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Agenda - 09-19-2017 - 7-a - Mountains to Sea Trail – Report on Segment 11 Trail Planning
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Agenda - 09-19-2017 - 7-a - Mountains to Sea Trail – Report on Segment 11 Trail Planning
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BOCC
Date
9/19/2017
Meeting Type
Regular Meeting
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Agenda
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7a
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45 <br /> November 2016 <br /> NC Mountains-to-Sea Trail through Orange County <br /> trequently A Shoe' Quo iin ,u It :° <br /> What is the NC Mountains-to-Sea Trail? <br /> The NC Mountains-to-Sea Trail (MST) is a 1,000-mile trail that will traverse the state from the Great <br /> Smoky Mountains in western North Carolina to Jockey's Ridge State Park on the Outer Banks. Partners <br /> across the state are helping to plan and build the trail that will link communities and serve as the <br /> backbone of a growing system of land and water trails in North Carolina. <br /> In 2000 the NC General Assembly authorized the MST as a unit of the North Carolina Parks System. <br /> A map showing the Mountains-to-Sea State Trail across North Carolina is available at: <br /> http://www,orangecountync,gov/MST statewide map 0612 Status ,pdf <br /> How many miles of the NC Mountains-to-Sea Trail are finished? <br /> Over 600 miles of dedicated trail — well over half the planned length— has been completed to date and <br /> is open for hiking. A series of interim roadway connectors(bicycle routes and back roads) have been <br /> identified by the Friends of the Mountains-to-Sea Trail organization that knit together the completed <br /> sections of the MST across the state. <br /> Some examples of completed trail in this area include the following: <br /> • In Durham and Wake counties there are 77 miles of the trail along the Eno River and Falls Lake <br /> • Raleigh and Clayton completed a 33-mile Neuse River Greenway from Falls Lake Dam to Clayton <br /> • Alamance County has 15 miles of trail–including 8 miles from Glencoe to Town of Haw River <br /> • Hillsborough completed the 1.3-mile Riverwalk and Classical American Homes Preservation Trust <br /> extended the trail another 1.5 miles. A third bridge over the Eno River opened in July 2016. <br /> How was the planned MST trail corridor chosen? <br /> The NC Division of Parks and Recreation held stakeholder meetings in 2005-2007 to identify a suitable <br /> MST planning corridor through Alamance, Orange and Durham counties. Trail planners began by <br /> identifying existing trails on public lands and connected them to key natural areas across the region. <br /> The result of that effort was a MST Trail Planning Corridor sent to local governments for consideration. <br /> The Orange County Board of Commissioners endorsed the MST Planning Corridor in 2010 following a <br /> review by three of its advisory boards and the towns of Hillsborough, Chapel Hill and Carrboro. The <br /> planning corridor for southwestern Orange County(Segment 11) was part of the MST State Trail master <br /> plan that was developed in 2014-15 and released in July 2015. <br /> County staff are working in collaboration with the State Trails Program (NC Division of Parks and <br /> Recreation), Eno River State Park, the Town of Hillsborough, the Friends of Mountains-to-Sea Trail <br /> (FMST), Orange Water and Sewer Authority, and others to develop specific plans for the MST in Orange <br /> County—thereby transitioning the trail planning corridor to an actual "trail alignment." The initial focus <br /> is to determine the trail alignment through the County's Seven Mile Creek Preserve and linking the <br /> Preserve with Occoneechee Mountain and the Hillsborough Riverwalk. A secondary focus is working <br /> with the Orange Water and Sewer Authority(OWASA)to identify a potential trail alignment through <br /> OWASA's Cane Creek Reservoir lands, and then linking the Reservoir lands with the Alamance County <br /> section of the MST along the Haw River. <br /> 1 <br />
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