Today, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced more than $4.6 million from President Biden’s Investing in America Agenda to expedite the assessment and cleanup of brownfield sites in Ohio while advancing environmental justice.
EPA selected eight communities in Ohio to receive eight grants totaling more than $4.6 million in competitive EPA Brownfields funding through the Multipurpose, Assessment, Revolving Loan Fund, and Cleanup (MARC) Grant programs. Thanks to the historic boost from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, this is the largest ever funding awarded in the history of the EPA’s Brownfields MARC Grant programs.
These investments are part of President Biden’s Investing in America Agenda to grow the American economy from the bottom up and middle-out – from rebuilding our nation’s infrastructure, to driving over $470 billion in private sector manufacturing and clean energy investments in the United States, to creating a manufacturing and innovation boom powered by good paying jobs that don’t require a four-year degree, to building a clean-energy economy that will combat climate change and make our communities more resilient.
“We’re working across the country to revitalize what were once dangerous and polluted sites in overburdened communities into more sustainable and environmentally just places that serve as community assets. Thanks to President Biden’s historic investments in America, we’re moving further and faster than ever before to clean up contaminated sites, spur economic redevelopment, and deliver relief that so many communities have been waiting for,” said EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan. “This critical wave of investments is the largest in Brownfields history and will accelerate our work to protect the people and the planet by transforming what was once blight into might.”
“Given the Midwest’s rich industrial history, it’s no surprise that Ohio has a significant portion of EPA’s funded brownfields sites,” said EPA Region 5 Administrator Debra Shore. “Thanks to the historic brownfields investment announced today, more communities will get the financial help they need to transform abandoned, blighted properties into assets that attract business and community development.”
“By investing in and redeveloping these brownfield sites, we create new opportunities for growth for communities across Ohio,” said Sen. Sherrod Brown. “Thanks in part to the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, this investment will support revitalization efforts critical to the safety and economic success of these communities.”
“I am proud to join the EPA in announcing $1 million in new federal grants coming to OH-11 as a result of increased funding provided by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. The grants will help advance environmental justice in our community, spurring further assessment, cleanup, and redevelopment in the cities of Cleveland and East Cleveland, sharing equally in the announced funding. I look forward to continued partnership with the EPA and the Biden-Harris Administration to build more clean, safe, and healthy communities in Northeast Ohio,” said Rep. Shontel Brown.
“This $500,000 award from the EPA will help ready the Lunkenheimer site for future development,” said Rep. Greg Landsman. “We’re excited to work with our federal partners, the City of Cincinnati, and the Port to catalyze new economic development that will bring good-paying jobs to South Fairmount.”
Many communities that are under economic stress, particularly those located in areas that have experienced long periods of disinvestment, lack the resources needed to initiate brownfield cleanup and redevelopment projects. As brownfield sites are transformed into community assets, they attract jobs, promote economic revitalization, and transform communities into sustainable and environmentally just places.
Thanks to the historic $1.5 billion boost from President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, EPA’s Brownfields Program is helping more communities than ever before begin to address the economic, social, and environmental challenges caused by brownfields and stimulate economic opportunity, and environmental revitalization in historically overburdened communities.
EPA’s Brownfields Program also advances President Biden’s Justice40 Initiative to direct 40 percent of the overall benefits of certain Federal investments to disadvantaged communities. The Brownfields Program strives to meet this commitment and advance environmental justice and equity considerations into all aspects of its work. Approximately 84 percent of the MARC program applications selected to receive funding proposed to work in areas that include historically underserved communities.
The following entities in Ohio have been selected to receive EPA Brownfields funding through the Multipurpose, Assessment, Revolving Loan Fund, and Cleanup (MARC) Grant Program.
- City of Cincinnati will receive a $500,000 community-wide grant to conduct 12 Phase I and eight Phase II environmental site assessments. Funds also will be used to prepare four cleanup plans and to develop and maintain a GIS-based brownfield site inventory. Cincinnati is targeting the Beekman Avenue and Spring Grove Avenue Corridors. Priority sites a vacant 154,000-square-foot foundry and valve manufacturing building built in 1908; a 5-acre site used to dump foundry sand since the 1970s, and two former manufacturing facilities with multiple vacant buildings.
