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  2. Large-Scale Residential Demolition

Community Involvement and Demolition

EPA's goal is to provide an environment where all people enjoy the same degree of protection from environmental and health hazards and have equal access to the decision-making process to maintain a healthy environment. Community relations should be part of any planned demolition activity. Community engagement is important for residential demolitions because they can involve management of harmful materials and they also present opportunities for site reuse. 

Demolition Stakeholder Engagement

Governments, businesses, non-profits and others involved with demolitions can engage with communities to ensure citizens are aware of demolitions and take note of any necessary health and safety precautions. To highlight some community best practices related to potential community involvement issues, EPA hosted the webinar, Effective Blight Elimination Communication Strategies. In this webinar, midwest communities and the National Demolition Association discussed strategies to promote engagement directly with demolition industry/program stakeholders and community focused blight elimination best practices.

Presentations:

  • St. Louis Development Corporation (PDF) (18pp, 3.69 MB)
  • Detroit Land Bank Authority (PDF) (16 pp, 3.15 MB)
  • National Demolition Association  (18 pp, 1.68 MB)

Background resources:

  • National Demolition Association
  • St. Louis Vacancy Collaborative Demolition Tracker
  • St. Louis Peace Park Planning
  • City of Detroit Demolition Portal
  • Detroit Land Bank Authority

Environmental Justice and Demolition

Environmental Justice is the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color, national origin, or income with respect to the development, implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and policies. Fair treatment means that no group of people should bear a disproportionate share of the negative environmental consequences resulting from industrial, governmental and commercial operations or policies.

You are not obligated to follow EPA’s environmental justice practices. However, you may want to look to EPA’s commitment to environmental justice when you address community involvement in the demolition process. The approach you choose should suit your community's unique needs.

  • EPA’s Environmental Justice Program
  • Public Participation Guide
  • Center for Community Progress

Large-Scale Residential Demolition

  • Large-Scale Residential Demolition Home
  • Pre-Demolition Planning
    • Community Involvement and Demolition
    • Pre-Demolition Inspections
    • State and Local Programs
    • Selection of Contractors
  • Harmful Materials and Residential Demolition
    • Asbestos-Containing Materials and Demolition
    • Open Burning
    • Stormwater and Dust
    • Disaster Debris Planning
  • Reuse and Recycling Opportunities
    • Disaster Debris Recovery Tool
    • Residential Demolition Bid Specification Development Tool
    • Deconstruction Rapid Assessment Tool
  • Compliance Assistance Tools
  • Requirements and Good Practices
Contact Us About Large-Scale Residential Demolition or the Disaster Debris Recovery Tool
Contact Us About Large-Scale Residential Demolition or the Disaster Debris Recovery Tool to ask a question, provide feedback, or report a problem.
Last updated on May 15, 2024
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