by Nick Castele
Cleveland officials say the city is working through its backlog of lead contamination cases, and trying to increase staff to take on new investigations.
Natoya Walker-Minor, the city鈥檚 acting health director, told council that temporary employees have identified what became of 1,334 cases in which children were poisoned by lead paint from 2003 to 2013.
Investigations had been completed on most of those cases, she said, but property owners complied with city rules in less than a quarter of them.
鈥淚 mentioned that I鈥檓 going to hire some compliance people, because I鈥檝e got to drill down on, if the compliance hasn鈥檛 been reached, now what?鈥 Walker-Minor said.
Walker-Minor said Cleveland has issued 31 notices of noncompliance鈥攁nd is still researching another 1,738 cases in its backlog.
Meanwhile, she plans to hire three lead inspectors, bringing the total number up to five. Walker-Minor told council that following up on lead poisoning cases is a marathon, not a sprint.
鈥淭his is time-intensive,鈥 Walker-Minor said. 鈥淭hese investigations take anywhere from three to six hours based on your skill level and how large the property is. And then you have to go in and update all the information through these systems.鈥
She says an earlier job posting didn鈥檛 yield enough qualified applicants, and that the city will try to hire inspectors from other counties in which federal grants for lead have not been renewed.