Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Brownfields Tax Expensing and New Markets Pass House in Extender’s Bill.

HR 4213, the “tax extenders” bill, passed the House earlier this month.  The bill included a one-year extension of the brownfields tax expensing program.  According to the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT), this provision would reduce revenues by $159 million over ten years.   The bill also extends the new market tax credit for one year.  The credit is provided to businesses that make qualifying investments in community development entities.  According the JCT, this provision would reduce revenues by $1.4 billion over ten years.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Vapor Intrusion (VI) Seeps onto the Stage










EPA Toxicology Review of TCE


On November 3, 2009 EPA released a draft of its Toxicological Review of Trichloroethylene for public comment, with comments due by February 1, 2010. External peer review has not yet been conducted. The document concludes that TCE is carcinogenic in humans by all routes of exposure. The document calculates an inhalation unit risk of 2 x 10-2 per ppm (4 x 10 -6 per ug/m3) based on kidney cancer risk. This number is twice the inhalation unit risk value used by EPA in establishing the Regional Screening Level value for TCE. The document can be found at:















Washington DEC Releases Draft VI Guidance


On October 16, 2009 the Washington Department of Ecology Toxics Cleanup program released its draft vapor intrusion guidance for public comment. Comments were due November 30, 2009. The document covers a tiered assessment approach, mitigation, and the establishment of media cleanup levels. The document can be found at:















Oregon Releases Draft VI Guidance


On September 14, 2009 the Oregon DEQ Land Quality Division released a draft Guidance for Assessing and Remediating Vapor Intrusion in Buildings. The document covers investigation guidelines, risk based evaluation, and mitigation. The comment period closed on October 30, 2009 and the draft document can be found at:















North Carolina Issues Guidelines for Evaluation of VI


The North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources Division of Waste Management issued Supplemental Guidelines for the Evaluation of Structural Vapor Intrusion Potential for Site Assessments and Remedial Actions on November 5, 2009. The document covers screening procedures and sampling guidance and can be found at:















Postal Service Issues VI Guidance


In September 2009 the U. S. Postal Service issued vapor intrusion guidance to assist its staff in responding to VI concerns at postal facilities. The guidance suggests internal roles and responsibilities for both reactive and preventive approaches. The document can be found at:















AEHS West Coast Conference


The Twentieth Annual Association for Environmental Health and Sciences Meeting and West Coast Conference on Soils, Sediments, and Water will be held in San Diego, CA on March 15-18, 2010. EPA will be chairing an all day vapor intrusion session on March 16 where three new EPA technical documents will be discussed. There is also a petroleum vapor intrusion workshop scheduled for the evening of March 16 as well as other vapor intrusion platform sessions on March 15. The preliminary program can be found at the following link:















ITRC Classroom VI Training Course


The Interstate Technology and Regulatory Council will be offering its two day course, Vapor Intrusion Pathway: A Practical Guideline, in Norfolk, Virginia on March 22-23, 2010. Information on the course is found at:

ITRC Course

Saturday, December 19, 2009

HUD Brownfields Programs Rescued

The HUD Brownfields Economic Development Initiative (BEDI) and HUD 108 programs were rescued in the Transportation HUD Appropriations Conference Committee.  BEDI got a boost - $17.5 million, which is $7.5 million above the FY 09 level and HUD 108 was continued at $6 million (leverages $275 million in loans).  BEDI and HUD 108 were eliminated in the Obama budget and in the Senate Appropriations Bill, but the House appropriated $25 million for BEDI and $6 million for HUD 108.

The Northeast-Midwest Institute coordinated a campaign - including the National Brownfields Coalition, Smart Growth America, the National Association Housing and Redevelopment Organizations (NAHRO), and LOCUS (Responsible Real Estate Developers and Investors Group) - to provide Congress with the documented benefits of these programs and the reasons that BEDI and HUD 108 fill a unique niche that cannot be addressed through the EPA Brownfields Program or the HUD CDBG Program.  The campaign was bolstered by letters from the mayors of Philadelphia, Tacoma, Cleveland, Cincinnati, and Baltimore - as well as the Economic Development Director of Pittsburgh, a group of 16 local governments and non-governmental organizations in Wisconsin, and a letter from the National Brownfields Coalition co-signed by 22 organizations.

For more information, contact Evans Paull (202/329-4282) at the Northeast-Midwest Institute.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Brownfield Business Development Strategy #3: Connect with the local Economic Development Corporation/Foundation

The local economic developer has a working relationship with all the existing industries and is typically the first person a site selection consultant calls (even before the mayor) on behalf of an industry that is interested in bringing a business to a community. Healthy relationships with these key local stakeholders will give you an idea who's coming and who's leaving.  A good start would be connecting with the State representative of the Southern Economic Development Council (http://www.sedc.org).  Also, each State has its own Economic Development Council, representing the economic development organizations within the State.  The Southern organizations are:

Sunday, December 6, 2009

New EPA Publication: State Brownfields and Voluntary Response Programs: An Update from the States

State Brownfields and Voluntary Response Programs: An Update from the States
November 2009
Publication Number: EPA-560-R-09-522

The "State Brownfields and Voluntary Response Programs: An Update from the States" explores the evolving landscape of state environmental, financial, and technical programs, including the incentives designed to promote brownfields cleanup and redevelopment. This user-friendly tool looks at multiple components of state brownfields and voluntary response program(s), and provides a synopsis of each state's response program(s) and contact information.

The information in the EPA "Update" for each State, starting with EPA Region 4, will be featured on a page in the blog.  Here's Alabama's link.

Subscribing to this web site will keep you updated on changes.

*NOTE: Let me know if there are any errors or modifications.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Brownfield Business Development Strategy #2:Notice Periodic Changes in the Brownfield Inventory

Each State should have a "brownfield inventory" or a listing of contaminated sites. For Mississippi, it can be found at http://list.brownfields.ms and is referred to as the CERCLA/USS File List. If you're not sure where to find your State brownfield inventory, contact your State Brownfield Coordinator; or, if you have a Phase I ESA with an EDR Report (more to come on that in a later discussion thread), look up the reference to the "State Inventory" of contaminated sites. The EDR Report will typically list the frequency that the list is updated.

For Mississippi, the brownfield inventory is usually updated monthly. Any changes from month to month typically represent (1) changes is site status (site has been cleaned up and has received a "No Further Action" Letter), (2) minor typographical modifications or addition of information like latitude/longitude, or (3) NEW SITES ADDED TO THE INVENTORY. When sites are added to the inventory, they may be still in the market for an environmental consultant. Perfect time for a call.