Join CCLR for an amazing opportunity to learn from the experts on how to manage brownfield redevelopment projects. This workshop is designed for redevelopment practitioners in Mississippi and Arkansas, from local governments, nonprofits, and the private sector with an interest in learning the nuts-and-bolts of redeveloping environmentally challenged property. Recycling abandoned and under-utilized properties in the Delta Region requires special knowledge and skills to manage contaminant issues. This practical and interactive workshop will provide project managers with the tools, techniques, and funding resources required to bring projects in on-time and on-budget.
Seasoned brownfield redevelopment practitioners will be on-hand to discuss funding sources and give you the advice you need to move your project forward. The workshop will be held at the offices of the Delta Regional Authority. Presenters from across Mississippi and Arkansas will discuss a number of successful brownfield redevelopment projects, and all attendees will have a unique opportunity to get an inside perspective on the projects. Other case studies will highlight a range of brownfield reuse opportunities applicable to both rural and urban communities in the Delta.
Cost:
Free (lunch provided)
Date and Time:
Wednesday, February 26, 2015, 9:00 am - 4:15 pm
Location:
The Delta Regional Authority, 236 Sharkey Avenue, Suite 400, Clarksdale, MS
The workshop is expected to fill quickly, so early registration is recommended. For more details and to register, click REGISTER below.
REGISTER
CCLR’s past workshops have received stellar reviews. This is the perfect opportunity to learn how to take blighted or underutilized land in your community and turn it into a community asset. For more information, contact Emma Leonard at (415) 398-1080 x100, emma.leonard@cclr.org.
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Sustainable Communities and Green Infrastructure Guidance
A new report, Enhancing Sustainable Communities
With Green Infrastructure: A guide to help communities better manage stormwater
while achieving other environmental, public health, social, and economic
benefits, aims
to help local governments, water utilities, nonprofit organizations,
neighborhood groups, and other stakeholders integrate green infrastructure
strategies into plans that can transform their communities. Many communities
that want to use green infrastructure approaches face technical, regulatory,
financial, and institutional obstacles that limit widespread implementation.
This report serves as a guide to develop a plan that can overcome these
obstacles for neighborhoods, towns, cities, and regions of all sizes. It also
can help stakeholders create a vision for how green infrastructure can enhance
their communities beyond reducing stormwater runoff, and directs readers to
other resources that provide more detailed information that can be tailored to
communities’ particular climate, goals, and circumstances.
The report is paired with a blog post by Joel Beauvais, Associate Administrator for EPA’s Office of Policy, on how green infrastructure is helping to transform neighborhoods, and a graphic to help communities quickly envision the 10 steps to developing a sustainable community and green infrastructure plan. You can also find photographs of green infrastructure approaches in communities on the Flickr page shown below.
The report is paired with a blog post by Joel Beauvais, Associate Administrator for EPA’s Office of Policy, on how green infrastructure is helping to transform neighborhoods, and a graphic to help communities quickly envision the 10 steps to developing a sustainable community and green infrastructure plan. You can also find photographs of green infrastructure approaches in communities on the Flickr page shown below.
- Read the report: http://www.epa.gov/smartgrowth/green-infrastructure.html
- Read the blog post: http://blog.epa.gov/epaconnect/2014/10/green-infrastructure-helping-to-transform-neighborhoods-in-cleveland-and-across-the-nation/
- View the graphic: http://www.epa.gov/smartgrowth/green-infrastructure-10steps-scip.html
- View the photos in Flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/usepagov/sets/72157648579274857/
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
EPA Brownfield Grant Webinar - 11/05 @ 2PM
·
The EPA will
provide a guideline outreach webinar on November 5th at 2:00 pm
(EST). The purpose of this training webinar is to assist applicants with
understanding the Assessment and Cleanup Grant Guidelines and in applying for
the grants. Join the webinar at https://epa.connectsolutions.com/fy15brownfields/ and/or via
conference call (dial-in number: 1-866-299-3188/ access code:
202-566-1817).
Monday, October 27, 2014
KSU Brownfield Webinar - 11/04 @ 3PM EST
·
The Kansas State
University’s TAB Program is hosting a webinar on November 4th at
3:00 pm (EST) to provide tips on good grant proposal writing strategies.
