- Lead Pipes for Drinking Water
- Pinewood Derby Cars for Cub Scouts?
- Making fishing weights or sinkers, or toy soldiers
- Using lead solder (e.g., for electronics)
- Using lead-containing artists' paints or ceramic glazes
- Burning lead-painted wood
- Car or boat repair
- Industries;
- Work sites and occupations that work with lead;
- Secondary smelting and refining of nonferrous metals
- Brass/copper foundries
- Firing ranges
- Automotive repair shops
- Bridge, tunnel, and elevated highway construction
- Motor vehicle parts and accessories
- Storage batteries (lead batteries)
- Valve and pipe fittings
- Plumbing fixture fittings and trim
- Pottery
- Chemical and chemical preparations
- Industrial machinery and equipment
- Inorganic pigments
- Primary batteries, dry and wet
- Hobbies and home activities
- Recreational use of firing ranges
- Home repairs, repainting, or remodeling
- Furniture refinishing
- Stained glass making
- Casting ammunition
|
What do you
do now?
Next
|