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News Releases from Region 03

EPA Funding to Revitalize Wilmington Brownfields

04/20/2017
Contact Information: 
Roy Seneca (seneca.roy@epa.gov)
(215) 814-5567

PHILADELPHIA (April 20, 2017) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today announced the award of a $197,500 grant to the City of Wilmington, Delaware to assist with area-wide planning for cleanup, redevelopment and productive reuse of former industrial properties in the City.

One of the sites is a former auto salvage yard located at the intersection of 14th and Church Streets along the Brandywine River, and the other is along the same river shoreline at 12th and Governor Printz Boulevard which is used by the City for storage of materials. Both properties are owned by the City of Wilmington.

“This area-wide planning approach sparks the kind of economic development that meets the needs of neighborhoods, and leads to vibrant communities,” said acting EPA Regional Administrator Cecil Rodrigues, speaking at a press conference near the former Diamond State Salvage facility along the Brandywine riverfront in northeast Wilmington. “We know that revitalization works best when local communities are directly involved in the process.”

This funding will help to empower the City of Wilmington and its partners including: The University of Delaware; The Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DENREC); The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA); and, Old Brandywine Village – as they plan the cleanup, redevelopment, and infrastructure upgrades necessary for neighborhood revitalization.

“Revitalization of our communities is necessary if Delaware is going to be competitive in the 21st century,” said Delaware Governor John Carney. “Cleaning up and redeveloping under-utilized sites strengthens the local economy by bringing new businesses and job opportunities and improves the quality of life of residents in the area. This brownfields area-wide planning effort by the City of Wilmington, Old Brandywine Village, local residents and the other partners will be a model for communities throughout Delaware to follow.”

“We are looking forward to conducting this community-based review and evaluation process to assist Wilmington in redeveloping two sizable areas of land,” said Wilmington Mayor Mike Purzycki. “We are grateful to the EPA and our state and city partners for helping us turn former brownfields into assets for the community and the City.”

EPA has previously awarded nearly $11 million to communities in the state of Delaware for assessing and cleaning up brownfields. One of these grants was a $1 million Brownfields Revolving Loan Fund grant which DNREC and its partners used to clean up five brownfields properties in Wilmington – leading to the creation of a group home for people with disabilities, 40 residential units, a community center, and a research and manufacturing facility.

Previous EPA Brownfields Assessment Grant funding has also helped to create the South Wilmington Wetlands Project, which has enabled planning for the cleanup and reuse of 20 plus acres of contaminated soils to create a healthy, functioning wetland with a proposed community park and environmental education center.

Since the federal brownfields law was passed in 2001, EPA’s brownfields program has assessed and cleaned up thousands of contaminated brownfields sites, returning over 66,000 acres of land to productive reuse nationwide.  The program has created or retained over 122,000 jobs and leveraged more than $23.7 billion in redevelopment investment in brownfields communities.

For more information on brownfields and brownfields grants, visit: https://www.epa.gov/brownfields