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Brownfields Financing Basics: Show Me the Money $$$$$$$$

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HUD funds for locally determined CDBG loans and 'floats' ... HUD's Brownfield Economic Development Initiative (BEDI) HUD's Community Development Block Grants ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Brownfields Financing Basics: Show Me the Money $$$$$$$$


1
Brownfields Financing BasicsShow Me the
Money
  • Presentation by
  • Charlie Bartsch
  • October 6, 2004

2
  • What this presentation will cover. . .
  • what financing gaps exist, and why public-sector
    support is needed
  • commonly used federal programs and examples
  • recap of programs especially applicable in
    distressed areas

3
The Face of Brownfields
From This. . .
Bend, OR
Baraboo, WI

New London, CT
Somerville, MA
4
The New Face of Brownfields
Bend, OR
Baraboo, WI
New London, CT
Somerville, MA
5
Overview
  • Keys to Building and Funding a Local Brownfields
    Program
  • Defining a community vision
  • Encouraging community involvement
  • Fostering public-private partnerships
  • Institutionalizing brownfield reuse strategies
  • Tapping into reuse incentives

6
The Red Zone
  • The Project Development Process -- Simplified!
  • What Impact Does Contamination Have on Financing?
  • Conceptualizing and Planning the Project
  • Economic Analysis for Marketing the Project
  • Dealing with Stigma
  • for Site Assessment
  • Additional Underwriting/Site Development/R.O.R.
    Costs
  • for Preparing a Cleanup Plan and Taking It
    Through
  • VCP/State/Local Regulatory Agencies
  • for Cleanup

Regular Real Estate Construction/Development
Costs When Site is Shovel Ready
7
Goals of Public Financing Tools What Can They
Do?
  • Reduce lenders risk
  • loan guarantees companion loans
  • Reduce borrowers costs
  • interest-rate reductions or subsidies due
    diligence assistance
  • Improve the borrowers financial situation
  • re-payment grace periods tax abatements
    training and technical assistance help
  • Provide comfort to lenders or investors
  • loan guarantees performance data
  • Provide resources directly
  • grants forgivable/performance loans

8
Federal Programs The Laundry List
Federal Financial Assistance Programs That Can
be Applied to Brownfield Redevelopment Activities
  • Loans
  • EDAs Title IX (capital for local revolving loan
    funds)
  • HUD funds for locally determined CDBG loans and
    floats
  • EPA capitalized brownfield revolving loan funds
  • SBAs microloans
  • SBAs Section 504 development company debentures
  • EPA capitalized clean water revolving loan funds
    (priorities set/ programs run by each state)
  • HUDs Section 108 loan guarantees
  • SBAs Section 7(a) and Low-Doc programs
  • Grants
  • HUDs Brownfield Economic Development Initiative
    (BEDI)
  • HUDs Community Development Block Grants (for
    projects locally determined)
  • EPA assessment pilot grants
  • EDA Title I (public works) and Title IX (economic
    adjustment)
  • Grants (continued)
  • DOT (various system construction and
    rehabilitation programs)
  • DOTs transportation and community system
    preservation (TCSP) pilot grants
  • Army Corps of Engineers (cost-shared
    services)
  • Equity capital
  • SBAs Small Business Investment Companies
  • Tax incentives and tax-exempt financing
  • Targeted expensing of cleanup costs (through
    12/31/03)
  • Historic rehabilitation tax credits
  • Low-income housing tax credits
  • Industrial development bonds
  • Tax-advantaged zones
  • HUD/USDA Empowerment Zones (various
    incentives)
  • HUD/USDA Enterprise Communities (various
    incentives)

9
Federal Financing ProgramsEPA
  • SITE ASSESSMENT GRANTS
  • Funds pre-cleanup environmental activities for
    example, site assessment, inventories, planning,
    design, and outreach
  • Typically, up to 200,000 per applicant/jurisdicti
    on
  • Local governments, tribes, redevelopment
    agencies, regional councils, land clearance
    agencies, and similar entities eligible

