Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh and a host of community organizations dedicated to fighting lead poisoning held a press conference to discuss a number of new steps the county is taking to combat lead poisoning.
Transcript
LADDIE SPRINGER: A press conference held on the steps of City Hall with Mayor Ben Walsh marked a new frontier in the ongoing battle against lead poison in Syracuse.
MAYOR BEN WALSH: Do hereby proclaim the week of the 23rd to the 29th of October 2022 to be Lead Poisoning Prevention Week in the county of Onondaga in the city of Syracuse, thank you all.
SPRINGER: The proclamation was the first of its kind in the city of Syracuse and will draw awareness and county resources toward battling the issue. The event also formally announced the recent implementation of the city’s new lead ordinance.
WALSH: Our lead ordinance is in full effect as of today and we are out in the community, um, doing the important work.
SPRINGER: The ordinance is supplemented by the new lead hazard control office. The office will filter rental registries, check certificates of compliance, and hear complaints from residents being impacted by lead poison. Darrell Buckingham, a program officer at the Central New York Community Foundation, says these announcements have left those who’ve battled the issue feeling seen.
DARRELL BUCKINGHAM: All of us are working in concert to do better and to be better. I’m excited about where we’re going.
SPRINGER: I’m here in front of City Hall. Press conference wrapped up about an hour ago and you just got the sense, just sticking around afterwards, a celebratory nature, a celebratory tone in the air. For the families and organizations and individuals who have been fighting this issue for so long. Big deal, big announcement by Ben Walsh today. In Syracuse, Laddie Springer, NCC News.
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (NCC News) — Today, a press conference was held by Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh and a number of community organizations dedicated to ending lead poisoning in Central New York. The press conference featured, among other announcements, a proclamation by Walsh recognizing October 23 to 29 as Lead Poisoning Prevention Week.
“Do hereby proclaim the week of the 23 to the 29 of October 2022 to be Lead Poisoning Prevention Week in the county of Onondaga in the city of Syracuse, thank you all,” said Walsh.
The proclamation was the first of its kind in the city of Syracuse and will draw awareness and county resources toward battling the issue. The event also formally announced the implementation of the city’s new lead ordinance.
“Our lead ordinance is in full effect as of today and we are out in the community, um, doing the important work,” said Walsh.
The ordinance allows inspections of apartments or homes that are a potential lead hazard to its inhabitants. The ordinance was passed unanimously in 2020, but only recently began being implemented. It is supplemented by the new Lead Hazard Control Office.
The office will filter rental registries, check certificates of compliance, and hear complaints from residents being impacted by lead poison.
Darrell Buckingham, a program office at the Central New York Community Foundation, says all of these new announcements and initiatives have left those who have fought the long fight feeling seen.
“All of us are working in concert to do better and be better,” said Buckingham. “I’m excited about where we’re going”.
In what has been a generally tense relationship between community organizations and the local government on the issue of lead poisoning, this press conference was seen as a victory.