Federal estimates have determined that there are nearly half a million
contaminated industrial properties scattered throughout
the United States, They dot every major American city and contribute
to urban blight and sprawl. Local governments have been virtually powerless
in their attempts to break this development cycle. These toxic sites
have been slow to redevelop because of their uncertain liability and
the probable high cost of their cleanup. Most often, these properties
are either left abandoned or are simply underutilized because of land
use restrictions.
Some eastern cities, like Chicago, have reported as many
as 2,000 of these contaminated industrial sites within a single metropolitan
area. Nationally, it is estimated that one in eight no-residential properties
has been contaminated. In an effort to combat this problem and to stimulate
economic development, the Clinton administration and the Federal Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) have instituted an urban revitalization policy
called the Brownfields Economic Development Initiative.
Brownfields, as these contaminated properties have come
to be known, represent a broad spectrum of hazardous waste. Pollutants
often include a vast array of extremely harmful chemicals and heavy
metals. These sites have been reported to be among the most contaminated
by both state and federal standards. In the past, the EPA has referred
to these toxic industrial properties as "uncontrolled hazardous
waste sites." EPA has stated that "uncontrolled hazardous
waste sites may present some of the most serious environmental and public
health problems the nation has ever faced."
Several months ago, the EPA announced a relaxation of
cleanup standards and the removal of 25,000 brownfield sites from its
Superfund list, The ripples from these regulatory actions have already
been felt in every state, as the active cleanups of 70 sites, nationwide,
were recently halted. Since 1993 and the federal program's first pilot
project in Cleveland, Ohio, an additional 17 EPA grants have been handed
out to municipalities wanting to participate in this brownfields study,
including California's state capitol. Within the next two years, 50
more cities will be awarded these grants, which will aid them in bringing
their petitions for brownfield status to completion.
The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation,
and Liability Act [42 U.S.C. § 9601 et seq.], most commonly known
as the Superfund Act, came about as a consequence of the recognized
impacts that these hazardous sites, like the highly publicized Love
Canal, were having on public health and the environment. Now, in the
present regulatory climate, the public is being asked to forget these
toxic lessons of the past.
The
Brownfields Initiative is being proposed as a new idea. However, it
is really a return to a time, not long ago, when polluters were unregulated,
sites went uncleaned, and public safety was forsaken for economic development.
Brownfield deregulation is now being accepted by a number of states
across the country. Acknowledged as having the strongest environmental
regulations in the country, even California has been quick to jump on
board. With the promise of jobs, community empowerment, and enhanced
"quality of life," this initiative will effectively end environmental
cleanups on these sites. It's no wonder that the Brownfields Initiative
is being criticized for its elements of environmental racism.
Excerpt from California's Brownfields Initiative: The Toxic Crisis
California Environmental
Law Reporter, May 1996, Volume 1996 Issue 5
| Soil Contamination Information
and News Articles |
- Playground Soil Tested for Arsenic Berkeley
Daniela Mohor, Berkeley Daily Planet, June 22, 2001
- California's Brownfields Initiative: The
Toxic Crisis
L A Wood, California Environmental Law Reporter, May 1996, Volume
1996 Issue 5
- Polluted properties for sale during
alleged data-fixing
Will Harper, Berkeley Voice, July 25, 1996
- Problems with toxic cleanup method aired:
City officials, gas station neighbors frown on aeration
Will Harper, Berkeley Voice, September 14, 1995
- Department of Non-attainment
L A Wood, East Bay Express, January 12, 1996
- TuneUp Masters Faces
City Council
Devona Walker, Berkeley Daily Planet, April 7, 2002
- Deep in the Heart of Toxins
L A Wood, East Bay Express, December 6, 1996 to editor
- ALSO SEE: USTs Underground Storage Tanks
On
Berkeley Soil (1996) 13:48 TRT...a look at groundwater beneficial
uses, the State of California's efforts at deregulation, SB 92-49
and its "containment zone" and "brownfields"
policies. |
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