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Tim Sullivan, Deputy Commissioner Revitalizing Connecticut’s Brownfields.

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Presentation on theme: "Tim Sullivan, Deputy Commissioner Revitalizing Connecticut’s Brownfields."— Presentation transcript:

1 Tim Sullivan, Deputy Commissioner Revitalizing Connecticut’s Brownfields

2 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 2 Table of Contents I.The Brownfield Imperative II.Program Updates III.OBRD Programs and Funding Opportunities IV.Q&A / Discussion

3 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development The Brownfield Imperative

4 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 4 The Challenge Connecticut’s – and America’s – economy is in constant transition, and our built environment must adapt as well The development of factories and mills drove the creation and growth of Connecticut’s cities and towns Many of these facilities operated before modern environmental laws existed, leaving behind significant contamination and hazardous waste In many cases, properties have been left abandoned for decades, and the original polluter is long, long gone There are thousands of abandoned or underutilized properties languishing in nearly every city and town in Connecticut These Sites are Market Failures Requiring Public Investment to Be Resolved

5 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 5 Why Brownfield Development? Pollution Cleanup & Public Health Job Creation & Economic Growth Downtown Revitalization Less Development Pressure on Open Land Brownfield Development More Properties On The Tax Rolls Historic Preservation “Cleaning up Connecticut brownfields is an important component of our economic development agenda.” – Gov. Dannel P. Malloy

6 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development Program Updates

7 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 7 Connecticut has made an unprecedented commitment to investing in brownfield redevelopment Since FY2012, the State has invested $138m in 100+ projects to remediate and redevelop contaminated sites across the State In FY2015, $41.5m was contracted with cities, towns, non-profits and developers For every dollar invested by the State, $4.53 has been or will be invested by non-State partners FY2015 projects: $6.29 for every $1 invested by the state $40m of new funding was authorized for FY16-17, up from $30m in previous biennium An Historic Commitment to Brownfields

8 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 8 DECD worked closely with DEEP and the Brownfields Working Group to advance several program improvements New program: Brownfield Areawide Revitalization (BAR) Grants Loan/Grant programs: Equalizing maximum loan and grant sizes Ending municipal authority to pass grants through as loans Enabling DECD to award additional grant funds for legitimate unexpected cost overruns Exempting HBM-only loans from VCP requirements Expanding State-owned brownfield initiative to include formerly State- owned sites 2015 Legislative Changes

9 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 9 Success Stories: Two Roads Brewery, Stratford

10 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 10 Success Stories: Two Roads Brewery, Stratford $500K OBRD Grant; $20m+ total private investment

11 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 11 Capewell Horse Nail Company - Hartford Built 1902, 170,000 Sq. Ft., Vacant Since the 1980s

12 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 12 Capewell Horse Nail Company - Hartford Groundbreaking, July 22 2015

13 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development OBRD Programs and Funding Opportunities

14 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 14 OBRD: How Can We Help? Connecticut has developed a suite of tools to encourage the remediation and redevelopment of brownfields Grants (Municipalities and Economic Development Agencies) Low-Interest Loans (Developers, Municipalities, Agencies) Liability Relief Tax Increment Financing

15 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 15 Connecticut statute provides several opportunities to relieve potential liabilities associated with brownfields Municipal Brownfields Liability Relief: Provides state and third party liability relief, exemption from Property Transfer Act; not required to fully investigate or clean up but required to serve as good stewards of the land Brownfield Remediation and Revitalization Program (BRRP): Up to 32 properties per year that enter into the VCP and pay 5% of the property’s assessed value to DEEP are eligible for relief from offsite liability Abandoned Brownfield Cleanup (ABC) Program: Properties that have been unused or underutilized for 5 years or more can apply to be held harmless for offsite contamination resulting from conditions onsite Properties must enroll in DEEP’s Voluntary Cleanup Program (VCP) Liability Relief for Brownfields “Responsible Parties” are ineligible for liability relief and State funding

16 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 16 OBRD administers a Municipal Grant Program (MGP) Eligible Applicants: Municipalities and economic development agencies Funding Amounts: Grants of up to $4 million Grants are reimbursement-based Application Process: Municipal Grants are awarded on a competitive basis through periodic funding rounds Next round: Applications posted September 28, due November 9 New Program: Brownfield Areawide Revitalization (BAR) Grants OBRD Financial Assistance: Grants

17 Comprehensive planning, moving from traditional site-by-site to area-wide approach Modeled after EPA’s Area-Wide Planning Program Pilot round: $1 MM funding availability Application published September 16, due November 16 Maximum grant: $200,000 (10% local match) Eligible entities - Municipalities, Economic Development Agencies, and COGs Eligible activities: community visioning, existing conditions analysis, limited ESAs, GIS mapping, market studies, marketing to developers, site portfolio, local zoning revisions and other actions to spur investment 17 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development Brownfield Areawide Revitalization Grant

18 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 18 OBRD administers a Targeted Brownfield Development Loan Program (TBDLP) Eligible Applicants: Potential brownfield purchasers and current owners (including municipalities) Funding Amounts: Loans of up to $4 million Terms: Low-interest, flexible/deferred interest; maximum 20-year term Application Process: Loans are awarded in a “rolling rounds” process Applications are batched and reviewed on February 1, April 1, July 1, October 1 At the discretion of the Commissioner, applications will be considered for funding outside of this schedule OBRD Financial Assistance: Loans

19 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 19 Costs associated with the investigation and re- development of a brownfield, including but not limited to: Soil, groundwater and infrastructure investigation Assessment Remediation Abatement Hazardous materials or waste disposal Long-term groundwater or natural attenuation Eligible Uses of DECD Funding Other institutional controls Attorneys fees Planning, engineering and environmental consulting Building and structural issues Environmental insurance

20 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development 20 Please reach out to us with any questions on any element of a brownfield project Follow us: @CTBrownfields@CTBrownfields www.ctbrownfields.gov brownfields@ct.gov OBRD Contact Information

21 Office of Brownfield Remediation and Development Q&A / Discussion

22 Tim Sullivan, Deputy Commissioner Revitalizing Connecticut’s Brownfields


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