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[pct-l] PCT Agua Dulce Reroute
- Subject: [pct-l] PCT Agua Dulce Reroute
- From: Kevin Corcoran <kevin@hughes.net>
- Date: Tue, 7 Dec 1999 16:48:53 -0800
This is from our local paper, a recent article on the PCT Agua Dulce
segment.....
Kevin
Hiking trail to go off beaten path
This story appeared in the Antelope Valley Press
December 2, 1999
By THOMAS FRANCIS
Valley Press Staff writer
AGUA DULCE - Hikers on the Pacific Crest Trail have
found a path
away from the noise and the danger of speeding cars.
Currently, a 3-mile portion of the trail just north of
Vasquez Rocks
County Park runs along the shoulder of the two-lane,
55-mph Agua
Dulce Canyon Road.
Thanks to a $1.5 million appropriation secured by Rep.
Howard P.
"Buck" McKeon, that 3-mile stretch of the trail will be
realigned away
from the road.
The Santa Clarita Republican held a press conference
Tuesday at
Vasquez Rocks County Park to announce the funding, which
comes as
part of the federal Omnibus Appropriations Act.
That funding had been pursued vigorously by members of
the Pacific
Crest Trail Association - particularly its executive
director, Bob Ballou,
and Vice President Bob Nida - and by Angeles National Forest
authorities who wanted to enhance the trail experience
for hikers coming
through Agua Dulce.
"When Bob Ballou, Bob Nida and members of the Forest
Service met
with me and talked about the danger and the need for
improvements on
the trail, I knew it was a very good project to be
involved in," said
McKeon, who identified improvements to the trail as one
of his top
environmental priorities before the congressional
session began.
Ballou, who spoke after McKeon, said that the $1.5
million is just the
beginning. That money will help move the trail off the
road, but Ballou
said his association already is looking toward the next
challenge: moving
the trail off the privately owned land, where property
owners may
exercise their rights to build over the trail.
"It's been my duty to try to focus our growing
organization's attention on
the 300 miles of Pacific Crest Trail that aren't already
on public land,"
Ballou said.
Referring to a map displayed next to the podium, Ballou
pointed to
portions of the trail that crossed white areas.
"This is private land and we're concerned it might end up in
development," he said.
It will cost more money to rescue the trail from private
land, of course,
and Ballou added that with the continued efforts of
McKeon, more
federal funds will open up.
Mike Wickman, the district ranger who will oversee the
implementation
of the $1.5 million, will prepare a report for Congress,
outlining more
precisely how the money will be used to enhance the trail.
He confirmed that while these most recent funds will
likely move the trail
off the roadside, future funds will take the trail off
private properties.
"By March 1, we'll have some idea for this whole area of
the trail, and I
anticipate that as we go ahead we'll go after the
highest risk areas first,
those most prone to development," Wickman said.
Fortunately, the Pacific Crest Trail is only threatened
by private
landowners in places where people are hostile to
recreation trails, and
by all accounts, the Agua Dulce area does not have such
a reputation.
"Agua Dulce is a special trail experience," Bob Nida
said. "I don't think
our hikers ever feel more welcome than they do here, and
that's because
of the people that live here."
For that reason, Nida said that though the trail will be
rerouted, it won't
stray too far away from the town.
"Our expectation is that the trail will be in this
area," Nida said. "It will be
relocated off the road to a safer place, but not a
remote place, because
there aren't many towns as welcome as this one."
Others speaking at the Tuesday press conference were
Darrel Redman
and Diane Terito, both of the Agua Dulce Town Council,
and Mike
Rogers, Angeles National Forest supervisor.
The Pacific Crest Trail spans 2,650 miles, from Canada,
through
Washington, Oregon and California, all the way to the
Mexican border.
Information regarding the Pacific Crest Trail can be
found at
www.pcta.org.
Thursday news page
News page
Valley Press home page
Uploaded December 2, 1999
© 1999 Antelope Valley Press, Palmdale, California, USA (661)
273-2700
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