- City of Cleveland will receive a $500,000 community-wide grant to conduct 16 Phase I and nine Phase II environmental site assessments. Funds will also support community outreach and meetings, an inventory of brownfield sites, five remedial action plans and five reuse plans. Cleveland is targeting the East 93rd Street Corridor. Priority sites include the Urban Agricultural Zone Brightfield site and the Former National Bronze and Aluminum Foundry Company site.
- Cuyahoga County Land Reutilization Corp. will receive a $500,000 grant to clean up the Euclid-Woodlawn Redevelopment site at 1810 Woodlawn Ave. and 12500 and 12524 Euclid Ave. in the City of East Cleveland. The site, contaminated with trichloroethylene, formerly housed commercial printing operations, a dry cleaner, an auto repair garage, a gas station, and an auto sales business.
- Jefferson County Port Authority will receive a $500,000 community-wide grant to conduct 12 Phase I and eight Phase II environmental site assessments. Funds will also be used to inventory sites, develop two reuse plans and support community outreach activities. The target areas for this grant are the City of Steubenville, the Town of Mingo Junction, the Villages of Yorkville, Tiltonsville, and Rayland, and the Pottery Addition community. Priority sites include a 230-acre former steel manufacturing yard, a 10-acre former nut and washer manufacturer, and a vacant trucking facility that fell into disrepair.
- City of Lima will receive a $500,000 community-wide grant to conduct 18 Phase I and nine Phase II environmental site assessments. Funds will also be used to inventory sites, develop four cleanup plans, two reuse assessments, a brownfields revitalization plan, and support community outreach activities. Lima is targeting a former asbestos roofing and sheet metal company and a former dry cleaner.
- Muskingum County Planning Commission will receive a $400,000 community wide grant to conduct 11 Phase I and six Phase II environmental site assessments. Funds will also be used to inventory and prioritize sites, develop five cleanup plans, and support community outreach activities. The county is targeting the City of Zanesville where priority sites include former gas stations, an auto body shop, a car dealership, a long-vacant train station and a former dry cleaner.
- Port of Greater Cincinnati Development Authority (doing business as the Port) will has receive $797,437 grant to conduct 12 Phase I and seven Phase II environmental site assessments and to develop a plan for community involvement and outreach. The Port will use the funds to clean up the former Reliable Castings site at 3530 Spring Grove Rd., in Cincinnati, and to target the Mill Creek Corridor along I-75 in Hamilton County. This area has many abandoned manufacturing facilities, abandoned properties, and neighborhoods in decay. The Mill Creek watershed is designated as the most endangered urban river in North America.
- Trumbull County Land Reutilization Corp. will receive a $918,685 grant to clean up the former Diversified Resources Site at 400 Refractory Rd., in Warren. This 28-acre site once used for heavy industry and manufacturing operations, is now contaminated with solvents, petroleum, and inorganic compounds. The cleanup will require removing about 3,400 drums, 200 super sacks, 9,000 tons of waste, and 11 empty storage tanks. The grant will also support community engagement activities.
You can read more about this year’s MARC Grant selectees here.
Additional Background:
EPA has selected these organizations to receive funding to address and support the reuse of brownfield sites. EPA anticipates making all the awards announced today once all legal and administrative requirements are satisfied.
EPA’s Brownfields Program began in 1995 and has provided nearly $2.37 billion in Brownfield Grants to assess and clean up contaminated properties and return blighted properties to productive reuse. EPA’s investments in addressing brownfield sites have leveraged more than $36 billion in cleanup and redevelopment. Over the years, the relatively small investment of federal funding has leveraged, from both public and private sources, nearly 260,000 jobs. Communities that previously received Brownfields Grants used these resources to fund assessments and cleanups of brownfields, and successfully leverage an average of 10.6 jobs per $100,000 of EPA Brownfield Grant funds spent and $19.78 for every dollar.
The next National Brownfields Training Conference will be held on August 8-11, 2023 in Detroit, Michigan. Offered every two years, this conference is the largest gathering of stakeholders focused on cleaning up and reusing former commercial and industrial properties. EPA co-sponsors this event with the International City/County Management Association (ICMA).
- For more on Brownfields Grants: https://www.epa.gov/brownfields/types-brownfields-grant-funding
- For more on EPA’s Brownfields Program: https://www.epa.gov/brownfields
Original source can be found here.