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McKee Administration, RIDEM announce grant awards to cleanup, redevelop brownfields

$2.5 million to go toward various remediation efforts across the state

Brownfields are underdeveloped properties that supposedly face issues with contamination from past or historical land use, according to professor of environment and society and sociology Scott Frickel.
Brownfields are underdeveloped properties that supposedly face issues with contamination from past or historical land use, according to professor of environment and society and sociology Scott Frickel.

On Jan. 26, the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management over $2.5 million in grants to support the remediation and redevelopment of brownfields.

Brownfields are 鈥渦nderdeveloped property that has real or perceived issues with contamination from past or historical land uses,鈥 Scott Frickel, professor of environment and society and sociology, explained.  

According to RIDEM鈥檚 press release, 鈥10 projects across five cities and towns will receive funding, made possible by the voter-approved 2022 Green Bond.鈥 RIDEM expects the projects to provide $522 million in additional investments due to the enhanced property value of the land following remediation, in addition to creating 鈥2,446 construction jobs and 475 permanent jobs.鈥 

鈥淭he community cleanups and investments made possible by brownfields grants underscore the power of the green bonds that finance them,鈥 RIDEM Director Terry Gray told The Herald. 鈥淕reen bonds help restore our environment, support economic development and strengthen Rhode Island鈥檚 resiliency in the face of climate change.鈥

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The redevelopment of these sites is part of a larger effort from RIDEM and Gov. Dan McKee to restore plots of land that have been made harmful to public health and the environment due to intense industrial contamination. Including the most recent awards, RIDEM鈥檚 Brownfields Remediation Economic Development Fund has invested in 71 projects across the state. 

These efforts have included building new schools, creating affordable housing, expanding recreational space and supporting green energy projects, according to the press release. 

Four of the new projects are located in Providence. Local nonprofit Crossroads Rhode Island received a grant of $350,000 鈥 one of the largest awards 鈥 for a new redevelopment project on Summer Street, an area. The grant will assist Crossroads RI in providing 176 new apartments to unhoused  鈥渁nd extremely low-income adults.鈥 

Director of Planning for the City of Pawtucket  Bianca Policastro emphasized that, while gas stations or former factory sites are obvious locations for potential contamination, farms, orchards and homes are also at equal risk 

Pawtucket received a total of  $775,000 from this new round of brownfield grants for three separate redevelopment projects. 

鈥淲e want to provide clean and safe living, working (and) playing environments to the city,鈥 Policastro said. Through the awards, 鈥渨e are able to remediate and build to higher standards,鈥 she added.  

Policastro also noted that climate change was a major factor when deciding how to pursue remediation points. 鈥淲e recognize we don鈥檛 freeze anymore; we flood,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o we鈥檙e always looking at ways to reduce waste and to build a more sustainable environment.鈥 

According to Frickel, the goal of these grants is ultimately simple. 鈥淚t's about developing properties to make them (safer and) to make properties more effective at bringing in revenue for cities and property owners,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t's been a real boom to cities that have been able to capitalize on those grants.鈥

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