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CPW: More than $4M in grant money will help better Colorado trails, access to public land

Colorado trails
Posted at 12:52 PM, Dec 18, 2018
and last updated 2018-12-18 15:19:33-05

DENVER — More than $4 million have been allocated to help improve trails and access to public land in Colorado, thanks to grants from the Colorado Parks and Wildlife Commission.

The commission recently approved the State Recreational Trails Committee's recommendations for the 2018 Colorado the Beautiful Trail Grants. Eleven grants were given out this year, totally more than $4 million.

“Colorado's outdoor spaces, trails, and recreation opportunities are why so many people choose to live and play here," said Nick Dellaca, CPW state trails program manager. "These trail grants expand access to trails and outdoor spaces, create new opportunities for outdoor recreation and help connect more Coloradans with nature. These projects will help take us a step closer to connecting every Coloradan to a park, trail or open space.”

As described on the CPW website, the grant winners are:

  • Methodist Mountain Trail System - $269,951 to Salida Mountain Trails: This will help to complete the BLM Master Plan for the Methodist Mountain Trail System. Overall, the project will see construction of six miles of non-motorized trail, reconstruction of five miles of a mixed-use trail, a new trailhead with 20 parking spaces, and new trail signage, gates and trailhead kiosk. The project will add two connections to the iconic Rainbow Trail and one to the city of Salida.
  • Lunch Loops Connector Trail - $400,000 to the City of Grand Junction: In collaboration with eight other funding sources, the Lunch Loops Connector will construct two bridges, four low-water crossings, 1.5 miles of concrete path and other trailhead amenities. This project will connect 75 miles of single-track dirt trail to the city of Grand Junction. In addition to impacting more than 120,000 visitors per year, the trail will provide under-served local communities safe access to the Lunch Loops Trail System.
  • Peaks to Plains Trail Phase 2 - $500,000 to Clear Creek County: Ultimately connecting Loveland Pass to Denver, the Peaks to Plains Trail will add 0.75 miles of concrete trail in the Clear Creek Canyon. With this new segment, trail users will be able to travel 4.5 miles along the Clear Creek from the Big Easy Trailhead in Jefferson County to this new segment around Tunnel 6 in Clear Creek County.
  • LOVA Trail - New Castle to Canyon Creek - $500,000 to the Town of New Castle: This new section in the Lower Valley will add 1.65 miles of trail along the south side of the Colorado River with a bridge, rock mitigation and an underpass to connect New Castle to Canyon Creek. Currently, bikers must navigate the busy freeway in order to travel from New Castle to Glenwood Springs.
  • Stage and Rail Trail - $205,400 to Chaffee County: As part of a larger 70-mile route from Leadville to Salida, proponents in Chaffee County will construct 1.9 miles of asphalt path to better connect Buena Vista to Johnson Village. The project will improve pedestrian and cycling safety in addition to adding signage to enhance navigability, access and education along this section of the Stage and Rail Trail.
  • Palisade Plunge - $527,000 to Mesa County: The Palisade Plunge Trail is a community effort led by groups within the Grand Valley. With the help of the Western Colorado Conservation Youth Corps, this first phase will construct 13.5 miles out of a total 33.8 miles of single-track trail. The whole project, with its length, vertical relief and unique terrain will make it a destination single-track trail fueling tourism and economic development to the region. The project will also rework the existing paved path near N. River Road and U.S. Highway 6 to connect existing trail networks.
  • Legacy Loop - Rock Island Trail - $500,000 to Colorado Springs Parks, Rec & Cultural Services: The project is set to add 0.62 miles of concrete trail and a gravel shoulder to the entire length of Rock Island’s “missing gap.” When complete, the Rock Island Trail will provide an east-west connection with the “spine” of the community’s urban Legacy Loop trail network giving thousands safe access to parks, neighborhoods and schools. Additionally, this project will add an ADA accessible trail connection to the Shook’s Run trail, two bridge underpasses, retaining walls, signage and wayfinding.
  • Fremont Pass Recreation Pathway - $600,000 to Summit County Open Space Trails: The Fremont Pass Recreation Path is an envisioned trail that will connect Copper Mountain in Summit County to Leadville in Lake County along the Top of the Rockies National Scenic Byway. This phase of the project comprises a 3.3-mile long paved multi-modal trail that bypasses a dangerous, narrow section of State Highway 91 that is currently used by cyclists. In addition to meeting ADA standards, this project will include a light penetrating elevated boardwalk through a wetlands area and a 260-foot bridge crossing Highway 91.
  • Heron/Heller/Carpio-Park Phase 1 - $750,000 to city/county of Denver - Parks and Recreation: In support of Phase 1 of the Heron Pond/Heller/Carpio-Sanguinette Master Plan, this project will construct 0.8 miles of concrete trails, 0.5 miles of multi-use trails and a trailhead parking area, providing loops to amenities within the park and connecting the under-served Globeville neighborhood with the South Platte Regional Trail System. In addition to accommodating recreation like biking and rollerblading on this 80-acre property, the park will include educational opportunities around the natural ecology of the area.
  • Great Western Trail - $250,000 to Great Western Trail Authority: Joining three miles of trail previously completed in 2014, this project will take another seven miles of abandoned railway corridor and turn it into a crushed-gravel recreational trail connecting Eaton to Severance. With its completion, the Great Western Trail will connect to the Front Range Trail via the Poudre River Trail and will provide a unique trail experience as it passes through rural agricultural lands.
  • Envision Recreation in Balance - $99,367 to Chaffee County: Born from the larger county-wide Envision Chaffee County community visioning program, the Envision Recreation in Balance program will develop sustainable solutions to balance rapid growth in outdoor recreation with watershed health protections by tracking and managing unplanned growth and impact issues. In addition to supporting a Recreation in Balance Task Force made up of 10 local land managers and businesses, the program will provide four deliverables including a Recreation and Natural Resource Atlas, a Recreation Impact Monitoring System, Rapid Response Projects, and a Balanced Recreation Plan.

The Colorado the Beautiful Grant Program is a partnership between CPW and Great Outdoors Colorado.