United States
                   Environmental
                   Protection Agency
                   Washington, D.C. 20460
Solid Waste
and Emergency
Response (5101)
  EPA 500-F-00-028
  April 2000
  www.epa.gov/brownfields/
  v>EPA  Brownfields Supplemental
                   Assistance
                                                            Lewiston,  ME
 Outreach and Special Projects Staff (5105)
                   Quick Reference Fact Sheet
EPA's Brownfields Economic Redevelopment Initiative is designed to empower states, communities, and other
stakeholders in economic redevelopment to work together in a timely manner to prevent, assess, safely clean up, and
sustainably reuse brownfields. A brownfield is a site, or portion thereof, that has actual or perceived contamination and
an active potential for redevelopment or reuse. EPA is funding: assessment demonstration pilot programs (each funded
up to $200,000 over two years), to assess brownfields sites and to test cleanup and redevelopment models; job training
pilot programs (each funded up to $200,000 over two years), to provide training for residents of communities affected
by brownfields to facilitate cleanup of brownfields sites and prepare trainees for future employment in the environmental
field; and, cleanup revolving loan fund programs (each funded up to $500,000 over five years) to capitalize loan funds
to make loans for the environmental cleanup of brownfields. These pilot programs are intended to provide EPA, states,
tribes, municipalities, and communities with useful information and strategies as they continue to seek new methods
to promote a unified approach to site assessment, environmental cleanup, and redevelopment.
BACKGROUND

EPA awarded the City of Lewiston supplemental
assistance for its Brownfields Assessment
Demonstration Pilot. The declining fortunes of the
New England textiles industry has adversely affected
the City of Lewiston (population 39,757). The main
focus of brownfields cleanup and redevelopment in
Lewiston will continue to be the 1.2 million-square-
foot Bates Mill Complex.  Historically, the eleven-
building mill complex employed more than 5,000
people and was the state's largest employer. Economic
decline and massive layoffs, however, have resulted
in a large abandoned mill and a barren downtown. In
the community surrounding the mill, unemployment is
16.1 percent, compared to 7.5 percent for the entire
city.  The  poverty rate in this community is 47.3
percent, while the rate for the city is only 3.9 percent.
Lewiston has been designated as a federal Enterprise
Community.

RevitalizationofLewiston's downtown and waterfront
depends upon  returning the Bates Mill Complex to
productive use. Because total renovation is estimated
to cost between $70 and $100 million, the city has
renovated the cleanest and most desirable sections of
the mill first.  Signs of the mill's rejuvenation are
beginning to show, with  several small businesses
  PILOT SNAPSHOT
     Lewiston, Maine
   Date of Announcement:
   March 2000

   Amount: $75,000

   Profile: ThePilottargetsthe
   1.2 million-square-foot Bates
   Mill Complex; in 1950, the
   textile mill was responsiblefor
   one-third  of the nation's
   textiles produced.
Contacts:

Development Department
City of Lewiston
(207)784-2951
Regional Brownfields Team
U.S. EPA - Region 1
(617)918-1209
      Visit the EPA Region 1 Brownfields web site at:
     http://www.epa.gov/region01/remed/brnfld/

     Forfutther information, including specific Pilotcontacts,
   additional Pilot information, brownfields news and events, and
   publications and links, visit the EPA Brownfields web site at:
         http://www.epa.gov/brownfields/

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operating and hundreds of employees working in two
sections of the complex.  Real  and perceived
environmental contamination, however, continue to
hamper development of the remaining portions of the
complex. Approximately 30 percent of the mill has
been assessed, with an initial focus on those areas that
will be purchased in the near future. The results of the
initial assessment work indicates that additional time
and resources  are needed to produce even greater
results at the complex.

OBJECTIVES  AND  PLANNED ACTIVITIES

Lewiston' s objective is to use the Bates Mill Complex
as an anchor for downtown cleanup and economic
redevelopment and as  a catalyst for community job
creation.  Lewiston  will use the supplemental
assistance to continue assessments  on the existing
Mill Complex and to conduct assessments on adj acent
properties that will become part of the complex in the
near future. The Pilot  will focus the assessments on
several  specific  environmental impacts  that were
identified through the initial assessment work.

To accomplish these objectives, the Pilot plans to:

• Conduct a detailed property-wide  soil assessment
  for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) that
  present a potential threat to human health during
  redevelopment activities;

• Conduct a subsurface assessment to determine the
  nature and extent of contamination near Mill 3;
• Conduct assessments on several adj acent properties,
 located along Lincoln Street, that are being acquired
 as part of the Mill Complex project;

• Develop a comprehensive cleanup design plan;

• Expand the strategic planning  and community
 involvement efforts and the public information
 programs to facilitate cleanup and redevelopment of
 the Mill Complex.

The cooperative agreement for this Pilot has not yet been negotiated;
therefore, activities described in this fact sheet are subject to change.
  Brownfields Supplemental Assistance
  April 2000
                                 Lewiston, Maine
                               EPA 500-F-00-028

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