Washington,
D.C. -- The
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced three steps to support
communities’ efforts to provide their citizens’ with economic opportunity while
reducing impacts on the environment. The
actions will encourage state and local government to make their communities more
sustainable by strategically aligning their environmental, transportation and
housing investments.
The steps EPA announced today are:
· The
creation of a new Office of Sustainable Communities to encourage communities to
take an integrated approach in making environmental, housing and transportation
decisions.
· A new
pilot grant program designed to help three states --
New York, Maryland and California --
use their clean water funding programs to support efforts to make communities
more sustainable.
· A pilot
program to clean up and redevelop contaminated sites, known as brownfield sites,
in coordination with communities’ efforts to develop public transportation and
affordable housing.
Today’s announcements build on the
work EPA is doing with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and
the U.S. Department of Transportation through the Interagency Partnership for
Sustainable Communities. The partnership is focused on ensuring that housing and
transportation goals are met while simultaneously protecting the environment,
promoting equitable development, and helping to address the challenges of
climate change.
The brownfields pilot program
announced today represents a key step in that partnership. Together, EPA, HUD,
and DOT have selected five pilot sites across the country where there is a
convergence of public transit and the need for affordable housing. Cleaning and
reusing this land and providing new housing choices will create jobs and new
economic opportunities. The five sites selected for the Sustainable Communities
Partnership Pilots are the Fairmount Line in Boston; the Smart Growth Redevelopment District in
Indianapolis; the La Alma/South Lincoln Park
neighborhood in Denver; the Riverfront Crossings
District in Iowa City, Iowa; and the Westside Affordable Housing Transit-Oriented
Development in National
City, Calif.
The Office of Sustainable
Communities that EPA announced today will help create neighborhoods that offer
good jobs, educational opportunities, safe and affordable homes and
transportation options while minimizing their impact on the environment. The
Pilot Technical Assistance Program for Sustainable Communities will further that
goal by encouraging states to use their Clean Water State Revolving Fund loan
program to better support communities that adopt sustainable strategies, like
transit-oriented, mixed-use development.
More information on the Partnership
for Sustainable Communities:
www.epa.gov/smartgrowth/partnership
More information on EPA’s Smart
Growth program:
www.epa.gov/smartgrowth