Save the Dates! Two West River Trail Workdays Scheduled

West River TrailTwo West River Trail Work Days scheduled:

Thursday, June 9, 4 PM
Remove/control Japanese Knotweed on the cobblestone shoreline of the Riverstone Preserve.  Meet at the Marina Trailhead. Bring water, work gloves, snack, bug dope, wear work boots.  We have tools, but bring your own if you prefer–shovel and loppers. Help keep the Riverstone Preserve beautiful and able to support its native plants! Contact pcameron@brattleboro.org for more information on the June 9 workday.

Saturday, July 23, 9 AM
Meet at the  Fox Farm Rd access.  We will replace a culvert, work on drainage issues and do more work on removal and control of invasive plants.  More information to come. Contact jason.cooper10@gmail.com for more information on the July 23 workday.

Many hands make light work!  Please join us!

Thank you for considering coming out to help maintain the beautiful West River Trail!

 

Rocks in Trail

west river trailIf you’ve been out on the Lower (Southern) Section of the West River Trail this month, you may have noticed some pretty big rock chunks sitting in the trail. Plans are underway to clear them off the trail. In addition, Jason Cooper will be organizing a trail workday this spring. Stay tuned!
As always, if you have a questions about the trail, feel free to contact the Friends of the West River Trail via comments on this blog, or via email.
Photo by Malcolm Moore.

CONTACT
The Lower  Section
138 Elliot St, Suite 3
Brattleboro, Vermont 05301
Email the Lower Section

The Upper Section
P.O. Box 2086
S.Londonderry, Vermont 05155
Email the Upper Section 

FWRT Annual Meeting and Open House

West River Railroad

A train departs the South Londonderry depot during the hey-day of the West River Railroad.

Friends of the West River Trail: Doings at the Depot!

The public is invited to attend an Open House and social hour, with refreshments provided, hosted by the Friends of the West River Trail (FWRT), to be held on Wednesday, March 23, from 6:00 to 7:30 PM, in the South Londonderry Depot on Route 100.

At the Open House, visitors will be updated on the current projects involving both the West River Trail (South Londonderry to Brattleboro when completed) and the Depot itself. Representatives of both the Northern (Londonderry to Townshend) and Southern (Newfane to Brattleboro) trail sections will be on hand.

A highlight of the evening will be an update on the status of the West River Railroad Museum, being developed by the Historical Society of Windham County in their recently-acquired Old Newfane Railroad Station.

Plans for the 2016 West River Trail Run will be presented by a representative from the Collaborative. The 2016 event will take place on National Trails Day, June 4

The Open House will be preceded at 5:30 PM by a short business meeting of the FWRT Board, to which visitors are welcome to attend if they choose.

Please plan to join your friends and the Friends of the West River Trail for an enjoyable and informative evening.

South Londonderry Depot, 34 West River Street, South Londonderry, VT 05155

November Trail Talk

West River Trail Bridge ConstructionThe lower section of the West River Trail is open at the bridge construction zone in Brattleboro. When using the trail, please take care at the intersections between construction access and the trail path. As an additional safety precaution, please keep pets on a leash.

Monthly trail talks sponsored by the PCL+FIGG construction team share behind-the-scenes activity on the I-91 Brattleboro Bridge Project. Trail Talks are scheduled for this Saturday, November 14th and for Saturday, December 12th. Interested participants should meet the PCL+FIGG team at the West River Trail Marina Trailhead at 8:15 am to walk to the I-91 bridge site.

The project’s website features up-to-date information about the project, construction photos, and live traffic cameras. If you would like additional information, or would like to be added to the email distribution list for all project updates, please contact Cindy Cook, Public Relations Officer, Adamant Accord, Inc. at ccook@adamantaccord.com.

The West River Trail in November

Beautiful in all seasons! With the leaves gone from the trees, the trail in November is light and bright, open to the sky and the sunshine, with the river running alongside more visible.

Do you use the West River Trail? Know someone who does? If so, you might be interested in attending the upcoming Dummerston Development Review Board public hearing on Tues Nov 17th, 2015 at 7 pm at the Dummerston town offices at 1523 Middle Road, Dummerston Center, Vermont, when they will consider the following application:

A review of app #3418 by the Friends of the West River Trail for site plan review, conditional use approval and waiver to construct a kiosk and sign at the trail head on Rice Farm Road, Dummerston, a Rural district Riparian area and Special Flood Hazard Area. The hearing is open to the public. A public hearing notice is posted at the Rice Farm Road trailhead. For more information, contact Charlotte Neer Annis, Zoning Administrator, Town of Dummerston.

