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December 2001, Week 4

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Subject:
Trails Advisory Committee Meeting Dec. 20
From:
Peggy Murdock <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Iowa Discussion, Alerts and Announcements
Date:
Wed, 26 Dec 2001 15:05:52 -0600
Content-Type:
multipart/alternative
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Trails Advisory Meeting, Thursday December 20, 2001
Iowa DOT

This first public trails meeting for the trails advisory committee was held
this December at the Iowa DOT.  It was open to the public because federal
guidelines now require that these meetings be made public.

This committee is made up of individuals appointed by the DOT and DNR, who
sought recommendations from people in the parks system.  Members were
selected to represent user groups, rather than geographical areas of the state.

The newest member of this group represents water trail users.  There is a
single representative for walkers, hikers, bikers, and birdwatchers,
another for equestrian users, another member represents biking,
cross-country skiing and inline skaters.

Meetings have been held as needed to process applications for trails
projects and go over issues, a minimum of twice yearly.

Their primary function is to distribute funds generated by a motorized
recreational fuel use tax from ATVs, snowmobiles, motorized boats and dirt
bikes.  A formula is used to determine what each state gets and Iowa's
portion is around $750,000 a year.  The requirements as this group
understands them is that 30% is to be allocated for motorized uses, 30% for
non motorized uses and 30% for diversified projects.

The projects selected for funding have to follow federal guidelines which
include the requirements set out by the Environmental Policy Act.  There
are design guidelines and eligible activities include education, safety,
OHB brochures, mapping projects, construction, design, development,
maintenance activities and renovation.  Applications have to have a
government cosponsor. It can be any level of government.

The committee decides what it's priorities are and use a point system to
rate projects.  The more uses allowed, the more points given. Projects that
can be used by the disabled, older citizens and other special groups get
more points. The degree to which there are trail linkages,  opportunities
for other projects, ties to trails, greenways, natural and historical
areas, compatibility with regional plans all earn additional points - the
more plans, the more points. No more than 80% of a project can come from
this program's funds, therefore the degree to which plans deliver funds
from other sources, both private and public adds points, for example, if
the boy scouts help maintain a trail.  The degree to which citizens
are  involved counts.  If the idea originated with citizens rather than
with a city or county board, the project gets more points. Public/private
partnerships to continue maintenance receive more  points than a project
requiring city or county crews to provide the service. An extra 10 points
is given if the area is cleaned up prior to use.

Applications should be postmarked Oct. 1 of every year. After applications
have been collected they are packaged up and sent to committee members who
set up a meeting and are supposed to score the applications before the
meeting  When they get the scores they make a list of motorized and
non-motorized projects, then go down the list until they run out of
money.  .  Approval is a staged process: once this group has ranked the
projects, it goes to the transportation commission and ultimately to the
federal highway commission for approval.

The list of applications for this year has already been submitted, since
the deadline is October 1st.  All the money allocated to Iowa has been
spent each year and some years there have been no motorized projects.  When
that happens they have to apply for a waiver.

Public comments follow:

Jane Clark presented a plan made by Audubon for a birding trail along the
Mississippi, pointing out that this would do a lot for areas along the
river, bringing birders, who spend a good deal of money to these places.
She showed examples of maps made by Minnesota and Texas of birding trails.

Gregory Vitale expressed his thanks to the federal representative for the
public meeting, pointing out that this has not happened in the past.  He
said that bikers are not a homogenous group. There are off-trail and trail
groups and both should have representation. He suggested that Audubon, the
Sierra Club and the Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation should also have
representation.

Gary Roland, the representative for paddlers, talked about the need for
signage for landings, camping and hazards along water trails.  There are
3000 miles of waterways and 300 access points.  He talked about his project
of finding access points along the Des Moines River.  Finding some of them
took five years.  There has been no organized effort to make a water trail
happen.

There was a question from a DNR man about the interpretation of  the rules
determining what percentage of the funds should go toward motorized
uses..  His understanding is that these rules have been loosened up and
more is left to the state's discretion.  He believes 95% of users in Iowa
are non motorized.  His question is whether non-motorized users should get
a greater percentage of the money.

The United States has a code for recreational trails that include
environmental benefits & mitigation.  It provides for redesign of
construction to minimize the impact to the environment this speaker did not
hear that in this code.

Jerry Cramer, VEEP of a snowmobile group pointed out that this funding
comes from a gas tax fund that is designated for non highway motorized use
and there are 45,000 motorized users in Iowa. He, himself, has snowmobiled
3000  miles in Iowa, getting only 10 miles to the gallon.  He believes
motorized users get little out of what they put into this.

He runs the groomer in his area and lets cross country skiers know where he
groomed.  He said it would be helpful to snowmobilers if cross country
skiers could wear luminescent markings to reduce injuries.

I suggested that another source of funding should be developed so that
other users could have a voice, said that mixing snowmobiles and cross
country skiers is dangerous, and mentioned that designated trails in Story
County outside of cities are designated as hunting areas and are suitable
only for hunting because they are undeveloped.  Pheasant hunting is allowed
on trails and it is the most hazardous of all hunting activities.

Mr. Garst of Garst Seeds brought up the problems of west central Iowa rails
for trails. He wanted assistance finding money for his trail project.  He
knows of no one in his area who can afford to contribute to this project
and potential trail areas are deteriorating because they are not being
developed.

The reply was that they are only able to fund about 25% of the projects
that apply because they run out of money.

Q: How many advisory groups are there that can get access for various kinds
of trails funding?

A: There are state trails and enhancements programs, this group, Iowa
trails 2000 and another group.  There is overlap among the membership of
these groups.

Q: How many user groups are there?

A: She doesn't know.  Some usergroups are more well organized and easy to
identify because they make their presence known. It is easier if they come
to us and say we're here.

Q: How would people find out about the program?  There are applications on
a website, and people can contact [log in to unmask] . Nancy Burns
goes to meetings and speaks, and there was a mass mailing to cities and
counties when this started. Send a letter if you want to be represented.

There was a question about whether the composition of this group had ever
changed.  The reply was that it takes people some time to learn how to rate
projects, and that a long term is an advantage.

Comments are being accepted until January 10th.  Contact
[log in to unmask]

Peggy Murdock


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