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EPA Lead Program

Grant Fact Sheet

Ga/y Safe Homes Partnership
Project

Gary, Indiana

EPA selected the City of Gary Health
Department in Gary, IN for a Targeted
Lead Grant.

This project will establish an in-home
education and inspection program that will
provide support for pregnant women and
new parents living in homes with lead
hazards. This support will include tools for
preventing exposure to lead.

Specifically, the Gary Health Department, in
partnership with local prenatal care
coordination programs, including faith-
based and other community groups, will
train local prenatal care staff and community
health workers to incorporate the following
activities into their outreach efforts:

•	Advise each pregnant woman and
new mother on lead poisoning risks
and the importance having mothers
and young children tested for the presence of lead in their blood

•	Perform visual assessments for lead-based paint hazards in the home

•	Provide for risk assessments in homes where hazards are suspected

•	Issue work orders requiring property owners to remediate lead hazards, and

•	Provide free lead-safe work practices training for property owners, contracted
renovators, and participants of the EPA-funded Gary Brownfields Job Training Program
and the Indiana Plan Pre-Apprenticeship Program.

EPA's Targeted Lead Grants

EPA's Targeted Lead Grant Program funds
projects in areas with high incidences of
children with elevated blood-lead levels in
vulnerable populations. In 2007 the Agency
awarded more than $5.2 Million in grants
under this ambitious program. These
targeted grants are intended to address
immediate needs of the communities in
which they are awarded, and will also
highlight lead poison prevention strategies
that can be used in similar communities
across the country.

EPA's lead program is playing a major role
in meeting the federal goal of eliminating
childhood lead poisoning as a major public
health concern by 2010, and the projects
supported by these grant funds are an
important part of this ongoing effort.
According to the Centers for Disease
Control in 1978 there were 13.5 million
children in the US with elevated blood lead
levels. By 2002, that number had dropped
to 310,000.

For more information about EPA's Lead
Program, visit www.epa.gov/lead or call
the National Lead Information Center at
1-800-424-LEAD.

2007 Targeted Lead Grant Program

Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics

www.epa.gov/lead


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