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  • 15 May 2018 9:59 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    by Ripon Advance News Service 

    U.S. Rep. Mike Turner (R-OH) on April 23 introduced bipartisan legislation that would authorize tax deductions toward the cleanup and redevelopment of America’s roughly half-a-million brownfields, which are former industrial or commercial sites that may have environmental contamination. 

    “As mayor of Dayton, I developed brownfields to reinvest in our city and spur economic growth, including the building of the Dayton Dragons stadium,” Rep. Turner said. “I know firsthand how important brownfields are for communities looking to rebuild. Our bill extends the brownfields tax credit to help cities like Dayton continue to grow.”

    The Brownfields Redevelopment Tax Incentive Reauthorization Act of 2018, H.R. 5579, would amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to extend expensing of environmental remediation costs through 2021. U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Esty (D-CT) joined Turner in introducing H.R. 5579, which has been referred to the U.S. House Ways and Means Committee.

    For the entire article, see

    https://riponadvance.com/stories/turner-bill-revive-tax-break-revitalize-nations-brownfields/

  • 15 May 2018 9:57 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    by Rebekah Sherry, WSHU Public Radio (NY)

    On Long Island, Suffolk County has sold the abandoned Hubbard Power and Light plant in Bay Shore. The County had been paying taxes on the property since 1996. 

    Vincent Trapani bought the almost two-acre site for $343,000s, which is a little more than what Suffolk County was paying the Town of Islip every year in taxes.

    Trapani has no specific plans for the land yet. “Let’s see what the opportunities are, but more than anything: what’s gonna give us the return? And the return I want is jobs.”

    For the entire article, see

    http://wshu.org/post/23-year-old-li-brownfield-be-rehabbed-developer#stream/0

  • 01 May 2018 3:46 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    by Larry Robinson, Watertown Daily Times (NY)

    The city is making inroads on a project to expand water and sewer infrastructure to the former Diamond International paper mill and Standard Shade Roller industrial sites along the St. Lawrence River in hopes of making the properties more marketable to developers.

    The water and sewer effort, referred to as St. Lawrence Shores Infrastructure, is being aided by money from two separate grants - a $30,000 consolidated funding application grant through the state Department of Environmental Conservation and a $250,000 grant through the Northern Border Regional Commission, according to Ogdensburg Planning and Development Director Andrea L. Smith.

    Ms. Smith said the city is using both funding sources for preliminary and final engineering reports that assess the existing water and wastewater systems in the area, and then to design a plan to expand those capabilities to accommodate future development.

    For the entire article, see

    http://www.watertowndailytimes.com/news05/ogdensburg-improving-infrastructure-at-old-factories-site-to-boost-riverfront-development-opportunities-20180413

  • 01 May 2018 3:26 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    by Jim Krencik, Batavia Daily News 

    A parcel looked at for creekside apartments, recreational activities and an expanded ice arena is the latest target for the City of Batavia’s economic development.

    Creek Park LLC, a Batavia Development Corporation subsidiary, now has officers, a $25,000 budget and BDC authorization to negotiate for the purchase of 60 Evans St. The vacant parcel, located behind the Falleti Ice Arena, would be marketed to developers after environmental reviews are conducted at the site.

    The week-old LLC conducted its first meeting Thursday, largely in an executive session BDC President Pier Cipollone said was for the discussion of real estate transactions. As a newly-appointed co-manager of the Creek Park LLC - alongside BDC Director Julie Pacatte - Cipollone said the ideas he’s heard for the site are enticing.

    For the entire article, see

    http://www.thedailynewsonline.com/bdn01/city-takes-steps-toward-buying-creekside-parcel-20180413

  • 01 May 2018 3:04 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    by Jim McConville, Martinsburg Journal (WV)

    Strike while the iron is still hot.…

    Although Martinsburg Business Manager Mark Baldwin didn’t exactly use those terms, his intent was essentially the same in advising prospective developers to take advantage of the remaining $98,000 left in Martinsburg’s $400,00 Brownfields Assessment Grant awarded to the city in 2015 by the Environmental Protection Agency to spark restoration of vacant and blighted industrial buildings in the city’s downtown area.

    Held at the J. Oakley Seibert City Council Chambers, the informational session is part of the three-year Martinsburg Mills & Rail Corridor Revitalization Brownfields Project.

    ...

