Linn County Mayors' Bike Ride

Please plan to join LCTA for the annual Mayors' Bike Ride on Labor Day, Monday, September 3rd.  There will be an 8 mile route and a 2.5 mile route.  Registration begins at 9AM in Ellis Park (near the pool pavillion) and the ride starts at 10AM.  The event is free, but donations to Linn County Trails Association are accepted.  For full details, visit here: https://linncountytrails.org/event/linn-county-mayors-bike-ride-2/


Volunteers Needed

Interested in volunteering with Linn County Trails Association?  LCTA is looking for volunteers to serve as route monitors for the annual Mayors' Bike Ride event and to help distribute water to the New Bo 1/2 Marathon participants.  Details of each event are below:

New Bo 1/2 Marathon Volunteers:
Sunday, September 2nd, 2012, 7-11AM

Mayors' Bike Ride Volunteers:
Monday, September 3rd, 2012, 9:30AM-11:00AM

If you are interested in helping at either of these events, please email: [email protected]


Mayors Bike Ride Event

Please plan to join LCTA for the annual Mayors' Bike Ride on Labor Day, Monday, September 3rd.  There will be an 8 mile route and a 2.5 mile route.  Registration begins at 9AM in Ellis Park (near the pool pavillion) and the ride starts at 10AM.  The event is free, but donations to Linn County Trails Association are accepted.  For full details, visit here: https://linncountytrails.org/event/linn-county-mayors-bike-ride-2/


Cedar Valley Trail Open at County Home Rd

The Cedar Valley Nature Trail has re-opened between County Home Rd and Schultz Rd. The trail has been closed since March due to a paving project.  The newly paved portion of the trail does have some cracking that needs to be repaired.  The contractors and engineers are currently working on a solution to the cracking. Future closures may be necessary to correct the cracked paving. Warch for additional information on linncountytrails.org or linncountyparks.com.


Last chance for the Trails Survey

The LCTA Trail Connections survey will soon close.  If you haven't participated yet, please do so this weekend.  The online survey is at

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/TCPX9YM

By the way, the Cedar Valley Nature Trail is now open.


Trail Connections Survey now in progress

The LCTA Trail Connections Survey is your chance to influence trail development in Linn County and the Metro Area!  The survey is located at:

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/TCPX9YM

It is important to get a strong response from trail users to identify the most important future trail projects.  Please participate.  The survey will close soon.

 


Please help rank trail project priorities

LCTA is working to identify the priorities of possible trail projects.  The Corridor Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) is now allocating funding for future trail projects and this is you chance to influence which trails are constructed.  The survey is located at http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/TCPX9YM

To assist in filling out the survey, please download the LCTA-TRAIL-CONNECTION-MATRIX at:

https://linncountytrails.org/wp-content/uploads/downloads/2012/07/LCTA-TRAIL-CONNECTION-MATRIX.pdf

Use this connection matrix in conjunction with the LCTA Trails Map (Metro Area Trail Guide) to help decide on the most important trail connections.

Please respond.  The survey will be closed after August 14.


LCTA board meeting to discuss trail priorities

The program for the July LCTA Board Meeting will be a discussion of the priorities LCTA should assign to future trail development projects.  Recent Corridor Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) decisions have potentially opened up significant new funds for trail development.  It is important that LCTA provide guidance in identifying the projects that will have the greatest benefit for the Metropolitan Area!  It is important that trail planning focuses on connections (trails that go somewhere).  This may involve filling critical gaps or providing connections to under-served destinations.  Please attend and help us develop a priority plan.

The meeting is at 7 pm on July 9 at the United Way Building, 2nd floor, 317 7th Ave SE.  The public is always welcome.


Event on Trail

On Saturday, June 9th, a run/walk race will take place in downtown Cedar Rapids.  Part of the route will be on the Cedar River Trail from the GreatAmerica Building to just past Sokol Park.  The event organizers anticipate 700 runners/walkers on the trail from 9:30AM-11:00AM. 

Questions for event organizers can be directed to [email protected].

 


CEMAR Trail Funding

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa — A paved bicycle trail connecting Marion and Cedar Rapids got a $2.5 million funding boost Thursday from the Corridor Metropolitan Planning Organization.

The CEMAR Trail was suggested 10 years ago by then-Cedar Rapids Streets Commissioner Don Thomas, but it’s never been completed. A month ago, that fact helped prompt the Cedar Rapids-dominated planning organization — which controls about $4 million a year in federal funds — to decide to use 80 percent of that money on trails and bike lanes rather than street projects.

On Thursday, the group unanimously voted to commit $2.5 million of its discretionary funds in fiscal 2016 to complete the 2.8-mile stretch.

The trail will connect Cedar Rapids’ heavily used Cedar River Trail at Cedar Lake to Marion. It will run along an old railroad line through older sections of northeast Cedar Rapids, then under First Avenue East at about 31st Street Drive SE and on to Marion.

The Cedar Rapids portion of the trail is being built in three segments. The middle section, from 20th to 29th streets NE, was built in 2010.

The first section, from the Cedar River Trail at Cedar Lake to 20th Street NE, has been slowed because of problems purchasing a trail easement through the former Terex Cedar Rapids industrial site at 909 17th St. NE. Progress is being made on that complication, city engineer and public works Director Dave Elgin said Thursday.

The third section is complicated by the need to get under, over or around First Avenue East, though the preferred plan is to go under, added Rob Davis, the city’s engineering operations manager.

Elgin said the city already has the money for some of the first segment; the $2.5 million from the planning group will pay for the rest and will fund the third segment as well. Davis estimated that the first segment will be completed in one or two years, and the third piece will follow.

At the city limits, the paved CEMAR trail will come close to crushed limestone trail segments in Marion, officials there told the planning organization.

Samantha Dahlby, a Cedar Rapids member of the planning group, said the funding commitment fit the organization’s decision-making criteria because it connects to the backbone of the metro trail system, the Cedar River Trail, and because it connects two member cities. Elgin said the group’s 2040 transportation plan named the CEMAR Trail as the top funding priority.

Monica Vernon, a Cedar Rapids City Council member and the chairwoman of the planning group, called the CEMAR Trail “one of the longest-running, talked-about trails we’ve had around here.”

Also at the top of the organization’s priority list for trails is the need to provide $1.3 million to fix the existing Cedar River Trail, which has some sections that are now 15 years old.