Nassau County Homeowner’s Guide to Mold & Asbestos: Prevention, Testing & Remediation (2026)

The definitive Nassau County guide to mold and asbestos in Long Island homes. Covers where hazards hide, testing costs, NYS licensing requirements, and remediation options.
Asbestos, Lead Paint & Mold in Pre-War NYC Co-ops: The Complete Buyer & Owner Guide

Pre-war NYC co-ops commonly contain asbestos, lead paint, and mold. Here is what buyers and owners must know about testing, abatement, board approval, and NYC regulatory compliance.
After Mold Remediation: Air Clearance Testing, Documentation & Final Walkthrough

Mold remediation is not complete until clearance testing passes. Learn what air sampling involves, what a passing result looks like, and what documentation your contractor must provide.
Pre-Purchase Asbestos & Mold Inspection on Long Island: What Home Buyers Need to Know

Buying a pre-1978 Long Island home? A pre-purchase asbestos and mold inspection reveals hazards before closing and gives you negotiating leverage. Here is what to test for and what it costs.
NYC Local Law 1 Lead Paint: Landlord Obligations & Tenant Rights (2026)

NYC Local Law 1 requires landlords in pre-1960 buildings with children under 6 to identify and fix lead paint hazards. Learn the obligations and what tenants can demand.
Lead Paint Removal in NYC & Long Island: EPA RRP Rules, Costs & Licensed Contractors

Lead paint removal in NYC & Long Island costs $8-$17 per sq ft. Learn EPA RRP rules, NYS licensing, and what certified abatement involves for pre-1978 homes.
Lead Paint Testing on Long Island: Costs, Process & Licensed Inspectors (2026)

Lead paint testing on Long Island costs $200-$600. Learn when required, what inspectors look for, and how to hire a certified NYS inspector.
Asbestos Siding on Long Island: How to Identify It, What It Costs to Remove, and Your Legal Options

Asbestos cement siding covers thousands of Long Island homes built 1940–1975. A licensed NY contractor explains how to identify it, what removal costs ($8,000–$20,000), and when you can encapsulate instead.
Institutional Asbestos Management: AHERA Requirements for Long Island Schools

The Asbestos Hazard Emergency Response Act (AHERA) requires every Long Island school district to maintain a management plan for asbestos-containing materials in school buildings, conduct periodic inspections, and provide annual notification to parents and staff. This is what AHERA requires and what happens when school districts fail to maintain compliance.
Asbestos Tile Mastic: The Hidden ACM Beneath New Flooring in Long Island Homes

Thousands of Long Island homes have new flooring installed over original 9-inch vinyl asbestos tiles — and the black mastic adhesive beneath those tiles is almost always also asbestos-containing. This hidden ACM layer is the most frequently overlooked asbestos in Long Island residential renovation.