We will advocate for
the State to reform the Brownfield Opportunity Area
(BOA) program and release planning grant funds to community
groups
The Brownfield Opportunity Area program (BOA) provides
approximately $8 million per year to help communities
with large concentrations of brownfields develop visions
for how underutilized land in their neighborhoods could
be redeveloped to strengthen existing or proposed community
plans. Between 2004 and 2006, the State awarded 10 BOA
grants to local organizations in the city and received
nine more City-supported applications. (See map on previous
page: Brownfield Opportunity Areas)
One of the recipients, the Bronx Council for Environmental
Quality (BCEQ), sought to revitalize a seven-mile sliver
of land between the Harlem River and the Major Deegan
expressway. Spanning 159 acres across 45 sites in the
neighborhood, every site in the study area is considered
potentially contaminated because each is located downhill
from dense urban development and adjacent to railroad
tracks. Currently, 33 of these sites are also considered
underused.
The BCEQ plan will expand access to the waterfront,
creating new parkland curving alongside the river, a
restored shoreline and natural habitat, and stronger
links with the surrounding areas.
But the progress on this plan-and 18 others-has ground
to a halt because of a cumbersome process for delivering
the grant money. Since 2005, no grants have been issued
at all, despite a backlog of City-supported initiatives.
To get BOAs back on track again, the City will request
that the State modify its requirements in order to deliver
funding to program grantees more quickly. The City also
will work with the State to ensure the provision of
funding to implement BOA plans, so that community initiatives
are more likely to come to life.
Progress (as of 4/22/08):
On March 7, the Governor, Speaker and Senate Majority
Leader signed an MOU that will release funds for Brownfield
Opportunity Area (BOA) grants to the 2005 and 2006 award
recipients. These grants will provide $2.5 million for
nine BOA projects in New York City. Further, the Administration
included reforms to the BOA program as part the legislation
submitted to Albany in May and, on September 25, testified
at a Senate/Assembly brownfields hearing to further
describe the recommendations. The Administration will
continue to press for changes to streamline the BOA
program's administration. |