10
Consumers Energy Headquarters Jackson County,
MI
  • In 1999 Jackson proposes the city of Jackson
    proposed a downtown brownfield site for Consumer
    Energys new corporate headquarters
  • Project jump-started by 200,000 site assessment
    grant, which demonstrated viability for some of
    the 36 parcels assembled
  • Ultimately, Consumers invests 70 million in new
    construction
  • Consumers Energys relocation to downtown saves
    600 Jackson jobs, brings 750 new jobs into
    downtown

11
r Kids Family Center New Haven, CT
  • New Haven used 20,000 of its EPA site assessment
    grant funds at the future home of the r Kids
    Family Center
  • Assessment found a 1,000-gallon underground
    storage tank containing a mixture of heating oil
    and water, and about 200 tons of TPH-contaminated
    soil.
  • Cleanup was completed in 2001
  • Connecticuts Department of Social Services
    provided two grants totaling 775,000 for
    building construction and site development, which
    was completed in the early summer of 2003.
  • The center now employs five full-time and nine
    part-time staff members, serving up to 120
    families a year.

12
Federal Financing ProgramsEPA
  • SITE CLEANUP GRANTS
  • Funds cleanups (new, starting in 2003) by
    eligible applicants at sites that they own
  • Typically, up to 200,000 per site
  • Local governments, tribes, redevelopment
    agencies, regional councils, land clearance
    agencies, and similar entities eligible
  • Non-profits also eligible
  • 20 match (funds or in-kind services) required

13
Federal Financing ProgramsEPA
  • BROWNFIELD CLEANUP REVOLVING LOAN FUND GRANTS
    (BCRLFs)
  • Provides capital to establish RLFs to make low/no
    interest loans for cleanup
  • Up to 1 million per recipient 20 match
    required
  • Local governments, tribes, redevelopment
    agencies, regional councils, land clearance
    agencies, and similar entities eligible
  • Starting in fiscal 2003, recipients may use up to
    40 of capitalization award for cleanup
    sub-grants at sites owned by sub-grantees
  • Non-profits can be sub-grantees

14
Firebarn St. Anthony Falls, MN
  • Vacant former car dealership and auto
    services/body work facilities
  • Prospective new user demanded clean site
  • Hennepin County Health Dept. made a 240,000
    BCRLF loan for soil and groundwater cleanup
  • 30 million mixed-use redevelopment complex built
    on clean site -- 78 housing units, and 45,000
    square feet of commercial/
  • retail/office space


15
Federal Financing ProgramsEPA
  • CLEAN WATER STATE REVOLVING LOAN FUNDS
  • Funds activities (such as removal of underground
    tanks, contaminated soil, basic site assessments)
    to correct or prevent water quality problems
  • State program, with state-set project priorities
  • Offers loans, up to 20 years, to communities or
    private parties
  • Potential use at brownfield sites with water
    quality issues
  • No limit on fund amounts

16
Grant Realty Cleveland, OH
  • Ohios Clean Water State Revolving Loan Fund
    provided 1.6 million to the Grant Realty company
    at an interest rate of about 4 percent to finance
    cleanup of a 20-acre industrial site
  • Water connection groundwater impacts on the
    Cuyahoga River
  • Site re-used for light industry and commercial
    purposes
  • Repayment source revenue from a tank-cleaning
    operation, along with personal loan guarantees
    and a second position mortgage as additional
    collateral
  • With assistance from the Cuyahoga County
    brownfields program, owner applied to Ohios VAP
    for a covenant-not-to-sue and was issued a no
    further action letter.

