&EPA
                   United States
                   Environmental
                   Protection Agency
                   Washington, D.C.  20460
                           Solid Waste
                           and Emergency
                           Response (5101)
      EPA500-F-98-137
      May 1998
                                 Assessment
Demonstration   Pilot
                 State  of New Hampshire
  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. Since 1995, EPA has funded more than 150 Brownfields Assessment
Demonstration Pilots, at up to $200,000 each, to support creative two-year explorations and demonstrations of
brownfields solutions. The Pilots 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 the State of New Hampshire for a
Brownfields Pilot. New Hampshire was one of the
first manufacturing centers in the nation, and many
of its  small towns developed around textile and
manufacturing mills.  A number of these mill and
manufacturing sites were abandoned or underutilized
as textile and manufacturing jobs left the state.  A
total of 467 non-National Priorities List (NPL) sites
have been inventoried by the state and found to be
contaminated with hazardous substances.

New Hampshire is composed primarily of small
towns and cities, and only one—Manchester—has a
population over 100,000.  Abandoned or underused
industrial and commercial  properties  can have a
significant impact on tax revenues and jobs in small
municipalities, since their property  tax bases are
comparatively small. In small towns, the resolution
of contamination issues surrounding an abandoned
site that formerly housed even a small industrial
facility can  have a dramatic impact on the local
community.   Cleanup and redevelopment of these
properties usually is hindered because of the uncertain
environmental conditions and unclear liabilities
associated with the contamination.  The state has
identified nine brownfields in different towns  as
potential targets for Pilot assistance.
                             PILOT SNAPSHOT
                           State of New Hampshire
  Date of Announcement:
  May 1998

  Amount: $200,000

  Profile: The Pilot intends
  to fund site assessment
  and cleanup planning
  efforts for New
  Hampshire's smaller
  towns in preparation for
  entry into the state's
  brownfields or voluntary
  cleanup programs.
                           Contacts:

                           New Hampshire
                           Department of
                           Environmental Services
                           (603)271-2900
Regional Brownfields Team
U.S. EPA-Region 1
(617)573-9681
                                Visit the EPA Region 1 Brownfields web site at:
                               http://www.epa.gov/region01/remed/brnfld/

                            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

The state' s obj ective is to create a brownfields cleanup
and redevelopment partnership among federal, state,
and local governments. The state will send EPA Pilot
funds to small  municipalities that are actively
attempting to address environmental problems and
other issues found at  idle properties.   The Pilot
assessments will be  targeted toward:  small
municipalities where brownfields have a significant
adverse impact on  the local economy; known
contaminated sites; and municipalities that are most
active in trying to address their brownfields problems.
The state' s brownfields program will provide liability
protection for prospective purchasers upon approval
of a cleanup plan, and will extend this protection to
future owners upon completion of cleanup. Funding
site assessment and  cleanup planning efforts will
prepare sites for entry into the state's brownfields or
voluntary cleanup programs.

ACCOMPLISHMENTS AND ACTIVITIES

Activities planned as part of this Pilot include:

• Selecting sites  that are either  1)  owned by  a
  municipality (e.g., taken for back taxes), or 2) being
  considered for purchase or municipal acquisition
  by tax deed or eminent domain;

• Providing targeted assistance to municipalities with
  the greatest need and potential impact to increase
  propertytaxes, createjobs, and concurrently resolve
  environmental problems;

• Conducting site assessments and preparing cleanup
  plans to aid in site redevelopment;

• Continuing to work with town redevelopment efforts
  and maintain the working relationships with all of
  the towns containing potential sites; and

• Establishing baseline data to track progress at each
  site. The baseline will consist of the assessed value
  of the property, the back taxes owed, and the status
  of the site with respect to environmental indicators.

The cooperative agreement for this Pilot has not yet been
negotiated; therefore, activities described in this fact sheet
are subject to change.
  Brownfields Assessment Demonstration Pilot                                         State of New Hampshire
  May 1998                                                                       EPA500-F-98-137

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