EPA announced today 171 communities will
receive 264 Assessment, Revolving Loan Fund, and Cleanup (ARC) grants
totaling $67 million in EPA brownfield funding. These funds will give
communities and businesses a chance to return economic stability to
under-served and economically disadvantaged neighborhoods through the
assessment and clean-up of abandoned industrial and commercial
properties.
“Not only are these funds protecting the
environment and public health by helping communities clean up blighted
toxic waste sites, there are new job growth opportunities for local
economies to leverage through these investments," said Gina McCarthy,
EPA Administrator. “With cities looking at how to combat the impacts of
climate change, it's more important than ever for communities to
innovate new ways to retrofit formerly polluted sites into assets for
the community."
This year several projects were selected to address
sites identified in their Brownfield Area Wide Planning projects,
including Lowell, Mass., which will focus on revitalizing an Industrial
Park and Toledo, OH, which will clean up an old transmission plant.
Other selected projects include future uses such as, river walks, a
sports park, manufacturing and light industrial use, an eagle sanctuary
facility, and a technology corridor.
A total of approximately $23.5 million is going to
communities that have been impacted by plant closures. Other selected
recipients include tribes and communities in 44 states across the
country; and over 50 of the grants are going to HUD-DOT-EPA grant
recipient communities.
Since the inception of the EPA’s Brownfield Program
in 1995, cumulative brownfield program investments have leveraged more
than $21 billion from a variety of public and private sources for
cleanup and redevelopment activities. This equates to an average of
$17.79 leveraged per EPA brownfield dollar expended. These investments
have resulted in approximately 93,000 jobs nationwide. These projects
demonstrate the positive impact a small investment of federal
brownfield funding can have on community revitalization through
leveraging jobs, producing clean energy, and providing recreation
opportunities for surrounding neighborhoods. EPA’s Brownfield Program
empowers states, communities, and other stakeholders to work together to
prevent, assess, safely clean up, and sustainably reuse brownfield
sites.
More information on brownfield grants by state: http://cfpub.epa.gov/bf_factsheets/
More information on EPA’s brownfields:
Program http://www.epa.gov/brownfields/
Success Stories http://www.epa.gov/brownfields/success/index.htm
Program Accomplishments http://epa.gov/brownfields/overview/bf-monthly-report.html