17
Federal Financing Programs HUD
  • COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS
  • Activities locally determined
  • Can include coping with contamination as part of
    financing for site preparation or infrastructure
    development
  • Can be lent to private companies under some
    circumstances

18
How Can CDBG Funds Be Used For Brownfield
Projects?
  • Eligible activities include
  • planning for redevelopment or revitalization of
    brownfields sites
  • site acquisition
  • environmental site assessment
  • site clearance
  • demolition and removal of buildings
  • rehabilitation of buildings
  • removal or remediation of contamination from
    sites or structures
  • construction of real estate improvements

19
Visiting Nurses Assisted Living -- Somerville, MA
  • This former mattress factory, vacant for more
    than two years.
  • Assessment found contaminants including barium,
    lead and petroleum
  • The project's redeveloper, the non-profit
    Visiting Nurses Association, remediated the site
    and demolished the existing structures
  • VNA constructed an assisted-living facility and
    health center, containing 97 units for
    low-to-moderate income seniors.
  • 100,000 in CDBG was used as a cost-containment
    reserve.

20
EXAL Corporation Youngstown, OH
  • Plant built in distressed neighborhood area,
    operator pledged to consider community residents
    in a "1st hire" agreement
  • 40 million in private investment, creating 88
    manufacturing jobs
  • CDBG used to pay for first year of loan, to
    allow EXAL to cover brownfield-related site
    preparation costs
  • EXAL now covers all loan costs from operations
    income stream

21
Chevy Place Rochester NY
  • Former downtown auto dealership and service
    garage
  • CDBG used for site assessment, partial cleanup
  • Now, 77 new residential units, coffee house, and
    restaurant

22
Shaws Supermarket --Bangor, ME
  • Bangor acquired and cleared the six-acre Bangor
    Gas Works site 25 years ago, doing a partial
    cleanup
  • Site cleanup was completed at the site when the
    Boulos Company proposed building a
    60,000-square-foot Shaws Supermarket
  • Bangor used 350,000 in CDBG and 975,000 in TIF
    financing for final cleanup
  • The Boulos Company invested 7 million in
    developing the building and associated site
    improvements, and Shaws spent 1.8 million on
    equipment and furnishings for the store.

23
Community Development Block Grant Float Loan
Program
  • The CDBG float provides short-term fixed-rate
    gap financing for business projects which create
    or retain jobs for low and moderate-income
    people.
  • To obtain financing, companies must be
  • willing to make jobs available to lower income
    people
  • able to obtain an irrevocable letter of credit
    from a bank to secure their loan
  • States may advance floats on behalf of small
    cities to whom distribute CDBG funds

24
Federal Financing Programs HUD
  • SECTION 108 LOAN GUARANTEES
  • Finances site clearance, property acquisition,
    infrastructure, or rehabilitation (including
    cleanup) activities too big for single-year block
    grant funding
  • Block grant recipients may borrow up to 5 times
    their entitlement, for up to 20 years
  • Requires pledge of future CDBG funds as
    collateral

25
Federal Financing Programs HUD
  • BROWNFIELD ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE (BEDI)
  • Established to provide additional financial
    assistance for brownfield development projects
    supported by Section 108
  • Must be used in tandem with Section 108 guarantee
  • Competitive grant application process

26
Grove Hall Mecca Roxbury, MA
  • Seven underground storage tanks were removed from
    the site, along with contaminated soil that was
    recycled into an environmentally acceptable
    product..
  • The property was sold to a community-based
    developer
  • Total development cost was 13.2 million key HUD
    resources included
  • 3.6 million Section 108
  • 3.6 million from the HUD BEDI
  • Current occupants of the Grove Hall Mecca mall
    mall include retail, food, and banking services,
    as well as a supermarket that opened in fall
    2001. The redevelopment has created more than
    250 full-time jobs.

27
Stamping Building Wheeling, WV
  • The Wheeling Stamping Building in the Wheeling
    National Heritage Area had been abandoned and
    deteriorating for more than a decade
  • HUD funding for site preparation and building
    renovation was key
  • 1-million BEDI
  • 2.25 million in Section 108
  • The City and its developer, the Ohio Valley
    Industrial and Business Development Corporation,
    created 88,000 square feet of new commercial
    space in Stamping Building.
  • 85 professional and high-tech jobs now housed
    there

