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THE EFFECTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS AND REGULATION ON URBAN REDEVELOPMENT August 1997 Submitted by Researchers From: Urban Institute Northeast-Midwest Institute University of Louisville University of Northern Kentucky Submitted to: U.S. Department of Urban Development Office of Policy Development and Research U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of Policy UI Project No.; 06542-003-00 THE EFFECTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS AND REGULATION ON URBAN REDEVELOPMENT August 1997 The Department is now actively participating in the Administration’s initiative to help communities clean up and sustainably redevelop brownfields. The Department is taking a series of programmatic steps to be responsive to this high priority of concern of State and local elected officials. This includes new Economic Development Initiative funds to specifically address brownfields redevelopment needs, provide technical assistance to State and local governments, and streamline community development regulations to make them more friendly to brownfields redevelopment. A key part of the Department’s efforts is an active brownfields research program. The Office of Policy Development and Research is implementing an aggressive research agenda in support of the Department’s programmatic efforts. The purpose of our brownfields research and development program is to better understand how brownfields are impediments to revitalization of America’s distressed communities, and to develop ways to overcome and eliminate those impediments. Our ongoing research is examining a range of issues: how the intertwined issues of environmental risk and neighborhood economic distress affect the redevelopment process; how the Community Development Block Grant program supports local brownfields revitalization efforts; the feasibility of using environmental insurance as a tool to spur economic redevelopment; and innovative approaches for financing brownfields clean up and development activities. This report, jointly sponsored by HUD and EPA, provides insight into some of the most basic issues confronting brownfields policy: the relative importance of environmental risk versus neighborhood economic distress as deterrents to the neighborhood development. The report addresses the significance of: 1) site contamination as a deterrent to brownfield redevelopment, as compared to other factors retarding reuse; 2) which environmental development cost or uncertainty most deters investments in redevelopment; and 3) which types of State brownfield clean up policies and programs are likely to be conducive to investments and redevelopment. This report sharpens the focus on what the real policy issues are and what are appropriate policy options for addressing these issues. Paul A. Leonard Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy Development The Effects of Environmental Hazards and Regulation on Urban Redevelopment Acknowledgments This report was drafted by Christopher Walker and Patrick Boxall of the Urban Institute, Charles Bartsch and Elizabeth Collaton of the Northeast-Midwest Institute, Peter Meyer of the University of Louisville, and Kristen Yount of Northern Kentucky University. We thank Ken Chilton, Jason Greenberg of the U. of Louisville, Maris Mikelsons of the Urban Institute, Brandon Roberts, and Robert Schneider of Public Policy Associates for their help in data collection. We acknowledge the patient guidance of Edwin Stromberg of the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the advice and assistance of Ludmyrna Lopez, Linda Garczynsky and Ben Hamm of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. We also thank the numerous developers, lenders, State and local officials, and others who took their valuable time to speak with us. Mistakes and conclusions are those of the authors, and not their respective institutions.
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