Posted on: April 17, 2023 Posted by: ojjsm Comments: 0

think of hiking from Maine to Oregon, by means of Vermont by means of major trails. thanks to recent legislation, the missing link—just 13 to 16 miles in Addison County—is a step closer to becoming a reality.

By Andy Kirkaldy

If you’ve ever dreamed of a trail that would have you hiking from sea to shining sea, Maine to Oregon (via Vermont, of course), take heart.

On February 12, the U.S. Senate passed the natural resources management Act by a 92-8 vote. just two weeks later, the house of representatives approved it 362-62, sending it to the president’s desk for signing. The detailed public lands bill permanently reauthorizes the Land and Water Conservation Fund.

And it includes a provision to link the North country national picturesque trail with the long trail and Vermont sections of the Appalachian Trails, by way of a new trail system in Addison County.

The Lewis and Clark Camiseta Selección de fútbol de Francia trail starts in Seaside, Ore. and stretches east, connecting to the North country trail in North Dakota. That trail runs through the Midwest and new York’s Adirondacks until it reaches its current terminus, the Champlain Bridge in Crown Point, N.Y.

Under the proposed plan, the North country Trail, projected to be 3,200 miles long, would pass through Addison County. There, it would intersect with the long Trail, which in turn intersects with the Appalachian trail at Willard Gap, just north of route 4.

The missing link lies between the long trail in Addison county and the Champlain Bridge. That stretch (which the national Park service estimates at 40 miles of trail), was originally contemplated as part of the North country trail but the green mountain Club objected to it in the 1970s. The club feared the link would cause overuse and damage to the long Trail, which the club manages. As a result, the linking stretch was not included in the 1980 authorization.

Vermont Rep. Peter Welch (D) helped introduce the legislation on the proposed trail extension.

Senator Leahy’s aide Lincoln Peek said this bill is a crucial first step, but cautions that much remains to be done, including finding funding, acquiring land rights and developing local partnerships. It could be a decade before the trail is a reality. but he also said the bill is a crucial “first step.”

“The passage of this authorization in the Senate is a real victory. The Vermont connection is literally the missing link,” Peek said.

“Finalizing the trail location and getting it built will take time and resources, and senator Leahy, through his work on the Senate Appropriations Committee, is already working to safe funding for this crucial project. He and his staff will also work to see that the national Park service and the U.S. forest service are full partners with the local organizations and home owners who will be vital to building this trail.”

Leahy himself said reauthorizing the Land and Water Conservation Fund was another crucial component of the bill. The fund, which draws on land leases and extraction rights given to fossil fuel companies, supplies grants and other help for natural resource projects.

The exact route is yet to be determined, but what a national Park service paper Camiseta Yokohama F. Marinos supplied by Leahy’s office calls the “preferred corridor” runs from the Lake Champlain Bridge through West Addison farmland, the Dead Creek wildlife management Area, Addison village, up and down (or possibly around) snake mountain and on to the trail around Middlebury. There the corridor uses two alternative routes, both reaching existing trails in the green mountain national Forest.

The national Park service (NPS) plan estimates that about 13 to 19 miles of new trail would need to be built, with the rest counting on existing trails. The route choices depend in part Camiseta Selección de fútbol de Arabia Saudita “on which landowners are ready to cooperate in establishing the trail.”

The paper states the NPS cannot obtain land by eminent domain for trail projects, but can purchase land or easements.

Cost estimates are not precise. The NPS paper foresaw the 13 to 19 miles of new trail “potentially requiring an estimated $450,000 to $6 million in land acquisition costs.”

The NPS paper also claims benefits for home owners and neighbors: “Landowners may also see boosted (or a lot more stable) home resale values due to proximity to permanently protected open space.”

It also hoped for a improve for local services from “increased visitation and associated economic activity.”

The paper describes a low-impact trail intended mostly for hiking that would allow other “compatible recreational activities such as snowshoeing, bird enjoying and nature study,” while noting, “The trail’s authorizing legislation prohibits motorized use.”

Featured photo Caption: above are the proposed paths for the 40-mile connector trail that would link the 3,200-mile North country picturesque trail with the Appalachian trail by means of Vermont’s long Trail. As proposed, the connector would follow the trail anull

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