    For the entire article, see

    http://www.journal-news.net/news/local-news/2018/04/martinsburg-brownfields-development-projects-spark-interest/

  • 26 Apr 2018 11:47 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    By Trevan J Houser, Clean Earth Inc., BCONE Advisory Board

    Allentown, PA – OK, I was wrong. I admit it – I was flat out wrong!  You see, when I was “volunteered” to attend this BCONE Brownfield Event in December of 2017, I was less than thrilled. Arts on Brownfields – I mean, I’m an engineer. What possible value can I gain from attending a Brownfields Event about Arts? So this is where one of those Emoji’s with the top of my head blowing off would fit in nicely!


    Bridgeworks Conference Room full of BCONE "Brownfielders"

    So this was arguably the best Brownfield event I have ever attended. OK, so there were two (2) breweries, a meadery (honey wine or mead), and a distillery involved, but they weren’t the best part! The event started with a quick overview of the day’s activities at the former Mack Truck factory, now redeveloped as the Bridgeworks Enterprise Center. 

    Next we boarded a nice charter bus for a short ride to the former Simons Silk Mill.  The Site is being redeveloped with apartments and some retail/commercial with a beautiful trout stream running just nearby.


    View of Böser Geist Brewing Company at the former Simons Silk Mill

    The Böser Geist Brewing Co. opened a tad early to serve us a mighty tasty beer. They feature their own varieties as well as other local favorites.

    Then back on the Bus to the former Bethlehem Steel Plant, now home to Sands Casino Resort and the ArtsQuest Center at Steel Stacks. WOW – how cool is this place. With the Sands Casino occupying one end of the Site and the ArtsQuest Center on the other end, they’ve got it all covered. ArtsQuest is a concert, film, festival, arts class, camp, and team building resource with quite an impressive visual backdrop of large blast furnaces. 


    Former Bethlehem Steel blast furnaces serving as ArtsQuest at Steel Stacks backdrop

    We toured the ArtsQuest Center first then over to the blast furnaces viewed from the elevated catwalk. Can’t wait to see a concert here!

    So if that was not enough, we finished the day back at the Bridgeworks facility with some informational sessions and wrap-up. Then the food arrived and the HiJinx Brewery and Colony Meadery opened and we enjoyed some very fine local craft. 


    So I learned my lesson. An engineer can learn something at an Arts event and I’ll never turn down another “volunteer” assignment. Cheers!

    Click here to view the photo gallery for this event.

  • 24 Apr 2018 11:43 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    TONAWANDA ISLAND [New York]: State funds to demolish former fire tower.

    by Mia Summerson, Lockport Journal (NY)

    Aside from a restaurant, some industry and a few docks, there's not much reason to visit Tonawanda Island. But the city of North Tonawanda's plans to make a destination out of the area have taken a step forward. 

    Just last week, Gov. Andrew Cuomo's office announced the fifth round of funding for the Restore New York Communities Initiative, which aims to support municipal revitalization efforts. Of the $8.8 million awarded to projects in Western New York, North Tonawanda is slated to receive $161,167, which will be used to demolish an old fire tower on the island.

    The money will go toward the "demolition of the former fire training tower on Bridge Street to prepare the property for a future mixed-use development that can serve as a potential catalyst to the future of Tonawanda Island," according to a press release from Cuomo's office detailing the grant awards. 

    In December, the North Tonawanda common council heard a pitch on the project from Michael Zimmerman, executive director of the Lumber City Development Corp. He said the 3-acre parcel included the tower and smokehouse buildings, along with other "various debris." He said that the tower is no longer used by fire professionals, adding that "they're not safe." 

    For the entire article, see

    http://www.lockportjournal.com/news/local_news/where-there-was-smoke-there-s-development-in-nt/article_f1bce82d-244c-5a06-afaa-a23cc6fe40db.html

  • 24 Apr 2018 11:42 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    by Michael P. McKinney, Lower Hudson News (NY)

    Could city-owned land on Lower South Street become home to an indoor sports complex? Residences? Some kind of production studio?

    The Common Council may vote in the next few weeks to seek developers’ proposals for 11.6 acres on Lower South Street - south of Travis Lane and north of the BASF Corp. property - on the city’s west side, not far from the Hudson River. The site is close to Route 9 and its Louisa Street exit. 

    Mayor Andre Rainey said there are many possibilities that "would be beneficial to have" in that space.

    For the entire article, see

    https://www.lohud.com/story/news/local/westchester/peekskill/2018/04/04/could-peekskill-see-sports-complex-production-studio-future/485183002/

  • 16 Apr 2018 10:33 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    by Steve Dwyer

    With all its environmental complexities, a former textile mill is a tricky re-development play, for starters. Having the wherewithal to retain historic aspects of the property is yet another challenge. 