28
Old Montgomery Ward Distribution Center Fort
Worth, TX
  • Historic, 800,000-square-foot building on a
    45-acre site
  • Damaged in March, 2000 tornado
  • Proposed reuse mixed light industrial/commercial
    /office
  • HUD financing tools include
  • 13 million Section 108 loan
  • 2 million BEDI grant
  • Other financing tools being used
  • Historic rehab tax credits
  • DOT (CMAQ) for related road and sidewalk
    infrastructure
  • State tax abatements and fee waivers

29
Federal Financing Programs HUD
  • HOME Investment Partnership Program
  • Provides grants to states for housing
    construction and renovation
  • Non-profits and for-profits eligible
  • Well suited for partnership with other programs

30
Bostons Hope Properties Dorchester, MA
  • Following completion of EPA-funded site
    assessment, Boston Aging Concerns/ Young and Old
    United, Inc., bought the property
  • The nonprofit spent about 300,000 to clean up
    the properties and is currently building 41
    residential units on 9 different sites for
    intergenerational families.
  • Total project cost is 8.5 million, covered by
    private and public funds, including HOME funds.
  • The groundbreaking took place in early 2004

31
Phoenix Heights Waukesha, WI
  • 69 energy-efficient homes completed, many for
    moderate income families
  • 13.5 million project, including 3.13 million in
    public funds, for
  • 1.87 million in state funds for cleanup
  • 415,000 in CDBG for construction
  • 575,000 in state and HOME funds for buyer
    assistance
  • 405,000 in annual property taxes generated

32
Federal Financing Programs EDA
  • ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ADMINISTRATION
  • Two major programs (1) public works grants
    finance industrial development site and
    infrastructure preparation, and
  • (2) economic dislocation program capitalizes RLFs
    for distressed areas EDA also supports rural
    planning. 2/3 of all resources traditionally go
    to small towns and rural areas

33
University Village Riverside, CA
  • Deteriorating mixed-use, economically distressed
    30 acre site adjoining UC-Riverside
  • 950,000 in EDA funding for infrastructure
    improvements, part of multi-agency funding
    package that included HUD and DOT monies
  • The result a 410,000 square-foot retail and
    entertainment center, which includes conference
    space for university use


34
Texaco Station Lockport, IL
  • Abandoned gas station converted to a retail
    telecommunications business
  • EDA funded site preparation, including cleanup

35
Federal Financing Programs ACE
  • ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS
  • Can provide planning and technical support if you
    can make the brownfields/waterfront connection
  • Technical assistance on a cost-reimbursable or
    matched basis
  • Local governments eligible reicpients

36
East St. Louis, IL Riverfront
  • 250,000 in Corps funding under the Planning
    Assistance for States program
  • City providing required match
  • Project involves analysis of 1,100 acres of
    mostly abandoned, mostly industrial riverfront,
    planning options and costs for new public and
    private uses (artists rendering at right)


37
Old Mill District Bend, OR
  • Former sawmill operation (from 1922 to 1994)
    on 250 acre site on the Deschutes River that
    flows through downtown Bend.
  • Major challenges included defining sections
    of the site for cleanup, as part of phased
    development plan, and changing land use from
    industrial to mixed use. Oregon DEQ cleanup
    program facilitated this process.
  • Currently, 15 commercial businesses now
    operate on the site future plans call for
    expanded retail, residential units, and a sports
    arena.

38
Center of Hope Dallas, TX
  • The Center of Hope was developed on a 1.8-acre
    brownfield site including a 40,000 square foot
    building, previously used by USACE.
  • USACE conducted an environmental investigation of
    the property and identified asbestos-containing
    materials and lead-based paint.
  • Demolition was done in February 2001
    construction began in April 2001. The Center of
    Hope was opened on February 26, 2002.
  • Valued at 1 million, the property was conveyed
    through GSA to Union Gospel Mission at no cost.
    Labor and materials, including construction
    management services, building components and
    furniture, were donated.

