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Following
are some Agency developments which may interest you. If you need
more information on any of these subjects, call the appropriate contact.
FOR RELEASE: THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 2000
EPA SEEKS NEW BROWNFIELDS SHOWCASE COMMUNITIES
Lauren M.
Mical 202-260-4358
EPA, along with more than 20 other federal agencies, is seeking communities
interested in being designated as Brownfields Showcase Communities.
A partnership of federal agencies with interests in brownfields redevelopment
has formed to offer special technical, financial and other assistance
to selected communities. EPA is offering each Showcase Community $200,000
in assessment funds plus the two-year loan of a federal employee to
help coordinate a community's brownfields efforts. Other federal agencies
support for the Showcases will depend upon the needs of a particular
community. These Brownfields Showcase Communities are models demonstrating
the benefits of focused attention on brownfields. To date, the federal
partners have designated 16 Brownfields Showcase Communities. Now that
these Showcases are up and running and yielding positive results, the
federal partners plan to designate 10 additional Showcase Communities
this year. These projects will promote environmental protection and
restoration, economic redevelopment, job creation, community revitalization,
greenspace development, energy efficiency and public health protection
through the assessment, cleanup and sustainable reuse of brownfields.
The pilots will develop national models demonstrating the positive results
of public, private and non-governmental collaboration in addressing
brownfields challenges. Brownfields are abandoned, idled or under-used
industrial and commercial properties where expansion or redevelopment
is complicated by real or perceived contamination. The deadline for
application submission is April 17, 2000. The Federal Register Notice
is expected to be published Thursday, March 16. For further information
about the Brownfields Showcase Communities Initiative see: www.epa.gov/brownfields.
FOUR BROWNFIELDS PREVENTION INITIATIVE PILOTS
CHOSEN
Lauren M.
Mical 202-260-4358
As part of EPA's Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act (RCRA) Brownfields Prevention Initiative, EPA today announced the selection
of four pilot projects that will showcase reforms to make it easier to cleanup
and reuse these sites. The RCRA cleanup program, like Superfund, was designed
to focus on sites posing the greatest risks to public health and the environment.
The four pilots chosen include: Bethlehem Steel Corp., Lackawanna, N.Y.; Blue
Valley Redevelopment Team, Kansas City, Mo.; Philadelphia Electric Company,
Chester, Pa.; and CBS Bridgeport, Conn. While there is no grant money associated
with these pilots, EPA has allocated contractor support to assist these pilots
in finding ways to expedite cleanups that protect public health and the environment.
This new initiative comes in response to concerns raised by representatives
from cities, industries and others who have recently begun emphasizing the importance
of looking beyond the
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA)
in addressing issues at brownfields sites in a more comprehensive manner.
To date, EPA has focused efforts primarily on issues associated with
CERCLA. Under this new initiative, EPA's goal is to help the state and
local governments and the site owners find ways to expedite cleanups
and allow for future reuse by using the flexibility of the existing
RCRA programs. EPA hopes to identify and understand any potential impediments
to cleanup and reuse of brownfields sites that may be posed under RCRA.
Information about the RCRA Brownfields Prevention Initiative will soon
be available at: www.epa.gov/brownfields.
NEJAC SUBMITS RECOMMENDATIONS ON WASTE TRANSFER STATIONS
Tanya Meekins
202-260-1387
The National Environmental Justice Council (NEJAC) has submitted recommendations
to EPA in their report, "A Regulatory Strategy for Siting and Operating
Waste Transfer Stations." The NEJAC is a federal advisory committee
that provides advice, consultation and recommendations to EPA's Administrator
on matters relating to environmental justice. As a result of citizens
concerns, the NEJAC, through its Waste and Facility Siting Subcommittee,
formed a working group to investigate the impacts of waste transfer
stations in minority and low-income communities. Waste transfer stations
are facilities that collect municipal waste before it is transported
to a disposal site. Some of the concerns include the clustering of waste
transfer stations in minority areas, human health and safety, and permitting.
The Agency plans to continue discussions with state and local governments
and is committed to bringing its technical and regulatory resources
to address these issues. As part of the subcommittee's investigation,
which began in September 1998, two fact-finding sessions were held in
New York City and Washington, D.C. These sessions included first-hand
tours of the waste facilities and the impacted communities, followed
by public meetings. The meetings were attended by various representatives
from community groups, industry groups, federal, local and state government
officials. For copies of the report, contact Tanya Meekins, EPA Office
of Media Relations, at 202-260-1387. If you have questions about the
report, contact Mathy Stanislaus, Chair of the Waste Transfer Station
Working Group, at 718-448-7916.
ENFORCEMENT WRAP-UP
Tanya Meekins 202-260-1387
OKLAHOMA CITY
CORPORATION AND INDIVIDUALS INDICTED
In Oklahoma City, Amtech Corp., a manufacturer
of oil field chemicals, and its co-owners were indicted on March 8 in U.S. District
Court in Oklahoma City, Okla., for violating the Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act and the Clean Water Act. The two co-owners Stephen Lane Adkins, President,
and Joel Edwin Mayhan, Vice-President, along with Virginia Malson, owner of
M&M Drum Co. were all indicted. The indictment alleges that waste chemicals
from the manufacturing process, including solvents, were illegally stored, transported
and disposed of between 1993 and 1997. The indictment states that drums of hazardous
waste were delivered to M&M Drum Co. by Amtech Corp. where the contents
of the drums were poured into the Oklahoma City sewer system. The drums of the
hazardous waste were also dumped in a field in Asher, Okla., and were stored
and buried in Osage County, Okla. Exposure to sufficient quantities of solvents
can cause a variety of diseases of the internal organs. The case was investigated
by EPA's Criminal Investigation Division and is being prosecuted by the U.S.
Attorney's Office for the Western District of Oklahoma.
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