    But tackling these two challenges and wringing results is exactly what’s taking shape in Lawrence, Mass. MassHousing recently committed about $17 million in financing to assist an affiliate of Trinity Financial to create an affordable housing community. 

    The project will be built on four adjacent land parcels within the city’s 34-acre Arlington Mills Smart Growth Overlay District, containing two interconnected mill buildings with 100 units, a small, former incinerator building with two units, a water pump house and a parking lot.

    Affordable housing end use a trend whose time has come, and a lot of the visioning can be owed to other advocates of an idea. In this case, New York City is renowned to be a forerunner of the affordable housing trendline. 

    In New York City, there are several case examples, and of them is The Hour Apartment House III in Queens, a 25,000-square-foot, sustainably designed building that serves a dual purpose: It serves as headquarters for the non-profit Hour Children and provides much-need affordable housing to formerly incarcerated mothers and their children.  

    Proof is in the pudding as The Hour Apartment House III is working out so well that it garnered a 2015 Big Apple Brownfield Award. 

    In Lawrence, Mass., Trinity Financial is transforming the former Van Brodie Mill into 102 units of mixed-income housing within a smart growth district. The adaptive-reuse project will preserve the historic mill, while remediating a brownfield site. The completed project will contain eight studio apartments, 25 one-, 56 two-, and 13 three-bedroom apartments.

    Van Brodie Mill, which originally manufactured yarn for wool and flannel, dates back to 1919 but by the 1950s the company shut down, where it was parlayed into manufacturing packaged breakfast cereals and rations for the military.

    The former mill is expected to “be an important new housing resource for working families in Lawrence,” said Tom Lyons, MassHousing’s active executive director. “This transformational project will put a former brownfield back into productive use, while advancing regional economic development and enabling families to live affordably and prosper in greater Lawrence.”

    The new apartments will serve residents with a broad range of incomes. Of the 102 units, 16 will be for very low-income households earning at or below 30% of the area median income (AMI), 67 will be for low-income households earning at or below 60% of the AMI, and 19 will be dedicated for workforce housing for households earning between 61 and 80% of the AMI. The AMI for Lawrence and the surrounding area is $87,600 for a family of four.

    MassHousing is supporting the redevelopment by providing more than $17 million in affordable housing funding, including a $14 million conduit bridge loan, $1.2 million in permanent financing, and $1.9 million in workforce housing funds.

    It’s all motivated by a plan to infuse new life into a historically significant asset while creating much-needed mixed-income housing in Lawrence, deemed a Gateway City, or midsize urban centers that anchor regional economies around the state. 

    This redevelopment advances the Mass. state administration’s goal of creating up to 1,000 new workforce housing units affordable to middle-income households through MassHousing’s $100 million Workforce Housing Initiative. 

    Since the inception of the initiative in 2016, MassHousing has committed or closed workforce housing financing totaling $49.7 million, to 23 projects, located in 13 cities and towns. To date, the Workforce Housing Initiative has advanced the development of 2,111 housing units across a range of incomes, including 538 workforce housing units.

    The organization has financed or administers the subsidy contract for 16 rental communities in Lawrence, totaling 1,965 housing units and an original loan amount of $103 million. The agency has also provided $120.5 million in financing to 1,341 Lawrence homebuyers or homeowners.

    The project is entirely in line with what Lawrence, Mass. needs to advance from a civic growth standpoint, which is scaling up on affordable housing end use, perhaps with more initiatives to come. Looking for past shining examples of success is one way to move the needle in the right direction. One way or another, MassHousing is exhibiting this requisite vision.

  • 13 Apr 2018 11:53 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    by Thomas J. Prohaska, Buffalo News (NY)

    The Town of Niagara plans to acquire a former tire store and gas station on Military Road and clean up environmental contamination before putting the property on the market for commercial reuse.

    The property at 4435 Military Road, long owned by Lewiston attorney Paul A. Grenga, is currently on the Niagara County tax foreclosure list, after many years in which the county had resisted foreclosing on brownfields. However, County Treasurer Kyle R. Andrews said the town is expected to take over the site.

    "It's in a very visible location along Military Road, so we can have high reuse potential," said Amy E. Fisk, president of the Niagara County Brownfield Development Corp., which granted the town $325,000 for the cleanup Tuesday.

    For the entire article, see

    http://buffalonews.com/2018/03/27/town-of-niagara-to-acquire-clean-up-military-road-eyesore/


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