39
Federal Financing Programs DOT
  • TRANSPORTATION PROGRAMS (DOT)
  • DOT highway and transit construction programs can
    support brownfields by
  • (1) helping upgrade existing facilities
  • (2) offer transportation amenities that improve
    access to and marketability of sites
  • (3) fund facilities and structures that serve as
    part of the remedial solution

40
Tank Facility to Train Station -- Emeryville, CA
  • The City and developers constructed an Amtrak
    station on a parcel that was once a Chevron tank
    facility
  • . The Emery Station 1 (ES1), 247,000 square feet
    of office, was completed in 1999. ES3 consists
    of a parking structure under 100 residential
    units, completed in 2002. The city worked with
    EPA to develop this site into a transit center
  • A pedestrian bridge was built with ISTEA funds
    and an access road to the project was partially
    funded from an EPA BCRLF loan.

41
Marsh Island Carry Old Town, ME
  • Transformation of an under-used contaminated site
    to a revitalized waterfront park and commercial
    property
  • Funding included a 400,000 Enhancement Grant
    from Maine DOT for the park and walkways
  • Other sources included
  • 400,000 CDBG for infrastructure around the
    commercial building
  • 24,500 from the National Trails Recreation Act
    for trails, walkways, and river stabilization
  • 8,000 from ME Forest Service for tree planting.

42
Federal Financing Programs Tax Incentives
  • BROWNFIELD EXPENSING TAX INCENTIVE
  • Deduction pegged to cleanup costs, which allows
    new owners to recover cleanup costs in the year
    incurred only incentive targeted to private site
    owners.
  • Expired 12/31/03 Congress re-renewed to
    12/31/05, retroactive to the first of this year

43
Inryco and Babcock Wilcox Milwaukee, WI


44
Federal Financing Programs Tax Incentives
  • REHABILITATION TAX CREDITS
  • Taken the year renovated building is put into
    service
  • 20 credit for work done on historic structures,
    with rehab work certified by state
  • 10 credit for work on non-historic structures
    build before 1936 no certification required

45
Sherman Perk -- Milwaukee, WI
Before
After
Tank Removal
46
Federal Financing Programs Tax Incentives
  • LOW-INCOME HOUSING TAX CREDITS
  • Can encourage capital investment in affordable
    housing projects on brownfield sites
  • States get a population-based allocation for
    distribution to communities and non-profits

47
American Can Company New Orleans, LA
  • Developer Historic Restoration Inc. transformed
    this abandoned warehouse into new apartments with
    retail and parking space
  • Total project cost -- 42 million
  • The projects Welfare to Work program targeted
    low/middle income workers for the 250
    construction jobs, and 20 percent of homes are
    set as affordable units.
  • Louisiana allocated a 29 million in Low Income
    Housing tax credits that provided access to
    low-interest financing with a requirement to
    provide 20 percent of the total units for
    affordable income community.
  • Other financing included
  • 5-million HUD Section 108 loan,
  • 1-million BEDI loan
  • 1-million city economic development loan.
  • Kimberly-Clark Corporation, through its
    subsidiary Housing Horizons, provided 8.5
    million in tax-credit equity for approximately
    7.8 million in historic tax credits.

48
Albina Corner Portland, Oregon
  • The Albina Corner is located on a
    three-quarter-acre site adjacent to a bus line
    and near a major light rail station. The area is
    a main street to several inner-city
    neighborhoods, where for several years small
    scale contaminants have deterred reuse.
  • Today, the Albina Corner is being redeveloped
    into a mixed-use area that includes 48 units of
    low-income housing built over 12,000 square feet
    of commercial space. Some of the features
    include a child care center and a second floor
    courtyard and play lot
  • LIHTCs one of 14 funding sources.

49
Selected USDA Rural Development Programs
Possible Brownfield Links
  • Community facility loans and grants can support
    development activities that include industrial
    park sites or access ways
  • Business and industry loans are available to
    public or private organizations to improve the
    economic and environmental climate in rural
    communities.
  • Intermediary Re-Lending Program intermediaries
    such as local governments are loaned money to
    re-lend to companies, in order to finance
    business facilities
  • Rural development grants given to provide
    operating capital and finance emerging private
    business and industry, including conversion,
    enlargement, or modernization of buildings,
    plant, and equipment.

