Release date: 07/23/2008
Contact Information: Beth Totman (212) 637-3662, totman.elizabeth@epa.gov
(San Juan, P.R.) Five municipalities in Puerto Rico will get a boost in their efforts to clean up and redevelop contaminated properties, thanks to a total of $2 million in grants announced today by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The funding will be used by the local governments to identify and assess sites that can be cleaned up and redeveloped. Properties such as these where reuse, redevelopment or expansion is hindered by pollution or potential pollution are known as brownfields. EPA Regional Administrator Alan J. Steinberg presented the grants today to representatives of the five municipalities at a ceremony at the Agency’s Caribbean Environmental Protection Division office in San Juan.
“Brownfields grants are given to equip communities with funding to tackle eyesores and polluted properties and to turn them into valuable resources,” said Alan J. Steinberg, Regional Administrator. “These assessment grants will enable each municipality to assess abandoned sites and to take the first important step toward putting useless sites into useful service.”
The following municipalities each received $400,000 in the form of one $200,000 grant to assess sites with hazardous substances and one $200,000 grant to assess sites with petroleum:
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