f w \ Brownfields 2004 Assessment Grant Fact Sheet
Miami, FL
EPA Brownfields Program
EPA's Brownfields Program empowers states,
communities, and other stakeholders to work together to
prevent, assess, safely clean up, and sustainably reuse
brownfields. A brownfield site is real property, the
expansion, redevelopment, or reuse of which may be
complicated by the presence or potential presence of a
hazardous substance, pollutant, or contaminant. On
January 11, 2002, President George W. Bush signed into
law the Small Business Liability Relief and Brownfields
Revitalization Act. Under the Brownfields Law, EPA
provides financial assistance to eligible applicants through
four competitive grant programs: assessment grants,
revolving loan fund grants, cleanup grants, and job
training grants. Additionally, funding support is provided
to state and tribal response programs through a separate
mechanism.
Community Description
The City of Miami was selected to receive a brownfields
assessment grant. Of the city's 362,470 residents, 29,128
live in the target neighborhood of Little Haiti, a two-mile
corridor in northeast Miami that contains commercial and
industrial facilities intermixed with low-income
residential housing. The Little Haiti area is an
impoverished, immigrant community where 38 percent of
the population live below the poverty level, and 14.9
percent are unemployed or out of the labor force. This
predominantly minority, Haitian-American community is
82 percent African-American, and 13 percent Hispanic. It
is one of the poorest areas in the city, with minimal green
space or buffers between residential and
commercial/industrial land. Hundreds of sites in the area
could be characterized as brownfields contaminated with
hazardous substances or petroleum. A lack of resources
and opportunities, deterioration of buildings,
unemployment, and the perception of high crime rates all
plague Little Haiti, creating instability. Grant funds will
encourage sustainable, ongoing redevelopment, and
address issues of environmental justice, public and
environmental health, and economic development.
Assessment Grant
$200,000 for hazardous substances
$200,000 for petroleum
EPA has selected the City of Miami for a
brownfields assessment grant. Hazardous
substances grant funds and petroleum grant funds
will both be used to conduct an inventory of
potential brownfield sites in the Little Haiti area,
and conduct eight Phase I and four Phase II
assessments at priority sites. Grant funds will also
be used to conduct redevelopment and health/risk
planning, and community outreach activities.
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 4 Brownfields Team
(404) 562-8792
EPA Region 4 Brownfields Web site
(http://www.epa.gov/region4/was te/bf)
Grant Recipient: City of Miami Department of
Economic Development,FL
(305) 416-1453
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	c
Environmental	anri Fmpflpn™	EPA 560-F-04-149
Protection Agency	Response (5105T)	June 2004
Washington, DC 20450	Kesponse (si us )

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