Search
ADPH Home
  ADPH has an RSS Feed and is on Facebook, Flickr, Twitter, Wikipedia, and YouTube!
Like ADPH on Facebook! Add ADPH on Flickr! Subscribe to Our RSS Feeds and Read the Latest ADPH News! Follow ADPH on Twitter! Read Our Article on Wikipedia! Subscribe to Alabama Public Health on YouTube!
Indoor Air Quality/Lead Pages
Indoor Air Quality/Lead Banner Image

The Indoor Air Quality/Lead Branch provides information on issues related to indoor air quality, lead-based paint, and other lead hazards. Regarding the lead hazard program, the primary focus of the branch is to enforce the state regulations promulgated under the Alabama Lead Reduction Act of 1997. These rules require individuals and firms that are engaged in lead identification and risk assessment, planning, and design of lead abatement projects, and lead-based paint removal of pre-1978 housing and child-occupied facilities to be training and certified to perform according to established safe work practice standards.

Branch personnel also provide support for the Alabama Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program, a program which identifies children with elevated blood levels through screening by local health departments and private physicians, and provides environmental surveys of their homes to identify sources of lead hazards and recommend methods to eradicate the hazard.

The Indoor Air Quality/Lead Branch is the Environmental Protection Agency's designated state indoor air contact providing advisory services for those who request it by providing indoor air quality, molds, asbestos information, and printed materials.

The Indoor Air Quality Program provides technical support to individuals based on EPA’s mold and moisture control guidelines. Currently there are no Alabama laws concerning residential or commercial building mold standards, testing requirements, nor is there any contractor accreditation/certification for contractors performing mold testing or remediation activities. It should also be noted that the EPA does not regulate mold or mold spores in indoor air.

Visit the Alabama Lead Contractors Certification Program


Image of house following a flood

Image of an air conditioning vent

Image of a wall with mold