Lead, Asbestos, & Environmental Toxins
Identifying legacy construction hazards and enforcing safe, verified abatement practices in San Diego County.
A significant portion of San Diego County’s housing stock was constructed prior to the federal bans on lead-based paint and asbestos-containing materials (ACMs). When undisturbed, these materials pose minimal risk. However, during renovations, disaster recovery, or pest remediation, illegal demolition by unregulated contractors releases carcinogenic fibers and neurotoxic dust directly into the home’s breathing zone.
The Illegal Demolition Threat
Following a kitchen leak or structural issue, predatory contractors will frequently offer “same-day tear outs.” If your home contains asbestos or lead, standard demolition is a federal violation of the EPA’s Renovation, Repair and Painting (RRP) Rule, severely contaminating your property.
Compliance Failure: Unregulated Abatement
EMERGENCY MITIGATION INVOICE
DATE: 03/14/2026
PROPERTY BUILT: 1968
SCOPE: Water Damage – Master Bathroom Demolition
LINE ITEMS:
1. Tear out and dispose of wet drywall (150 sq ft) – $650.00
2. Removal of linoleum flooring down to subfloor – $400.00
3. Application of negative air fan (vented to hallway) – $250.00
NOTES: No asbestos or lead testing requested or performed prior to demolition. Debris bagged in standard trash bags and placed in property dumpster.
Targeted Legacy Toxins
Lead-Based Paint
Banned for residential use in 1978. While intact paint is generally safe, friction surfaces (windows/doors) and renovation activities create invisible lead dust. Ingestion or inhalation causes severe, irreversible neurological damage, particularly in children.
Asbestos-Containing Materials
Commonly found in popcorn ceilings, acoustic tiles, joint compound, and 9×9 floor tiles in homes built before 1989. When these materials become friable (crumbled by hand) during demolition, microscopic fibers are released, leading to asbestosis and mesothelioma.
Legacy Pesticides
Older homes may have residual soil contamination from Chlordane (banned 1988) used for subterranean termite treatments. Disturbing foundation soil or crawlspaces without proper PPE can re-aerosolize these persistent organic pollutants.