They will discuss the TAB EZ tool that is intended to streamline and simplify
the grant writing process. TAB EZ is very user friendly, offers helpful hints
for addressing proposal requirements, and links to additional resources. Join
the webinar at https://epa.connectsolutions.com/fy15tabez/ and/or via
conference call (dial-in number: 1-866-299-3188/ access code: 202-566-1817).
Friday, October 24, 2014
More Than $1 Billion in Funding and Technical Assistance Available for State, Local, and Tribal Governments
More
than $1 billion in funding and technical assistance is available for state,
local, and tribal governments from the U.S. Economic Development Administration
(EDA), Department of Energy (DOE), Department of Agriculture (USDA), National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), and Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) that can be used to
support climate and energy initiatives, including economic development,
sustainable communities, green infrastructure, and water efficiency. For full
eligibility and application details, please visit the links provided
below.
In
addition, please visit the calendar of 2014
EPA grant opportunities that may be of particular interest to
communities.
DOE
Climate Action Champions Program – Funding Amount TBD
- Applications Due: October 27, 2014
- Eligible Entities: county, city, township, and tribal governments
DOE
is seeking to highlight between 10 and 15 local governments and tribal
governments—or regional collaborations or consortia thereof—that demonstrate a
strong and ongoing commitment to implementing strategies that both reduce
greenhouse gas emissions and enhance climate resilience, with a particular
emphasis on strategies that further both goals. The program is also intended to
provide recognized entities with additional opportunities for financial and
technical assistance, as well as facilitated peer-to-peer networking
opportunities and mentorship, to support and advance their greenhouse gas
emissions reduction and climate resilience objectives.
For
more information, visit the request for
applications.
EDA
FY14 Regional Innovation Grants – $15 million
- Applications Due: November 3, 2014
- Eligible Entities: county, city, township, tribal, and state governments; public/private institutions of higher education; nonprofits; special district governments
EDA
is seeking applications for three programs that develop regional innovation
strategies: the i6 Challenge ($8 million available), Science and Research Park
Development Grants ($5 million available), and Cluster Grants for Seed Capital
Funds ($2 million available). The i6 Challenge aims to commercialize
innovations, ideas, intellectual property and research into viable companies;
the Science and Research Park Development Grants seek to provide research hubs
and increase regional competitiveness; and the Cluster Grants for Seed Capital
Funds are intended to create sustainable financing institutions for
innovation-based startups. Science and Research Park Development Grant
applications in the field of energy efficient building technologies, renewable
energy, and cogeneration can receive extra consideration.
For
more information, visit the funding
opportunity description.
USDA
FY14 Rural Community Development Initiative – $6 million
- Applications Due: November 12, 2014
- Eligible Entities: private, non-profit (including faith-based and community organizations and philanthropic organizations), or public (including tribal) organizations that provide financial and technical assistance to multiple recipients
USDA
is making available funds to develop the capacity and ability of qualified
private, non-profit community-based housing and community development
organizations, low-income rural communities, and federally recognized Native
American tribes to undertake projects related to housing, community facilities,
or community and economic development in rural areas. Applications that consider
technical assistance for the development of renewable energy systems and energy
efficiency improvements can receive additional consideration.
For
more information, visit the funding
opportunity description.
NOAA
Ecological Effects of Sea Level Rise Program – $800,000
- Applications Due: November 18, 2014
- Eligible Entities: institutions of higher education; non-profits; state, local, and tribal governments; commercial organizations; U.S. territories; and federal agencies
NOAA
is seeking applications to support management of regional and local ecosystem
effects of sea level rise and coastal inundation through targeted research on
key technologies, natural and nature-based infrastructure, physical and
biological processes, and model evaluation. The funding is intended to integrate
dynamic physical and biological processes with sea level rise and coastal
inundation to improve the prediction of coastal ecosystem effects to enable
enhanced coastal resiliency.
For
more information, visit the funding
opportunity description.
EPA
Environmental Justice Small Grants Program – $1.2
million
- Applications Due: December 15, 2014
- Eligible Entities: tribal governments, non-profits
EPA
is making available funding to support activities designed to empower and
educate communities to understand environmental and public health issues and to
identify ways to address these issues at the local level. The funding will focus
on proposals supporting community-based preparedness and community climate
resiliency efforts. Examples of community resilience projects that will receive
consideration include improving water use efficiency and installing green
infrastructure to increase resilience to heavy storms.
For
more information, visit the funding
opportunity description.
