\   2012 Environmental Workforce  Development
              and Job Training Grant  Fact Sheet
              Toledo,  OH
EPA Environmental Workforce
Development and Job Training Grant
Program

In 2010, the Office of Brownfields and Land
Revitalization (OBLR) led an effort to more closely
collaborate with other programs within EPA on workforce
development and job training. Program offices now
participating in the expanded initiative include the Office
of Resource Conservation and Recovery (ORCR), Office
of Superfund Remediation and Technology Innovation
(OSRTI), Office of Underground Storage Tanks (OUST),
Federal Facilities Restoration and Reuse Office (FFRRO),
Center for Program Analysis (CPA), Innovation,
Partnerships, and Communication Office (IPCO), Office
of Wastewater Management (OWM), Office of Chemical
Safety and Pollution Prevention (OCSPP), and the Office
of Emergency Management (OEM). This initiative was
created to develop a job training cooperative agreement
opportunity that includes expanded training in other
environmental media outside the traditional scope of just
brownfields cleanup. As a result of this effort, the
Environmental Workforce Development and Job Training
Grants Program, formerly known as the "Brownfields Job
Training Grants Program," now allows applicants to
deliver other training in the environmental field, in
addition to the core traditional brownfields hazardous
waste and petroleum training historically provided.

Environmental Workforce Development and Job Training
grant funds are provided to nonprofit organizations and
other eligible entities to recruit, train, and place
predominantly low-income and minority, unemployed and
under-employed residents from solid and hazardous
waste-impacted communities. Residents learn the skills
needed to secure full-time, sustainable employment in the
environmental field, including a focus on assessment and
cleanup activities. To date, EPA has funded 191 job
training grants totaling over $42 million through the
former Brownfields Job Training Program and newly
expanded Environmental Workforce Development and
Job Training Program. As of January 2012, approximately
10,275 individuals had completed training and
approximately 7,155 obtained employment in the
environmental field, with an average starting hourly wage
of $14.12. This equates to a cumulative placement rate of
                    Environmental Workforce
                    Development and Job Training
                    Grant

                    $200,000

                    EPA has selected the City of Toledo for an
                    environmental workforce development and job
                    training grant. Toledo plans to train a minimum of
                    75 students, place at least 60 graduates in
                    environmental jobs, and track graduates for one
                    year. The core environmental training program
                    includes 124 hours of instruction in 40-hour
                    HAZWOPER, UST leak prevention, solid waste
                    management, innovative and alternative treatment
                    technologies, wastewater treatment, chemical
                    safety and stewardship, and pollution prevention
                    training. Program participants also will be eligible
                    for supplemental training in 32-hour asbestos
                    abatement worker. Up to five state and federal
                    certifications will be offered. Toledo is targeting
                    unemployed and underemployed residents of those
                    neighborhoods with the most number of
                    brownfield sites, with an emphasis on recruiting
                    minority and high poverty candidates, veterans,
                    and ex-offenders. Key partners include The Source
                    Northwest Ohio One-Stop, Economic Opportunity
                    Planning Association of Greater Toledo, East
                    Toledo Family Center, Uptown Association, The
                    Cherry Street Mission Ministries, United North,
                    and Owens Community College.
                    Contacts

                    For further information, including specific grant
                    contacts, additional grant information, brownfields
                    news and events, and publications and links, visit
                    the EPA Brownfields Web site
                    (http://www.epa.gov/brownfields).

                    EPA Region 5 Brownfields Team
                    312-886-4747
                    EPA Region 5 Brownfields Web site
                    (http://www.epa.gov/R5Brownfiel ds/)
  United States
  Environmental
  Protection Agency
  Washington, DC 20450
Solid Waste
and Emergency
Response (5105T)
EPA560-F-12-181
      June 2012

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approximately 70% for the program, and also includes
accomplishments data recorded since the program was
created in 1998.
                       CJrant Recipient: City of Toledo,OH
                       (419) 936-3944

                       The information presented in this fact sheet comes
                       from the grant proposal; EPA cannot attest to the
                       accuracy of this information. The cooperative
                       agreement for the grant has not yet been
                       negotiated. Therefore, activities described in this
                       fact sheet are subject to change.
  United States
  Environmental
  Protection Agency
  Washington, DC 20450
Solid Waste
and Emergency
Response (5105T)
EPA560-F-12-181
      June 2012

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