Greenbytes: June 17, 2005 Edition
In this Issue
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Feature: Brownfields Success Stories
Dorchester Brownfields Project Honored at "Phoenix Awards"
Note From EPA New England Regional Administrator Bob Varney:
Most people in the environmental field know what Brownfields are - a property (often urban) for which redevelopment or reuse may be complicated because of the presence or potential presence of a hazardous substance, pollutant, or contaminant. During the past several years, EPA has focused intently on how we can assist communities to evaluate, clean and put Brownfields back into productive use.
This is the third of an occasional series that explores recent projects that demonstrate how Brownfields revitalization projects truly make a difference to people, families and communities in need - bringing new economic opportunities, resources and pride to areas that suffered from neglect, blight and contamination.
Dorchester Brownfields Project Honored at "Phoenix Awards"
A community development corporation in the Dorchester neighborhood of Boston, Mass., was recognized recently for redeveloping a contaminated site and winning an international Brownfields award. The Dorchester Bay Economic Development Corporation's (DBEDC) Bay Street Project, a $15 million redevelopment project of the former 4.7 acre Boston Insulated Wire and Cable Company site, was one of 14 winners of Phoenix Awards, given by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection to recognize innovative remediation projects across the United States and abroad. The Phoenix Awards were created in 1997 to honor the groups that develop significant Brownfields sites across the country – recognizing innovative and practical remediation projects, which bring blighted, old commercial and industrial sites back to productive use
The Bay Street site was home to the Boston Insulated Wire and Cable Company for 80 years and then abandoned for 10 years before the DBEDC bought the site in 1994 and planned its redevelopment. A new building was opened on the site in 2002 which serves as the headquarters for Spire, a Boston-based marketing firm which designs, prints and distributes marketing materials from its two-story facility. Spire's new headquarters employs over 100 people, which includes some entry level positions. Spire offers job training for local residents in this lower income area of Dorchester to prepare them for some of these entry level positions.
Prior to redevelopment and reuse, contamination that was concentrated on a 1.1 acre portion of the site that contained a lagoon and a railroad spur had to removed. Both the lagoon and ground water in this portion of the site were contaminated with lead and silver, volatile organic compounds, oil and grease. The railroad spur also contained lead, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) and total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH). Some of these contaminants are known to disrupt breathing or to be neurotoxic or carcinogenic.
Financing redevelopment was a challenge due to site contamination, back taxes and liens, which made it an unattractive site for private developers. After the Dorchester Bay Economic Development Corporation acquired the site, the city of Boston forgave $1 million in back taxes. The $15,720,000 required to complete the projects was creatively financed through a combination of public and private funding from more than 20 individual organizations, including $800,000 from the Dorchester Bay Economic Development Corporation itself.
Throughout the redevelopment process, the Dorchester Bay Economic Development Corporation coordinated monthly meetings with residents in the neighborhood surrounding the site to discuss the project. The neighbors ultimately chose Spire as the tenant for the site because, among other things, it promised jobs for local residents and would create less truck traffic than some of the alternatives being considered. The opening of Spire caused a ripple effect in the community--other businesses have opened or expanded in the area and created even more jobs. Homeowners have also seen their property values increase.
The Dorchester Bay Economic Development Corporation was given the Phoenix Award at a reception during the Brownfields 2004 Conference in St. Louis, Mo., last September. A total of 14 projects from across the United States and one project in Germany were recognized.
More information about EPA New England's Brownfields program (http://www.epa.gov/region1/brownfields/)
Press Releases
With Summer Approaching, EPA Offers Massachusetts $256,580 to Monitor Coastal Beaches
With Summer Approaching, EPA Offers Connecticut $224,290 to Monitor Coastal Beaches
Fish Tissue Results from Silver Lake in Pittsfield
EPA Finalizes Human Health and Ecological Risk Assessments for GE Pittsfield / Housatonic River Site
Two Small Businesses in Massachusetts Get Grants for Innovative Research
New Bedford PCB Clean-Up Plan Reviewed; Public Meeting Scheduled
EPA New England News Release - EPA and City of Boston Celebrate Clean Diesel Trolleys
EPA and NH DES to Hold Informational Meeting for Mohawk Tannery Site
Meetings & Conferences
Cleanup Activities
at the Shpack Landfill Site
June 21, 2005 - Norton, MA
NETC (Newport)
Restoration Advisory Board
June 22, 2005 - Newport, RI
McCoy Field Public
Meeting
June 22, 2005 - New Bedford MA
EPA and NH DES
to Hold Informational Meeting for Mohawk Tannery Site
June 27, 2005
MMR Impact Area
Review Team
June 28, 2005
New Bedford Harbor
Superfund Site
June 30, 2005 - New Bedford MA
GE Pittsfield Superfund - new reports
Hatheway & Patterson Superfund Site - new reports
Lead Paint Enforcement - new notification & disclosure rule tip/complaint form
Pollution Prevention - grant info added
Salvage Yard and Auto Recyclers Home Page - updated text
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