EPA-560-F-08-305
                                                                                                              October 2008
COASTAL RANGE  FOOD BANK
                                                Coastal Range Food Bank, Inc., OR
                                                                         Cleanup Grant
       Former Post  Office  in  Blodgett Delivering  Hope  to Local Residents
     ADDRESS:         I 1663 Nashville Road, Blodgett, OR 97326
     PROPERTY SIZE:    0.54 acres
     FORMER USES:     Nashville Store, Gas Station, and Post Office
     CURRENT USE:     Food Bank Operations Center and Thrift Store
     EPA GRANT RECIPIENT:
     Coastal Range Food Bank, Inc.
     received a $ 100,000 EPA Brownfields
     Cleanup grant in 2004.
PROJECT PARTNERS:
Oregon Department of Environmental Quality
(DEQ); Oregon Economic and Community
Development Department; Green and White
Rock Products, Inc.
OREGON
                                                                                    For additional data and geographic information for this and other
                                                                                    Brownfields Grants, please visit EPA's:
                                                                                    Envirofacts - www.epa.gov/enviro/html/bms/bms_query.html
                                                                                    Enviromapper - www.epa.gov/enviro/bf
    PROJECT BACKGROUND:
    The 0.54 acre property once housed an old-time general store that sold meat, milk, bread and other staples, and served as the local
    gathering place for children to purchase ice cream. Located in a logging community, the store offered oil, chainsaw chains, spark plugs
    and other necessities to loggers. The store had an outside island with two gasoline pumps and an outbuilding for dairy production.
    It also maintained a separate room for use as a US Post Office. The property was abandoned following foreclosure in the 1970s and
    remained abandoned for more than  23 years. In 2004, Coastal Range Food Bank, Inc. received a $ 100,000 EPA Brownfields Cleanup
    grant for the property. Coastal Range Food Bank, Inc. used its Brownfields grant to remove two substandard underground storage
    tanks and associated piping, excavate approximately 100 tons of petroleum-contaminated soil, and install ground water monitoring
    wells. This cleanup allowed Coastal Range Food Bank, Inc. to convert the site into a food bank and thrift store in order to serve the
    sparsely populated nearby forest communities, which experience a disproportionately high poverty rate.

    KEY ACCOMPLISHMENTS:
    •   Created a plan to redevelop the general store and gas station into a food bank
        and thrift store.
    •   Removed 100 tons of petroleum-contaminated soil; removed two underground
        storage tanks and piping; and installed ground water monitoring wells.
    •   Leveraged nearly $25,000 toward cleanup and redevelopment efforts.
    •   Provided a needed food and clothing service to the  surrounding community.

    OUTCOME:
                                                                                ^m
    This former brownfields site has new life as the Coastal  Range Food Bank which,           The Coasta/ Range Food Bank, open for business.
    unlike most food banks that distribute only boxed food allotments, provides the
    same services as a regular market and serves more than 400 people monthly. Shelves
    are stocked with food, and clients are able to browse the aisles with shopping carts to choose the items that best suit their needs.
    Clothing for babies, children, men and women is available in the Unique Boutique Thrift Store and there is no charge for any of the
    food or clothing offered. The grantee leveraged nearly $25,000 for cleanup and redevelopment from the state of Oregon and local
    business, and provides a much needed service to the surrounding logging community. As a result of public meetings held to fulfill
    the EPA Brownfields grant requirement, the community began a positive dialogue with the Toledo, Oregon Fire Chief toward the
    development of a local volunteer fire department on a portion of the unused land. In addition to community safety, the presence of a
    local fire department will  make prospective homebuyers eligible for homeowners' insurance, allowing them to finance the purchase of
    a home. This will provide a potential boost to the local economy,  as well as attract and retain younger residents to the area who often
    cannot finance the purchase of a home independently.
   FOR MORE INFORMATION:  Visit the EPA Brownfields Web site at http://www.epa.gov/brownfields/ or call EPA Region 10 at (800) 424-4372

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