Post Gazette: Developing Brownfields Deemed Best Approach to Asbestos
The Post Gazette reported that reuse of old, abandoned industrial sites [[including those with asbestos]], like those in Ambridge, remains a high federal priority, said U.S. Environmental Protection Agency administrator Stephen Johnson. But lack of funding continues to hamper such projects.
Mr. Johnson, speaking to a crowd of 100 at yesterday's "Brownfields in Our Neighborhoods 2001-2006: Stronger Than Steel" workshop in Ambridge, said the Bush administration has asked for additional funding to accelerate brownfield redevelopment, but has not received it from Congress because of "other funding issues pressing on the federal budget."
He said interest in brownfield redevelopment remains high in the EPA and the development community because it "makes sense to turn such eyesores into opportunities for economic growth."
U.S. Rep. Melissa Hart, R-Bradford Woods, said site preparation costs remain the main stumbling block to redevelopment of the old, abandoned industrial sites. But she said there are many examples of successful local brownfield development, including the Ambridge Regional Distribution and Manufacturing Center, where the workshop was held.
The three-day workshop, sponsored by Carnegie Mellon University's Steinbrenner Institute for Environmental Education and Research, is a follow-up to a 2001 workshop that also focused on brownfield redevelopment in the Ambridge area, 12 miles down the Ohio River from Pittsburgh.
Deborah Lange, director of the Western Pennsylvania Brownfields Center and the Steinbrenner Institute, said brownfield problems are complex and require a broad, interdisciplinary approach.
Jared Cohon, president of Carnegie Mellon, where the first brownfield research center was established in 1996, said such post-industrial sites present the "perfect problem" for university research.
"Our faculty is interested in solving real problems," he said, "and brownfields present an opportunity to make a difference in this region, and through that effort, nationally."
Courtesy of The EPA
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