Background Information On Lead Surfaces that are chewed or mouthed
GIVE EXAMPLES OF "LEAD-BASED PAINT HAZARDS" Peeling paint
AND OTHER COMMON SOURCES OF LEAD IN Chipping paint
RESIDENTIAL ENVIRONMENTS. Soil hazards
Friction surface
Impact surface
COMMON SOURCES OF LEAD IN RESIDENTIAL Windows
ENVIRONMENTS Doors
Floors
Bare Soil
Background Information On Lead Lead Dust
HAZARDS THAT TYPICALLY EXIST IN RESIDENTIAL Lead Contaminated Soil
ENVIRONMENTS Peeling, Chipping Paint
Folk Remedies
Health Effects of Lead Exposure Hand to mouth activities
DESCRIBE HOW CHILDREN ARE TYPICALLY Worker take home dust
EXPOSED TO LEAD
2026/02/04
,Lead Paint Abatement Supervisor Review Questions Answered
IDENTIFY THE COMMON ROUTES OF WORKER Inhalation
LEAD EXPOSURE Ingestion
Health Effects of Lead Exposure Stomachache
DESCRIBE THE BASIC HEALTH EFFECTS OF LEAD TO Nausea
WORKERS Headache
Memory Loss
High Blood Pressure
Long term--can cause kidney damage
DESCRIBE THE OSHA AND OTHER RECOMMENDED Information on respirators, their use, different types, importance of proper fit
REQUIREMENTS FOR LEAD-ABATEMENT WORKER Medical exams required for everyone working with lead
TRAINING Describing what your employer is doing to reduce your exposure to lead
Background information on federal, State and Local Waste from commercial and industrial projects needs to be tested, labeled
Government Regulations and hauled correctly
DESCRIBE THE RCRA (40 CFR 262) REGULATIONS Waste from residential property will most likely fall under the household
AND RELATED INFORMATION REGARDING WASTE hazardous waste exemption
DISPOSAL FOR LEAD-ABATEMENT PROJECTS
2026/02/04
, Lead Paint Abatement Supervisor Review Questions Answered
. Background information on federal, State and Local TCLP test - Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure
Government Regulations Detects how much lead would leach out of the waste.
IDENTIFY THE LEAD RCRA DEFINITIONS OF 5 mg/l is considered hazardous waste
HAZARDOUS WASTE AND TESTING PROCEDURES Lead meets the toxicity part of being a hazardous waste
. Background information on federal, State and Local Someone who can identify hazards
Government Regulations Someone who can take corrective action
DESCRIBE A "COMPETENT PERSON FOR HEALTH
AND SAFETY" AS DEFINED BY OSHA (29 LEAD CFR
1926-62)
Background information on federal, State and Local When above the permissible exposure limit:
Government Regulations Need to wear HEPA filter and any other appropriate filter
DESCRIBE THE OSHA RESPIRATOR PROTECTION Have a written respiratory program in place
STANDARDS (29 CFR 1910.134) RELEVANT TO LEAD-
ABATEMENT WORK
2026/02/04