the problem of lead poisoning to flaking paint in slums, concluding that the problem could only be addressed by ridding the country of slums and educating “relatively ineducable” parents. As late as 1959, lead poisoning was seen as “a headache” by the industry.

The industry’s responses to the lawsuits have included denying and deflecting responsibility for causing lead poisoning:

“We voluntarily removed the lead in 1955.”

The industry is fond of claiming that it stopped adding lead to interior paints when it learned that lead-based paint was dangerous. In fact, the lead pigment manufacturers knew that lead-based paint was hazardous long before 1955. The decision to push for adoption of a 1955 standard limiting the lead content in paint was a ploy to further delay government regulation. The self-serving standard allowed 10,000 parts per million of lead in paint, exempted exterior paints altogether, was completely voluntary, and lacked any means for tracking or enforcement.

Moreover, it was largely a concession to market forces. By 1954, with lead-based paints losing market share to safer, better alternatives and with the expanding demand for lead in automobile fuel, it was a clever exit strategy for the lead industry to magnanimously participate in the adoption of this unenforceable standard.

The 1955 standard notwithstanding, 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 paint in 1978. And from 1978 to today, they have done virtually nothing to prevent children’s exposure to toxic lead dust from paint, or to remove lead-based paint hazards from children’s homes.

“It’s not fair to sue now; lead paint has been banned for 25 years.”

The fact that the federal government banned lead-based paint in 1978 has not prevented the product from continuing to cause serious damage to children’s intelligence and behavior. Lead-based paint takes its toll every day as more children are poisoned, and it will continue to do so unless and until lead hazards are abated. Lead-based paint may no longer be on the shelves, but lead paint hazards in most older housing continue to poison generation after generation of young children.

“Property owners are to blame.”

Home ownership carries with it responsibilities as well as rights, including the duty to maintain property in safe and habitable condition. Rental property owners properly are held accountable when they endanger children by failing to control lead hazards. However, property owners are not to blame for the fact that the paint in their homes is toxic. The lead industry, which for decades aggressively marketed lead-based paint as safe, bears sole responsibility for the toxic qualities of paint.

In fact, research published by the CDC (Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, April 6, 2001) confirms that even the most responsible property owners cannot rid themselves of this nuisance. It points out that after lead-painted wood has been chemically stripped with a caustic (alkaline) material, the bare wood may still contain lead that can be released if the surface is disturbed, for example by sanding. This study documents that that even property owners who justifiably may think they have removed lead paint could still have potential hazards.

Are lawsuits necessary?

To date, the lead industry has refused to contribute significant resources to solving the problem it created. Instead, the industry has invested enormous sums in lobbying to dissuade cities and states from filing—$1 million in Milwaukee alone prior to that city’s decision to sue. The industry has hired prominent Washington lobbying firms including Cassidy & Associates and Hill & Knowlton, as well as former US Attorney General Dick Thornburgh, former Maine Attorney General Andrew Ketterer, and former Members of Congress Alan Wheat and Martin Russo. Industry’s favorite counter-proposal is to suggest spending more of other people’s money. In Milwaukee, for example, the industry offered to use its lobbying clout to shift additional federal dollars to Milwaukee (at the expense of other cities receiving lead hazard control funds).

What companies comprise the lead industry?

The recent suits are directed primarily at companies involved in the manufacture, distribution, or sale of lead pigments, the lead component in lead-based paint. Well-known paint companies, including Sherwin-Williams, have been sued. Some companies that produced lead pigments have been sold or have merged, so their successor companies inherited these legal responsibilities. American Cyanamid, Atlantic Richfield, O’Brien Corporation, SCM Chemicals, Cytec Industries, Millennium Inorganic Chemicals, Valspar Corporation, and ConAgra Grocery Products Company all have been sued as successors to lead pigment producers. Additional defendants include companies prominent in the lead industry, such as E.I. Du Pont de Nemours and NL Industries (formerly National Lead, producer of Dutch Boy lead-based paint). Some jurisdictions also have sued local manufacturers and sellers of lead-based paint. The Lead Industries Association (LIA), the industry’s trade group, also is named as a defendant in the lawsuits for its role in downplaying the dangers of lead poisoning and promoting the use of lead-based paint in residences, schools, and hospitals, despite clear knowledge of the hazards. In April 2002, the LIA, a defendant in nearly 40 cases against former manufacturers of lead-based paint, filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code (liquidation). As a result, lawsuits in which the LIA is a defendant are stayed with respect to the LIA, but continue against other defendants.