EPA awards $200K to the City of Shelby, Mont., for cleanup of historic Rainbow Hotel property
Brownfields grant part of $69M announced nationally
CONTACT: Daniel Heffernan: 303-312-7074; heffernan.daniel@epa.gov City of Shelby: 406-434-5222
(Denver, Colo. – May 24, 2012) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) today announced the City of Shelby, Mont. will receive a $200,000 Brownfields grant to clean up and redevelop the historic Rainbow Hotel property in the city’s downtown business district. The award is part of $69.3 million in EPA Brownfields grants provided to 245 communities across the nation to clean and redevelop contaminated properties, protect public health and create jobs.
The abandoned hotel on Main Street is contaminated with heavy metals, inorganic contaminants, and mold. EPA’s Brownfields grant will be used to clean up the property and make the building ready for reuse. The building was used exclusively as a hotel from 1923 through the early 1990s.
"Restored Brownfield properties can serve as cornerstones for rebuilding struggling communities. These grants will be the first step in getting pollution out and putting jobs back into neighborhoods across the country,” said EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson. “Clean, healthy communities are places where people want to live, work and start businesses. We're providing targeted resources to help local partners transform blighted, contaminated areas into centers of economic growth." Approximately 29 percent of the grants are being awarded to non-urban areas with populations of 100,000 or less, 16 percent are being awarded to “micro” communities with populations of 10,000 or less, and the remaining grants are being awarded to urban areas with populations exceeding 100,000. |
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Thursday, May 24, 2012
News Release: EPA awards $200K to the City of Shelby, Mont., for cleanup of historic Rainbow Hotel property
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