The stars of HGTV’s popular Good Bones renovation series have been ordered to get the lead out.The US Environmental Protection Agency said Friday that it had reached a settlement with” Two Chicks and a Hammer, Inc.”— the company founded by mother-daughter duo Karen E.
Laine and Mina Starsiak Hawk. The settlement indicates they allegedly violated a federal lead paint law.Good Bones follows Starsiak Hawk, a real estate agent and mother of two, and her mom, Karen E Laine, a lawyer, as they buy dilapidated properties in their hometown of Indianapolis.
During each episode, the pair demos the houses down to the studs and renovate them into dazzling family homes, while offering a glimpse into their personal lives.The agreed-upon penalties in the EPA settlement include a $40,000 fine and will produce a video about renovations involving lead-based paint that features Hawk.
The company is required to share that video — and another about protecting children from lead exposure — on its social media channels.Two Chicks and a Hammer did not admit or deny the specific allegations, according to the settlement.The settlement stems from renovations performed in 2017 at three different properties in Indianapolis, Indiana.
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