2000 CPEO Brownfields List Archive

From: CPEO Moderator <cpeo@cpeo.org>
Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 16:55:24 -0700 (PDT)
Reply: cpeo-brownfields
Subject: [CPEO-BIF] FORTY PILOT PROJECTS SELECTED, FUNDS AWARDED TO RETURN TOXIC WASTE
 
US EPA Headquarters Press Release
Washington, DC

Date Published:  07/13/2000

FORTY PILOT PROJECTS SELECTED, FUNDS AWARDED TO RETURN TOXIC WASTE SITES TO
PRODUCTIVE COMMUNITY USE

EPA Administrator Carol M. Browner and the Clinton-Gore Administration
announced today that 40 new Superfund Redevelopment Pilots have been
selected and that nearly $4 million will be divided among them to help
communities return toxic waste sites to productive use. These pilots are
receiving up to $100,000 each to help put back into commercial and
recreational use the nation's worst sites -- those listed on the National
Priorities List (NPL).

"The Clinton-Gore Administration has cleaned up more toxic waste sites
faster and more cost effectively than ever before in history. Now we are
showing that by working with communities, these sites can be restored in
ways that lead to productive, economically viable use," said Browner. "The
Superfund Redevelopment Pilot projects are proving that economic
development and environmental protection go hand-in-hand."

In July 1999, Administrator Browner kicked off the initiative by awarding
$1 million in first round pilot financial assistance to ten communities
nationwide. With this second round of Superfund Redevelopment Pilots, the
Agency intends to award nearly $4 million to towns, cities, counties, and
states across the nation. These funds will be used for a variety of
activities designed to develop local input on anticipated future uses,
including the following: public outreach; facilitation of community
services; coordination between different levels of government and community
members; training of community members and local governments on reusing
Superfund sites; and developing reuse assessments and reuse plans.

Many Superfund sites are already being reused as a result of economic
conditions or the foresight of local communities or individuals. To date,
190 NPL sites are being reused as retail stores, office buildings, golf
courses, softball fields and tree groves. Of the reused sites that have
been analyzed, more than 13,000 acres have been returned to ecological or
recreational reuse and approximately 14,500 jobs representing $450 million
in annual income are located on recycled sites with commercial use. 

The Clinton-Gore Administration has completed more than three times as many
Superfund site cleanups than previous Administrations. In addition, over
the past seven years, EPA has made significant improvements in the
Superfund initiative, making the cleanup process 20 percent faster and the
cost of cleaning up a site 20 percent less expensive.

One example of a successfully reused Superfund Site is the Old Works Golf
Course in Anaconda, Montana. Once a former copper smelting and processing
area, golf legend Jack Nicklaus helped transform this site into a
recreational and tourist destination by designing a golf course that
incorporates many of the features of the old industrial site. This 1,500-
acre property employs 20 people and will help revitalize the town of Anaconda.

Overall, EPA or potentially responsible parties are providing up to
$100,000 in financial assistance and/or services to each pilot. Applicants
are offered several types of program assistance including funding through a
cooperative agreement, personnel through the Intergovernmental Personnel
Act and access to facilitation services. 

A cooperative agreement is the formal mechanism by which EPA is providing
the funds. Thirty-seven out of the 40 pilots will develop a cooperative
agreement to fund their activities. EPA is providing facilitation services
for five of the pilots. Facilitators will help the communities identify
stakeholders, hold public meetings and reach a consensus on the reuse of a
site. Additionally, EPA may help fund a position for a federal agency
expert for at least one of the pilots. By using an Intergovernmental
Personnel Act assignment, a federal agency expert can work with a local
government on predicting potential reuses for a site.

The mission of EPA's Superfund program is the timely and efficient
assessment and cleanup of the nation's worst hazardous waste sites. Through
its Administrative Reforms and Superfund experience, EPA has become
increasingly aware of the importance of fully exploring future land use
opportunities with communities before choosing and performing the cleanup.
This process assures that the cleanup is protective of human health and the
environment and consistent with the anticipated future uses.

Along with EPA's Brownfields pilots, these pilots emphasize EPA's goal of
environmental protection through cleanup activities that allow for the
conversion of once-blighted properties into valuable community assets. The
towns, cities and states selected to receive pilot funds are: Corinna,
Maine; Lowell, Mass.; Walpole, Mass.; New Bedford, Mass.; Pittsfield
Economic Development Authority, Mass.; Woburn, Mass.; Merrimack, N.H.;
Stratford, Conn.; Gowanda, N.Y.; Saratoga Springs, N.Y.; West Winfield,
N.Y.; Camden, N.J.; Newark, N.J.; Glen Cove, N.Y. (received designation/no
funding); Philadelphia, Penn.; Hagerstown, Md.;Chattanooga, Tenn.;
Spartanburg County, S.C.; Jacksonville, Fla.; Waukegan, Ill.; Kokomo, Ind.;
Calumet, Mich.; Allegan, Mich.; Board of Lake Township Trustees, Ohio;
South Milwaukee, Wis.; Chicago Department of the Environment, Ill.;
Alexandria, La.; Cushing, Okla.; Plainview, Ark.; East Feliciana Parish
Police Jury, La.; Texas City, Texas; Dallas, Texas; Jasper County
Commission, Mo.; Board of Lake County Commissioners, Colo.; State of Utah;
Denver (City and County), Colo.; Butte-Silver Bow Planning Board, Mont.;
Alameda, Calif.; Santa Fe Springs, Calif.; and Panhandle Health District I,
Idaho. 

For further information: www.epa.gov/superfund/programs/recycle/index.htm.
R-109 # # #

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To read CPEO's archived Brownfields messages visit
http://www.cpeo.org/lists/brownfields

If this email has been forwarded to you and you'd
like to subscribe, please send a message to
cpeo-brownfields-subscribe@igc.topica.com 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
___________________________________________________________
T O P I C A  The Email You Want. http://www.topica.com/t/16
Newsletters, Tips and Discussions on Your Favorite Topics

  Prev by Date: [CPEO-BIF] EPA'S BROWNFIELDS PROGRAM RECOGNIZED AS INNOVATION LEADER
Next by Date: [CPEO-BIF] S. 2700 is still alive
  Prev by Thread: [CPEO-BIF] EPA'S BROWNFIELDS PROGRAM RECOGNIZED AS INNOVATION LEADER
Next by Thread: [CPEO-BIF] S. 2700 is still alive

CPEO Home
CPEO Lists
Author Index
Date Index
Thread Index