HUD
National Disaster Resilience Competition – $1
billion
- Applications Due: March 16, 2015
- Eligible Entities: states with counties that experienced a Presidentially Declared Major Disaster in 2011, 2012 or 2013
HUD
is seeking applications to help communities recover from prior disasters and
improve their ability to withstand and recover more quickly from future
disasters, hazards, and shocks. HUD will also provide technical assistance to
every eligible state and local government to help applicants consider future
risks and vulnerabilities in planning and decision-making, and assist them in
applying for funding. The competition is structured in two phases: a framing
phase, in which applicants consider their disaster recovery needs,
vulnerabilities, stakeholder interests, resilience, community development
objectives, and investment alternatives, and an implementation phase, in which a
subset of applicants will refine their approaches developed in the first phase.
HUD will award funding at the conclusion of Phase 2.
For
more information, visit the competition
fact sheet.
State
and local officials interested in additional information about developing and
implementing cost-effective climate and energy strategies that help further
environmental goals and achieve public health and economic benefits may visit
EPA’s State
and Local Climate and Energy Program site.
NALGEP Brownfield Grant Writing Assistance
·
The NALGEP
(National Association of Local Government Environmental Professionals), the
Center for Creative Land Recycling (CCLR), the Kansas State University’s
Technical Assistance to Brownfields (TAB) Communities Program, and the New
Jersey Institute of Technology are hosting a webinar on October
30th from 2:00 to 3:15 pm (EST) to provide the latest advice on
preparing a successful 2015 application. CCLR and KSU both have EPA grants to
provide this type of assistance to potential applicants. Webinar speakers
include experts who have been successful applicants, technical assistance
providers, and recent reviewers of brownfields grant applications. Speakers will
provide special tips for disadvantaged and small/rural communities and discuss
common mistakes and special advantages for these applicants.
Registration is required: Register for the webinar today.
Registration is required: Register for the webinar today.
Thursday, October 23, 2014
FY15 Brownfield Assessment and Cleanup Guidelines Outreach Webinar
EPA will provide one
guideline outreach webinar on November 5, 2014 at 2pm (EST). The purpose of this training webinar is
to assist applicants with understanding the Assessment and Cleanup Grant
Guidelines and in applying for the grants. Join
the webinar at https://epa.connectsolutions.com/fy15brownfields/ and/or
via conference call (dial-in number: 1-866-299-3188/ access code:
202-566-1817).
Background: These brownfield grants may be used to
address sites contaminated by petroleum and hazardous substances, pollutants, or
contaminants (including hazardous substances co-mingled with petroleum).
Opportunities for funding are as follows: Brownfield Assessment Grants (each
funded up to $200,000 over three years; Assessment Coalitions are funded up to
$600,000 over three years) and Brownfield Cleanup Grants (each funded up to
$200,000 over three years). Please note that applicants who received an
Assessment grant from EPA in Fiscal Year 2014 (FY14) are eligible to apply under
this competition. If the applicant was a member of a coalition that was awarded
a grant in FY14, that applicant is also eligible to apply under this assessment
competition. The proposal submission deadline is December 19,
2014.
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
EPA Brownfield# Grant Guidelines Posted!!! - Deadline - December 19, 2014
The Brownfield Assessment and Cleanup Guidelines are now publically available and should be posted on www.grants.gov very soon.
The Guidelines are posted on the OSWER website (http://www.epa.gov/oswer/grants-funding.htm) and will also be posted, along with the supplemental guidance documents, on the OBLR website (www.epa.gov/swerosps/bf/applicat.htm).
The direct link to the Guidelines are:
Assessment: http://www.epa.gov/oswer/docs/grants/epa-oswer-oblr-14-07.pdf
Cleanup: http://www.epa.gov/oswer/docs/grants/epa-oswer-oblr-14-08.pdf.
Proposals are due December 19, 2014.
The Guidelines are posted on the OSWER website (http://www.epa.gov/oswer/grants-funding.htm) and will also be posted, along with the supplemental guidance documents, on the OBLR website (www.epa.gov/swerosps/bf/applicat.htm).
The direct link to the Guidelines are:
Assessment: http://www.epa.gov/oswer/docs/grants/epa-oswer-oblr-14-07.pdf
Cleanup: http://www.epa.gov/oswer/docs/grants/epa-oswer-oblr-14-08.pdf.
Proposals are due December 19, 2014.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)