Ohio Homeowners – Residential Asbestos Law

Hey Ohio Homeowners! Don’t Let Anyone Gamble With Your Family’s Lungs

If you’re planning any asbestos abatement that involves more than 50 linear feet or 50 square feet of friable asbestos-containing materials—even in your private home—you must notify Ohio EPA.

There is no residential exemption. That “oh, it’s just a residential” excuse doesn’t fly.

Why This Matters

Your health is on the line: Asbestos fibers don’t care if you’re in a school, factory, or your own living room. Disturbing it without proper notification and controls can poison the very air your family breathes.

It’s the law: The Ohio Administrative Code (OAC) 3745-22 defines an asbestos hazard abatement project as greater than fifty linear feet or fifty square feet of friable asbestos-containing materials, period.

Read it here: OAC 3745-22 (C)(4) – Asbestos Hazard Abatement

The Notification Rule

Under OAC 3745-22-03(C)(4), once you hit that size, the project must be reported to the Ohio EPA at least 10 working days before it starts.

It doesn’t matter if it’s a school, a commercial site, or your home—the same rule applies.

Homeowners: Lay Down the Law

This is your house and your family’s air. Don’t let a contractor sweet-talk you into cutting corners.

👉 Demand proof that they’re following every single rule.
👉 Demand certification.
👉 Demand notification.

And if they can’t or won’t provide it? Kick them out of your home. No discussion. No second chances. Unless you want to break the law and gamble with your health, they’re gone.

The Bottom Line

50 feet or 50 square feet = NOTIFICATION REQUIRED.
10 working days notice to Ohio EPA.
No residential exemption—your home counts.
Your health > their shortcuts.

If your contractor won’t follow the law, they don’t deserve your trust, your money, or a place in your house.

Sincerely,

Rick Kuhlman, President
330.818.0188