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Brownfields 1997 Revolving Loan Fund Pilot
Fact Sheet

Sacramento, CA

EPA Brownfields Initiative

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.

Background

The City of Sacramento has many low-income
neighborhoods characterized by dilapidated commercial
strips, substandard housing, inadequate infrastructure,
and general blight. Many of these neighborhoods contain:
abandoned junk yards, former plating and metal-working
shops, closed dry cleaners, and vacated auto repair
operations. Pursuant to a state redevelopment law,
Sacramento has designated nine impoverished and
deteriorated neighborhoods as Redevelopment Project
Areas. The city uses tax increment financing, and
partners with city agencies, prospective developers and
project area committees (comprising neighborhood
residents, property owners, and businesses) to revitalize
these distressed areas to best meet community needs.

Sacramento has selected four of these Project Areas as
targets for the BCRLF Pilot, including North
Sacramento, Oak Park, Stockton Boulevard, and the R
Street Corridor (a portion of the Downtown Project
Area). The median household income in each target area
is at least 20 percent lower than the average income in
Sacramento County. Each of the target areas contain
many brownfields sites, and their redevelopment is being
vigorously pursued. Following the first round of lending,
the Sacramento BCRLF program may add other
Redevelopment Project Areas with a significant number

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Pilot Snapshot

Date of Announcement: 09/01/1997
Amount: $350,000; $150,000 supplement funding
awarded May 1999

Profile: Sacramento's Redevelopment Project Areas:
North Sacramento, Oak Park, Stockton Boulevard,
and the R Street Corridor.

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 9 Brownfields Team
(415)972-3091

EPA Region 9 Brownfields Web site
(http ://www .epa.gov/region9/brownfields)

Grant Recipient: City of Sacramento,CA
(916)264-8196

Objectives

The Sacramento BCRLF program will leverage the
EPA grant money with other financial tools available to
the city for use in the target areas. The city will use the
revolving loan fund as a source of short-term financing
for environmental cleanup prior to sale or development
of the property. A BCRLF loan will be offered as part
of a redevelopment package approved by both the city
and the community, whereby the city can provide
additional incentives to facilitate cleanup and
redevelopment. This approach will ensure that the
property is cleaned up and put to productive reuse
consistent with the community's needs.

Activities

Fund Structure and Operations

The city anticipates making up to six loans from the
original loan pool. The initial round of lending is
expected to be closed within three years of grant

United States
Environmental
Protection Agency
Washington, DC 20450

Solid Waste
and Emergency
Response (5105T)

EPA 500-F-99-051
May 99


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approval.

The City of Sacramento will act as the Lead Agency.
The Sacramento Housing and Redevelopment Agency
(SHRA) will serve as the Fund Manager. Loan
applicants will be required to conduct cleanup under the
California Department of Toxic Substances Control
(DTSC) Voluntary Cleanup Program. The DTSC will
serve as Site Manager, ensuring compliance with
CERCLA and other applicable environmental laws.

SHRA will evaluate the borrower's financial capability
and credit history, as well as his/her ability to manage
the cleanup, as part of the underwriting process. Similar
to many construction loans, the BCRLF loans will be
structured with interest-only payments until cleanup is
complete. Loans will be written for no more than
three-year terms, with repayment expected from sale or
refinancing of the property. A post-cleanup appraisal of
the property will be required to insure the loan-to-value
ratio will not be greater than 85 percent, including the
BCRLF loan and all prior financing.

Leveraging Other Activities

By coupling the revolving loan program with other
redevelopment initiatives and funds, including programs
established for financing environmental assessment, the
city hopes to put together packages that address a
spectrum of brownfields problems-both the
contamination and the underlying economic issues. In
some cases, other sources of cleanup and/or
redevelopment funding may be available (e.g., the state
underground storage tank fund, responsible party
contributions, city tax increment financing, and
non-profit grants).

Use of BCRLF Pilot funds must be in accordance with
CERCLA, and all CERCLA restrictions on use of
funding also apply to BCRLF funds.

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 500-F-99-051
May 99


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