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Camden Selected to Gain Nearly $1 Million to Cleanup Brownfields; EPA’s Investments in Camden For Brownfields Total In excess of $6 Million

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Category: Air
Type: News
Source: EPA
Date: Monday, June 22nd, 2015

(New York, N.Y.) Today, E.P.A. Regional Administrator Judith A. Enck announced that the Camden Redevelopment Agency was selected to gain $944,710 in E.P.A. brownfields grants to clean up contaminated sites and revitalize communities across Camden. Regional Administrator Enck was joined by Congressmember Donald Norcross, Salvation Army Major Paul Cain and Jim Harveson Director of Economic Development, Camden Redevelopment Agency at the location of the old Harrison Avenue landfill. The E.P.A. funds will pay for continued cleanup work at the landfill to create open space and a park next to the Ray and Joan Kroc Salvation Army Corps Community Center. EPA's Brownfields plan helps communities assess, clean up and reuse contaminated properties that are often a blight on communities.

"The EPA's brownfields plan helps transform communities by cleaning up toxic pollution, improving the quality of life for neighborhoods and creating jobs," said E.P.A. Regional Administrator Judith A. Enck. "The nearly $1 million of backing announced today brings to $6 million the total amount of brownfield dollars that E.P.A. has invested in Camden."

Camden will use $600,000 in brownfields backing to continue cleanup work at the Harrison Avenue Landfill Lot 18 at East State Street and Harrison Avenue; the APM location at East State Street and River Avenue; and Building eight at 100 Cooper Street.

Camden will use $200,000 at the Harrison Avenue Landfill Lot 18, an old city dump that operated between 1952 and 1971, where virtually everything was dumped, including chemicals, industrial waste and medical waste. A portion of the landfill location has already been cleaned up and now includes the Salvation Army Corps Community Center. Another portion of the location will be used for a public waterfront park. The suggested Cramer Hill Waterfront Park Project will have restored wetlands, walking trails and landscaped areas.

Another $200,000 of backing announced today will also be used at the APM site, which was formerly used as a warehouse, experimental laboratory, and toy assembly plant, and is contaminated with arsenic, metals, and polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons. The Camden Redevelopment Agency will use the property for retail businesses.

Camden will use $200,000 in cleanup funds to address Building 8, which is now vacant, but was formerly used for radio manufacturing and office space and is contaminated with PCBs, chlorinated volatile organic compounds, dioxin, and inorganic contaminants. The Camden Redevelopment Agency will use E.P.A. brownfield funds to do community outreach near all 3 of the sites.

The Camden Redevelopment Agency will use $344,710 in brownfields funds to determine the nature and extent of environmental contamination at the Camden Labs property at 1667 Davis Street. About two-thirds of the location is covered by asphalt-paved parking areas and one- and two-story vacant buildings. Assessment activities will include some demolition to remove areas of pavement, concrete or masonry structures to access underlying areas of the site. Grant funds also will be used for community outreach.

Since the inception of the EPA's Brownfields plan in 1995, cumulative brownfield plan investments have leveraged in excess of $21 billion from a variety of public and private sources for cleanup and redevelopment activities. This equates to an average of nearly $18 leveraged for every E.P.A. brownfield dollar expended. These investments have resulted in creating approximately 93,000 jobs nationwide. These plans demonstrate the positive impact a small investment of federal brownfields backing can have on community revitalization through leveraging jobs, producing clean energy, and providing recreation opportunities for surrounding neighborhoods. The EPA's Brownfields Plan empowers states, communities, and others to work together to prevent, assess, safely clean up, and sustainably reuse brownfields sites.

Additional information on E.P.A. Brownfields activities is accessible at http://epa.gov/brownfields

Follow E.P.A. Region two on Twitter at http://twitter.com/eparegion2 and Facebook at http://facebook.com/eparegion2.

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