SEFft
United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
Office of Solid Waste
And Emergency Response
(5401G)
EPA 510-F-02-013
June 2002
www.epa.gov/oust/
Underground Storage
Tanks And Brownfields Sites
MISSOURI/St. Louis
EPA's USTfields Initiative funds states and tribes to conduct pilot projects in brownfields communities to assess and clean up petroleum
contamination from federally-regulated underground storage tanks (USTs) at idle or abandoned commercial properties. Petroleum
contamination has generally been excluded from funding under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
Liability Act (CERCLA) and has not, therefore, been covered under EPA's Brownfields Program. In 2002, EPA's Office of Underground
Storage Tanks (OUST) competitively selected 40 state and tribal USTfields Pilots. In each pilot, the state will work with a local
community or the tribe will work with its EPA Region to address identified sites. Each pilot is awarded up to $100,000 of Leaking
Underground Storage Tank (LUST) Trust funds to assess and clean up petroleum-contaminated sites; as a result, the sites will be ready
for future reuse.
BACKGROUND
The State of Missouri will work with the City of St. Louis as
its partnering local area. The city is a Brownfields
Assessment Demonstration Pilot and Brownfields
Showcase Community. As part of its Brownfields cleanup
plans, the city has identified 6 - 9 abandoned gas stations
with underground storage tanks in two of its northern
neighborhoods. These neighborhoods are part of a
Federal Empowerment Zone and a larger comprehensive
revitalization plan. Abandoned gas stations within the
neighborhood are not only eyesores to the surrounding
communities but also pose potential threats to human
health and the environment from petroleum contamination.
OBJECTIVES
Using USTfields Pilot funds, augmented by the Missouri
Petroleum Insurance Fund, the state will work with the city
to assess and clean up abandoned gas stations in the two
targeted neighborhoods. This cleanup work will provide
health and environmental benefits, as well as mitigate
illegal dumping and criminal activities occurring at these
sites. Local non-profit community development corporations
will be involved in the redevelopment of this area. After
the sites are cleaned up, they will be reused to create
opportunities for economic improvements.
EPA Region 7
St. Louis, MO
Applicant Name: State of Missouri
Local Partner: City of St. Louis
Date of Selection: June 2002
Profile: Missouri will work with the City of St. Louis
to assess and clean up several abandoned gas
stations to help create opportunities for economic
improvements.
Contacts:
EPA Region 7
Janet Hallier
(913) 551-7532
Missouri Department of
Natural Resources
Betty Keehart
(573) 751-3176
For further information, go to www.epa.gov/oust/
EPA USTfields INITIATIVE
EPA has not yet negotiated the Cooperative Agreements with states and tribes to fund these pilots; therefore, activities are subject to change.
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