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Brownfields 2008 Job Training Grant Fact Sheet

Durham, NC

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 Durham was selected to receive a job training
grant. Located in central North Carolina, Durham
(population 187,035) is focusing its job training
recruitment efforts on residents of the Pettigrew Street
Corridor of Northeast Central Durham. Once a thriving
residential and business community, Northeast Central
Durham has suffered from neglect as residents moved to
the suburbs and industrial facilities closed. The area
contains a number of brownfields, including scrap yards,
garages, and vacant and abandoned industrial facilities. In
this community, more than 36 percent of residents live in
poverty, and the unemployment rate is 15 percent.
Eighty-eight percent of residents are minorities. The
Durham community has designed a revitalization strategy
for this 96-block area that includes brownfields
redevelopment. A labor market survey has shown that
there will be a demand for program graduates with
training in solid waste management, field testing and
equipment, and other environmental technician skills.

Job Training Grant

$200,000

EPA has selected the City of Durham for a job
training grant. Durham plans to recruit at least 60
residents, train 48 students, place at least 65
percent of graduates in environmental jobs, and
track graduates for a minimum of one year. The
training program will consist of three four-week,
160-hour training cycles that will include training
in HAZWOPER, field testing and equipment, lead
worker awareness, and soil and water
management. The primary trainer will be Durham
Technical Community College. Students will be
recruited from unemployed and underemployed
residents of Northeast Central Durham, primarily
from the Pettigrew Street Corridor. The city will
work with the Durham JobLink Career Center,
North Carolina Department of Environment and
Natural Resources, and North Carolina
Department of Labor's Bureau of Apprenticeship
to place graduates in environmental jobs.

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 Durham,NC
(919) 560-4965

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-08-230

Protection Agency	Response (5105D	February 2008

Washington, DC 20450	Kesponse (si us )


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United States	c

Environmental	anri Fmpflpn™	EPA 560-F-08-230

Protection Agency	Response (5105D	February 2008

Washington, DC 20450	Kesponse (si us )


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