50
East Coast Steel Greenfield, NH
  • The New Hampshire Department of Environmental
    Services (NHDES) used 88,964 in funding from EPA
    New England to conduct state-led Targeted
    Brownfield Assessment at the 2.54-acre East Coast
    Steel site in Greenfield, NH, beginning in fall
    2000. Cleanup was completed in late 2003
  • In 2004, the town redeveloped the site as a
    community septic system and open space park
  • USDA Community Facilities Loan was a critical
    part of the project funding, along with G.O. bond
    proceeds


51
The Brownfields Lending Climate
  • Lender issues -- Why Do Bankers Act the Way They
    Do When You Say Brownfields?
  • TOOLS
  • What legal tools will be used
  • NFA letter, indemnifications, deed restrictions,
    institutional controls, covenants not to sue?
  • What private financial tools will be used
  • Escrows, collateral discounts?
  • What public financial tools will be used
  • Grants, loans, tax credits, guarantees, other
    mechanisms ?
  • Will environmental insurance be used? Does it
    make financial sense for the project?

52
The Brownfields Lending Climate
  • Institutional Factors Why Do Bankers Act the
    Way They Do When You Say Brownfields?
  • Market policy-making structure
  • Sphere of activity or market niche
  • Level of sophistication and knowledge
  • Comfort level with new cleanup technologies
  • Past experience

53
The Brownfields Lending Climate
  • Over-riding concerns Why Do Bankers Act the Way
    They Do When You Say Brownfields?
  • Certainty of collateral value over time
  • Soundness of marketing plan is the end use
    something that anybody wants?
  • Ongoing compliance with institutional controls
  • Cleanup cost/financing and timing concerns
  • VCP process
  • Grant application, approval, and disbursement
    time

54
Low-Cost/No-Cost Tools That Enhance the Climate
for Brownfield Transactions



  • Institutional controls
  • Proprietary
  • Governmental
  • Innovative remedial technologies
  • Mr. Wizard meets economic development
  • Cost saving technical assistance and project
    support
  • Environmental insurance
  • Remediation insurance
  • Stop-loss coverage
  • Pollution legal liability insurance

55
Home Depot Honolulu, Hawaii



  • Institutional controls
  • First site through Hawaii VCP
  • Institutional controls such as venting,
    capping, monitoring wells key to economic
    viability of project

56
Williamsport, PA
  • Innovative technologies
  • former airplane engine factory, abandoned nearly
    50 years, with groundwater contamination that
    proved too costly to treat by conventional means
  • state and local governments worked with
    developer to identify innovative cleanup
    technology that would work within standards of
    VRP
  • Result retail complex and parking facility

57
Kaiser Steel Mills/ California Speedway
Fontana, CA
  • Role of environmental insurance
  • Former Kaiser Steel Mill operation (from 1942 to
    1983) on 23 acre site.
  • Project was a result of a large partnership
    between the public and private sector.
  • Site assessment and cleanup took 5 months. The
    raceway and interior facilities were used as an
    environmental cap.
  • The California Speedway Opened in June 1997.
    Last Year, the Speedway generated 12.5 million
    in economic activity, 2.5 million in tax
    revenues and 1200 new jobs.

58
Web Site
  • www.nemw.org/brownfields.htm
  • Federal Legislative Proposals to Promote
    Brownfield Cleanup and Redevelopment - whats
    happening in Congress
  • State of the States - profiles of state VCPs,
    including new information on financing
    incentives, economic benefits, eligible
    contaminants, cleanup standards, and
    institutional controls
  • Guide to Federal Brownfield Programs - detailed
    information on programs throughout the federal
    government that can promote and support
    brownfield cleanup and redevelopment
  • Financing options for brownfield cleanup and
    redevelopment
  • Contacts in state and federal brownfield programs
  • Link to EPA brownfield home page
  • Links to brownfield databases and organizations
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