SEPA
                      United States
                      Environmental
                      Protection Agency
                      Washington, D.C. 20460
                        Solid Waste
                        and Emergency
                        Response (5101)
   EPA 500-F-99-100
   May 1999
   www.epa.gov/brownfields/
Brownfields  Job Training
and  Development
Demonstration Pilot
      Houston Community College, TX
 Outreach and Special Projects Staff (5101)
                                         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 forthe 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 has selected Houston Community College for a
Brownfields Job Training and Development
Demonstration Pilot. The community college's
Brownfields Assessment Pilot partner is the City of
Houston. The Job Training Pilot will target the East
End and Palm Center communities located within
Houston's federal Enhanced Enterprise Community
(population 102,000). The East End area is comprised
almost entirely of Hispanic residents.  The annual
income per person in this area is  $5,945, and 71
percent of the adult  residents do not have a high
school diploma. The Palm Center area is comprised
almost entirely of African-Americans. The annual
income per person in this area is  $7,596, and 44
percent of the adult  residents do not have a high
school diploma.

The City of Houston is home to hundreds of inner-city
brownfields.  Over 490 acres of brownfields have
been  entered  into the   city's  Brownfields
Redevelopment Program. The Milby Bus Bar, awell-
known brownfield in the East End, has already been
cleaned up and made ready for redevelopment at a
cost of $7 million. The extreme distress of the East
                       PILOT SNAPSHOT
                       Houston Community
                       College, Texas
Date of Announcement:
May 1999

Amount: $200,000

Profile: The Pilot will train 100
participants as environmental
technicians. Students will be recruited
fromthe Hispanic community of East
End and the African-American
community of Palm Center, both of
which are located in Houston's Federal
Enhanced Enterprise Community.
                       Contacts:
                       Houston Community College
                       (713)718-7228
   Regional Brownfields Team
   U.S. EPA-Region 6
   (214)665-6736
                           Visit the EPA Region 6 Brownfields web site at:
                       http://www.epa.gov/earth1r6/6sf/bfpages/sfbfhome.htm

                         Forfurther information, including specific Pilot contacts,
                       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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End and Palm Center communities and the city's
cleanup and redevelopment activities in these two
communities indicate a need for environmental
training.

TRAINING OBJECTIVES

Houston Community College plans to train 100
students, achieve a 75 percent placement  rate, and
track graduates for one year after completion of the
training.  Participants  will be  recruited from
disadvantaged  Latino  and African-American
communities inHouston's federal Enhanced Enterprise
Community. The Pilottraining program will consist of
a comprehensive 210-hour environmental technician
training program, including  training in the use of
innovative  assessment and  cleanup technologies.
Graduates will receive an environmental technician
certification, and internships from local environmental
companies are available.

The training efforts of Houston Community College
will be supported by organizations such as the East
End Chamber of Commerce, League of United Latin
American  Citizens,  Gulf Coast Workforce
Development  Board, Environmental Educational
Services, Inc., and Onsite Environmental  Staffing.
The broad-based Land Redevelopment  Committee
will serve as an advisory body for the Pilot.

ACTIVITIES

Activities planned as part of this Pilot include:

• Conducting  outreach  to  recruit disadvantaged
 residents  of the  East End and Palm Center
 communities;

• Conducting environmental technician  training,
 including courses in the use of innovative assessment
 and cleanup technologies; and

• Supporting career placement of graduates for one
 year after the job training is completed.

The cooperative agreement for this Pilot has not yet been negotiated;
therefore, activities described in this factsheetare subjectto change.
 Brownfields Job Training and Development Demonstration Pilot                    Houston Community College, Texas
 May 1999                                                                         EPA500-F-99-100

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