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The Best Science Writing Online 2012
Showcasing more than fifty of the most provocative, original, and significant online essays from 2011, The Best Science Writing Online 2012 will change the way...
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In Augusta, Maine, an old paper mill that operated for more than a century will be turned into a new hotel and conference center.
In Chicago, soil and ground water polluted with dry-cleaning solvents will be cleaned up to make room for a new library in a poor neighborhood.
On an Indian reservation in Arizona, a contaminated tanning factory will be turned into a new industrial park, perhaps one that makes solar panels.
And in Addison, W. Va., land scarred by an old mine and abandoned railroads will be scoured and transformed into a museum and tourism center.
These projects and 210 others will be funded in part with $76 million in 2011 grants announced Monday by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The aim is to help turn contaminated industrial sites called brownfields into new developments that could revitalize communities across the country.
Most of the newly announced grants were awarded to poor, minority communities with high unemployment rates.
New Jersey leads the pack with 13 projects, followed by Massachusetts and Florida, each with 12, according to an EPA list. Michigan will receive seven, totaling $2.9 million. In all, the funds will go to 172 cities or communities in 40 states and three tribes.
Most of the grants are for $200,000 apiece and are directed for cleanup of a specific site. But 21 of them, including grants going to Portland, Ore., Kennebec, Maine and Tallahassee, Fla., are for $1 million each. In those cases, the grant must go to a coalition of at least three groups and involve cleanup of at least five sites. Other grants are for $400,000 and involve both assessment and cleanup.
Since its inception in 1995, the EPA’s brownfields program has awarded 1,895 assessment grants totaling $447.6 million, 279 revolving loan fund grants totaling $273.1 million and 752 cleanup grants totaling $140.8 million. That funding helped leverage more than $16 billion in cleanup and redevelopment funds more than $17 for each federal dollar spent and created nearly 70,000 jobs, EPA officials said.
At each site, the federal grants are paired with local, state and private funding. The money has gone to major cities such as Los Angeles and Chicago as well as small, rural towns and Native American reservations. Gas stations, smelters, ironworks, rail yards and scrap yards are among the sites chosen this year.
"Revitalizing our communities is vital to our health and the health of our local economies," EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson said in a statement Tuesday. "The grants we're awarding to communities across America will support projects that will help create thousands of jobs and make our communities cleaner, healthier and more prosperous places to raise a family and start a business.”
The brownfields program started with small seed grants. It grew in 2002 after Congress passed a law which had bipartisan support and was signed by President George Bush that provided funding and protected prospective developers from liability for old contamination they didn’t create.
Environmental groups as well as industry groups have supported the program.
"It is perhaps one of the most cost-effective uses of federal dollars to be found anywhere in the federal government," said Vernice Miller-Travis, former director of the Environmental Justice Initiative at the Natural Resource Defense Council, who was involved with advising EPA on the brownfields program when it was created. "Whole communities and cities have been brought back from the brink of economic despair because of successful brownfields redevelopment projects."





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1 Comments
Add CommentThank you for this report. The EPA needs more funding to support more of these brownfield clean up projects every year.
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