Meeting March 4 could lead to grant for trails

CORNWALL — Improvements to a recreational trail from West Cornwall to Cornwall Bridge are eligible for a National Recreational Trails Program grant.The unnamed 3-mile trail parallels the Housatonic River, mostly through Housatonic State Forest. Its northern trailhead is at the end of Lower River Road, at the edge of the Trinity Conference Center property. It crosses private property in Cornwall Bridge and comes out on Popple Swamp Road. It is mainly used by locals.The Board of Selectmen got a first look at the grant guidelines, and had a lot of questions and thoughts to discuss at the Feb. 19 meeting. They know that it is an 80 percent reimbursement grant that could be as much as $150,000. They liked that it would keep cyclists off Route 7, that it would provide better access for rescues on that side of the river and a large portion of the state forest and that it would satisfy a priority in the Town Plan of Conservation and Development to connect the town centers via a natural resource.If some sort of material is laid on portions to make it accessible to bicycles, it could eventually be a part of the Western New England Greenway, slated to run from New York to Montreal.The catch is the grant application, which would be submitted by the Northwestern Connecticut Council of Governments (COG), is due March 29. That allows little time for a process that includes a town meeting.The issue will be on the agenda of the March 4 board meeting (7:30 p.m. at Town Hall), where the selectmen hope to assemble everyone involved, including property owner John Harding, COG Executive Director Dan McGuiness and Pat Hare, who is working with COG on the proposal. Grants are administered through the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP). First Selectman Gordon Ridgway said a prior meeting with McGuiness and Hare was canceled. McGuiness told The Lakeville Journal they would initially seek planning and feasibility study funding. As the selectmen noted, there are some difficult spots on the trail, especially where it conflicts with the active railroad line. Nothing structural is planned, beyond possible trail head signs and short bridges over a few places.

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