United States
                   Environmental
                   Protection Agency
                   Washington, D.C. 20460
 Solid Waste
 and Emergency
 Response (5101)
 EPA 500-F-00-002
 April 2000
 www.epa.gov/brownfields/
  <&EPA   BrownfieldsSupplemental
                   Assistance
                                                           Birmingham,  AL
 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 Birmingham supplemental
assistance  for its  Brownfields  Assessment
Demonstration Pilot.  Birmingham will expand its
current brownfields project area to incorporate the
Kingston Community, the Birmingham Enterprise
Community, and the Ensely Community. The Kingston
Community is home to the former Stockham Valve
Company.  This  area  has  great potential for
redevelopment due to its rail access and close proximity
to the freeway, airport, and downtown. However, it
has remained vacant due to the perception of
environmental  contamination of  the  area.
Birmingham's federally designated  Enterprise
Community is home to one of Birmingham's most
disadvantaged communities.  The project plans to
assist with the current socioeconomic problems of
this community by redeveloping abandoned industrial
buildings and revitalizing the community. The Ensley
Community includes one of the city's most notorious
brownfields redevelopment sites, the former USX
property. Although this 448-acre property is suspected
of contamination,  there  is  a great deal of
redevelopment interest in this property due to its size
and central location.
PILOT  SNAPSHOT
  Birmingham, Alabama
                     Date of Announcement:
                     March 2000

                     Amount: $150,000

                     Profile:  The Pilot targets
                     the Birmingham Enterprise
                     Community,  Kingston
                     Neighborhood, and the
                     Ensley Community for
                     environmental and economic
                     revitalization.
Contacts:
Mayor's Office/Community
Enterprises Division
City of Birmingham
(205)254-2870
Regional Brownfields Team
U.S. EPA-Region 4
(404)562-8661
     Visit the EPA Region 4 Brownfields web site at:
 http://www.epa.gov/region4/wastepgs/brownfpgs/bf.htm

   For further 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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OBJECTIVES AND PLANNED ACTIVITIES

The City of Birmingham' s goal is to return abandoned
industrial lands and buildings in the target areas to
productive, environmentally conscious uses.  The
Pilot will use the supplemental assistance to continue
to increase  redevelopment  activities  of these
communities,  provide additional  employment
opportunities for community residents, identify new
land for business development, and increase tax
revenues for the City of Birmingham and the North
Birmingham Community.

The Community Enterprises Division of the Mayor's
office (CED) will have general supervision of the
Pilot. The Birmingham Environmental Clearinghouse
(BEC) will be responsible for coordinating  daily
activities.  Residents and members of the business
and environmental professional communities will assist
in achieving the Pilot's  objectives as well.

To accomplish these objectives, the Pilot plans to:

• Develop an inventory of sites in the target areas;

• Perform Phase I assessment of the selected  sites;

• Evaluate and perform ASTM Phase II assessment
  of selected sites;

• Develop a cleanup and redevelopment plan for each
  site; and

• Leverage resources  from stakeholders already
  interested in redeveloping these areas.
The cooperative agreement for this Pilot has not yet been negotiated;
therefore, activities described in this factsheetare subjectto change.
 Brownfields Supplemental Assistance                                                  Birmingham, Alabama
 March 2000                                                                        EPA 500-F-00-002

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