Old General Motors sites could receive $800M for clean up

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The Obama administration on Tuesday proposed a trust fund of more than $800 million to pay for the cleanup of closed General
Motors sites in 14 states, including one in Indianapolis and one in Kokomo.

President Barack Obama, speaking in Youngstown, Ohio, which is near a GM assembly plant, called the trust a "landmark
agreement to help dozens of communities like Youngstown revitalize and redevelop old, shuttered GM facilities, preparing them
for new industries, new jobs and new opportunity."

Ed Montgomery, who leads the White House Council on Automotive Communities and Workers, said the fund would clean up nearly
90 properties shuttered in the GM bankruptcy.

The proposed sites include the Indianapolis Stamping plant on the west side and the former GM Delco Plant 5 in Kokomo.

He said it represented the largest environmental and economic development effort for former manufacturing sites.

The cleanup plan will help raze or rehabilitate dozens of vacant manufacturing facilities and offices left barren by GM's
government-led bankruptcy last year. Montgomery announced the cleanup at a conference sponsored by the White House and the
Brookings Institution on the future of automotive communities affected by the industry's downsizing.

More than half of the sites are in Michigan, and others are located in Ohio, Indiana and New York. The fund will "take
these properties and once again make them productive assets for your towns and communities," Montgomery said.

The Obama administration declined to provide a full list of the sites, but some of them include: former GM plants in Wilmington,
Del.; Kansas City, Kan.; Shreveport, La.; Pontiac, Mich.; Flint, Mich.; Lansing, Mich.; and Moraine, Ohio. Other facilities
are located in Syracuse, N.Y.; Janesville, Wis.; West Mifflin, Pa.; Fredericksburg, Va.; Framingham, Mass.; Danville, Ill.,
and Trenton, N.J.

General Motors received $50 billion in government aid to get through its bankruptcy last year. GM has repaid $6.7 billion
that the government considered loans, with the remaining $43.3 billion converted to a 61 percent stake in the automaker.

GM said Monday that its net income rose to $865 million in the first quarter. Company officials have said a public stock
offering — a key step in the government eventually selling its ownership stake — could come later this year or
in 2011.

White House economic adviser Larry Summers gave an upbeat assessment of the company's future, saying there was a "real
prospect of the government recovering most, if not all, of its investment" in GM.

Montgomery and Summers said the environmental plan would provide $536 million for the cleanup of properties and about $300
million to help states and communities pay for property taxes, demolition costs, plant security and other expenses.

The funding comes from $1.2 billion provided by the Treasury Department to wind down the "bad" assets of GM set
aside in the company's bankruptcy.

The administration plans to work with states to finalize the plan and will present the framework of the cleanup to the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York for approval.

Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm said the rehabilitation of the manufacturing sites would help states trying to lure "green"
manufacturing jobs such as battery production, wind turbines and solar panels.

"We want to make these sites the place for them to locate," Granholm said.

Granholm said environmental concerns have been the biggest barrier to redeveloping the state's 47 sites covered by the
agreement. She said Michigan officials are talking with several companies who are interested in the locations.

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