 

Rice Farm Road Trailhead Update

Rice Farm Road Trailhead Update

West River Trail, near Rice Road TrailheadFrom the Friends of the West River Trail Lower Section Steering Committee:

We have been working to resolve a disagreement regarding the Rice Farm Road Trailhead area, where no trespassing signs have been posted for the last several months. We have researched the issue and recently sent additional letters in our effort towards resolution of the disagreement.

Click on the links below to view the letter sent to Melvin Mayo, along with the opinion of surveyor Eric Morse and a new map that clearly shows the boundaries of Mayo Property and WRT and other abutting properties.

We will continue to post updates on the website as we have new information. Feel free to email us with questions or comments at lowersection@westrivertrail.org. Thank you.

Map Parcels Rice Farm Rd Dummerston VT July 2015

Eric Morse Land Surveying January 2015

FoWRT Mayo Letter July 2015

Rice Farm Road Trailhead Update

Rice Farm Road Trailhead Update

west river trail june 2013 7From the Friends of the West River Trail Lower Section Steering Committee:

We have been working to resolve a misunderstanding at the Rice Farm Road Trailhead area, where no trespassing signs have been posted for the last several months. We have researched the issue and recently sent letters in our effort towards resolution of the misunderstanding. We will post updates on the website as we have new information.

Feel free to email us with questions or comments at lowersection@westrivertrail.org. Thank you.

To view the letters, click on the links below.

Friends of the West River Trail Letter to Melvin Mayo 5-14-15

West River Trail Ownership Questions Legal Letter 2-11-15

 

Misunderstanding at the Rice Farm Road Trailhead

Misunderstanding at the Rice Farm Road Trailhead

West River Trail April 2015Update from The Friends of the West River Trail Lower Section Steering Committee:

West River Trail users may have noticed the No Trespassing signs and logs blocking the parking area at the Rice Farm Road trailhead. We want you to know that the FWRT lower section steering committee is aware of this. There is a misunderstanding and we are working on a resolution. For more information, email FWRT at lowersection@westrivertrail.org and/or check the website for updates. Thank you.

West River Trail Work Day Nov 1

West River Trail Work Day Nov 1

west river trail signSave the date and come on out to our West River Trail Work Day!
Saturday, Nov 1, 10 AM to 1 PM.
Meet at the Marina Trailhead & bring boots, gloves and water
We have plenty of tools, but if you prefer, bring your own shovel, iron rake, hand saw, clippers or leaf rake. It should be light work– mostly drainage clean out and pruning as needed. Hopefully it will be a great fall day on the trail!
Bring a friend and join the work party! Questions? Please email Jason at jason.cooper10@gmail.com. See you on the trail!

Concerns Stall West River Trail Work in Dummerston

Concerns Stall West River Trail Work in Dummerston

West River Trail, Lower Section, photo by Elin Waagen

This is a reprint of an article that originally appeared in the Brattleboro Reformer on 8/27/2014.  Mike Faher can be reached at mfaher@reformer.com or 802-254-2311, ext. 275.

http://www.reformer.com/localnews/ci_26412197/questions-concerns-stall-trail-work-dummerston. 

DUMMERSTON — West River Trail advocates are hoping to someday provide a relatively smooth ride for bicyclists along an old rail bed stretching from Brattleboro to Londonderry.

But they’ve run into continuing friction in Dummerston, where there are questions about property titles, taxes, permitting and the impacts of a trail. Those tensions came up again at a recent meeting, leading a trail advocate to pledge cooperation with landowners.

“We want to be a good neighbor,” said Jason Cooper, a member of the Friends of the West River Trail Steering Committee. “This is an incredible asset to the community.”

But for now, the project has stalled: Trail expansion requires a review of the group’s application by Dummerston Development Review Board, and officials say that cannot happen until several affected homeowners sign off.

“Since I don’t have signatures or an agreement with the taxpayers, I don’t consider (the application) complete yet, so it’s still sitting on a table,” Zoning Administrator Charlotte Annis said. “And that’s where the process is.”

