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Brownfields 2006 Assessment Grant Fact Sheet

Alpena, Ml

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 Alpena was selected to receive two
brownfields assessment grants. Located in northeast
Michigan, where the Thunder River discharges to
Thunder Bay, Alpena (population 11,304) has been a
center for the lumber industry since its first pulp and
paper mills were built in the late 19th Century. The city's
waterfront gave the industry easy access to shipping and
water for processing. It served as a draw for other
industries, including cement and gypsum producers, to
locate there. While industrial activities still exist at the
waterfront, many operations have closed over the past 25
years, leaving behind vacant and abandoned properties. A
search of state and federal sources has identified 78
known contaminated sites in Alpena. The city and
surrounding county have not experienced the population
growth or relative economic prosperity of other northern
Michigan communities. Since 1990, the city has lost over
two percent of its population, and the median household
income is only 68 percent of the state median. The
brownfields and other industrial sites along the waterfront
are impediments to the city's plan to develop a mixed-use,
walkable, vibrant downtown with a strong linkage to the
waterfront. Assessment and eventual cleanup of these
brownfields properties will enable Alpena to continue its
efforts to convert a brownfields area into a tourist
destination with recreational and retail space that will

Assessment Grants

$200,000 for hazardous substances
$200,000 for petroleum

EPA has selected the City of Alpena for two
brownfields assessment grants. Hazardous
substances grant funds will be used to conduct
community outreach, inventory and prioritize
sites, perform up to 20 Phase I and ten Phase II
environmental site assessments, and develop
baseline environmental assessments and
redevelopment plans for selected sites around the
city. Petroleum grant funds will be used for the
same tasks at petroleum sites.

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) 886-7576

EPA Region 5 Brownfields Web site
(http://www.epa.gov/R5Brownfiel ds)

Grant Recipient: City of Alpena,MI
(989)354-1700

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)

EPA 560-F-06-104
May 2006


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create jobs for area residents.

United States	c

Environmental	anri Fmpflpn™	EPA 560-F-06-104

Protection Agency	Response (5105T)	May 2006

Washington, DC 20450	Kesponse (si us )


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