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Brownfield Sites

National Information
Region 4 Brownfield Information
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Brownfield sites are real property, the expansion, redevelopment, or reuse of which may be complicated by the presence or potential presence of a hazardous substance, pollutant, or contaminant. Cleaning up and reinvesting in these properties takes development pressures off of undeveloped, open land, and both improves and protects the environment.

Brownfield Program Background

EPA's Brownfields Program is designed to empower states, communities, and other stakeholders in economic redevelopment to work together to sustainably reuse brownfields. To achieve these goals, the Brownfields Program provides funds and technical assistance to states, local communities, tribes and other stakeholders in economic redevelopment to work together to prevent, assess clean up, and sustainably reuse brownfield sites. More Brownfields Information.

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Redevelopment of Brownfield Sites

It is estimated that there are more than 450,000 brownfield sites in the United States. EPA's Brownfields Program provides financial and technical assistance for brownfields activities through an approach based on four main goals:

Brownfields grants serve as the foundation of EPA’s Brownfields Program. These grants support revitalization efforts by funding environmental assessment, cleanup, and job training activities.

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Legal Issues at Brownfield Sites

EPA’s Brownfields Liability page offers useful information about liability associated with redeveloping Brownfields properties. The Brownfields Law clarifies CERCLA liability as related to Brownfields. Other related laws and regulations impact brownfields cleanup and reuse through financial incentives and regulatory requirements.

In addition, the 2002 Brownfields Law expanded EPA's assistance by providing new tools for the public and private sectors to promote sustainable brownfields cleanup and reuse. The Brownfields Law amended the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA or Superfund) by providing funds to assess and clean up brownfields; clarified CERCLA liability protections; and provided funds to enhance state and tribal response programs.

It is important to remember that while aspects of the Brownfields Law apply to most types of contaminated property, the legal issues at some sites will not be encompassed or solved by the 2002 amendments. The 2002 amendments have two main components:

EPA has developed guidance and fact sheets to help prospective purchasers understand the BFPP provision. EPA's Common Elements Guidance (22pp, 366K) lays out and explains the 8 criteria that prospective purchasers must meet. A Common Elements Reference Sheet (6pp, 204K) highlights the main points of the guidance through short summaries and FAQs.

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Brownfield Tools & Resources

EPA and Region 4 have developed many tools and resources that can help implement redevelopment activities at contaminated sites and properties. The links below provide Brownfield-specific tools, resources, and information from a number of sources.

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Brownfield Partnerships

EPA has continued to build partnerships with a wide range of stakeholders - including federal partners, state, tribal and local governments, and non-governmental organizations - to promote the cleanup and reuse of Brownfield sites.

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Brownfield Program Activities and Initiatives

The Brownfields Program promotes the cleanup and redevelopment of brownfield sites through a series of activities and initiatives that explore sector-based solutions, enhance environmental quality, stimulate economic development, and revitalize communities. More information on national Brownfield initiatives.

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Brownfield Grant Recipients in Region 4

Region 4 maintains a catalogue of brownfield sites through the Region where pollution is being or has been cleaned up. Sites are organized by state, and allow you to find site summaries, site profiles, contacts, and fact sheets.

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State Brownfield sites

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Brownfield Program Contacts

An appropriate Region 4 contact for reusing a brownfield site can be found on the Revitalization Contacts page.

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