The popular hiking and biking path’s southern starting point is near the marina in Brattleboro. Following the former West River Railroad route, the trail extends north into Dummerston, where there is an access point on Rice Farm Road.

“Our proposal is basically to start where the trail is ending now — where it comes out to Rice Farm Road — and to continue the trail along the original railroad bed up to the Nature Conservancy parking lot,” Cooper told residents and Dummerston officials.

He added that, “just north of where the trail ends now, there is a brook that crosses where there used to be a railroad bridge. We want to restore a footbridge there.”

There also would be plans to create a safe crossing at a point where Rice Farm Road crossed the railroad, Cooper said.

“Our biggest concern there is making sure there is adequate signage to protect both the people on the trail, so that they know they’re coming to an intersection, and for the people on the road so that they know they’re coming to a trail,” he said.

But there are concerns among property owners including Sigrid Pickering, who said the trail would cross her driveway.

She inquired about the possibility of fencing and buffers between trail users and her land. Without such measures, “that’s just an invitation to vandalism and theft, and that’s not really going to work for me,” Pickering said.

She also draws a sharp distinction between the purposes of the old railroad right of way and the plan now being advanced by Friends of the West River Trail.

“If it was a railroad, there would be a schedule. It wouldn’t be a 24/7 recreation thing with people dispersed all over the place,” Pickering told Cooper. “It would be a train going through at certain times of the day. It’s a very different use that you’re proposing than the right of way that was granted by the previous owner.”

Pickering wrote a lengthy, detailed letter to the Friends group and to the town. Another concern is the state of Rice Farm Road itself: In recent years, she said, “traffic has increased exponentially there, both in volume and speed.”

“Putting a (trail) crossing sign up in the middle of this stretch of road without addressing the speeding traffic exacerbates an increasingly serious safety issue,” Pickering wrote.

Cooper said the trail group could do nothing about the speed or frequency of traffic on a town road. But he maintains that developing the trail will improve safety in that area.

“Currently, the people who come up the trail come out onto the road, and they’re traveling along Rice Farm Road and up Quarry Road,” Cooper said. “So by our being able to get the trail onto the old railroad bed, our hope is that we would be making it much safer by having a separation of the (trail users) from the car traffic.”

Cooper promised to talk with Pickering about signs, fencing and possibly buffers “to work that out in a way that meets everybody’s needs to keep it as safe as possible.”

But there are thornier issues for trail backers in Dummerston, including the question of who actually owns the railroad right of way.

“If the trail goes through our property, are we supposed to pay taxes on this part of the property, or receive a tax break (since) part of our property would be for public use by a nonprofit entity?” asked landowners Jenna and Hakan Shearer Demir in a letter to the town.

That letter is only the most-recent version of that argument. Last June, Dummerston officials raised the issue of ownership after an attorney representing the town claimed the railroad was abandoned in the 1930s and subsequently has “reverted to the prior owner(s), their heirs, successors and assigns.”

Trail advocates last year countered by saying the rail bed was not abandoned. Rather, they claim a clear line of transactions: The property was transferred from the rail company to the state, from the state to a quarry operator and then to a salvage company from which Cooper’s company acquired it before signing the parcel over to Friends of the West River Trail.

At the recent meeting in Dummerston, Cooper reiterated his stance that, “at this point in time, the title to this property is in our name.”

That assertion, however, leads to the question of whether Friends of the West River Trail can or should be taxed by the town. Dummerston Selectboard member Joe Cook, while an avid cyclist and a trail supporter, made a “friendly suggestion” to Friends of the West River Trail.

“I think it’s not in the best interest of the West River Trail (group) to own that property. You don’t want to be looking at a tax bill, I wouldn’t think,” Cook said.

Cook added that, “clearly, this body is not going to decide the ownership of the land. The only way you’re going to find out is if somebody mounts a challenge. And I think everybody’s trying to avoid that.”

At this point, it’s unclear whether the trail group even can get their proposal before the town’s Development Review Board anytime soon. Annis said the trail project passes through a “special flood hazard area” and therefore requires both town and state approval.

Annis pointed to the ongoing question of the property’s ownership, saying “our residents are paying the taxes on it.” If those owners do not sign the trail group’s application, “I’m not going to send it forward,” Annis said.

But even if that happens, Annis pointed out, it does not mean the project is dead.

“I would deny the application, and they could appeal my denial to the Development Review Board,” she said. “So it doesn’t necessarily stop with me.”