Good news on the cycling front — I think. The long-planned Corvallis-Albany bike trail may soon get $2 million of the roughly $4.8 million it is estimated to cost. The project ended up 18th on a statewide priority list of funding under the program known as Connect Oregon V (that’s V as in 5).
Local governments and others asked for grants totaling more than $124 million for “multimodal” transportation projects under the fifth installment of this lottery-funded program, and $42 million are available. After the initial rounds of reviews by local groups around the state, the final review committee reached its recommendations in Portland Wednesday.
Benton County had asked for $4.8 million, and the review committee recommended that $2 million be approved. The project also calls for $1.2 million in matching contributions, but exactly where that would come from was not clear. Some of it could take the form of staff time spent by public works employees.
The trail would run roughly alongside the railroad right of way between Corvallis and Albany. It’s intended mainly to allow bicyclists to travel between the cities without risking their lives on the shoulders of the Albany-Corvallis Highway.
A short section of the trail has been built in Corvallis. Benton County applied for the Connect Oregon funds to build the roughly six miles from Manchester Street in northeast Corvallis to Scenic Drive in North Albany.
The review committee recommended that portions of 37 transportation projects in all parts of Oregon be funded in this round for a total of $42.4 million. The $2 million for the trail is No. 18 on the list. No other projects in Linn or Benton County were recommended for funding.
Final approval is up to the Oregon Transportation Commission, which will hold a public hearing July 17 in Salem and take action when it meets in Ontario on Aug. 21 and 22.
The trail has been planned for 10 years or more. The next steps locally will become clear as time goes on. One hurdle had been negotiations with farmers whose property would be affected by the trail’s route. I could not get an update on that aspect of it Thursday night. (hh)
Thanks for keeping after this one. As I often bike commute on Hwy 20, it is of great interest. The trail would get a lot more folks on that route, for business and pleasure.
I have no problem with the building of a bike trail. I do have a problem with using funds that result from governmental taxing power.
Bikers who choose to use the trail and receive its benefit should pay a user fee. Non-bikers shouldn’t be forced to subsidize a biker’s choice.
A bike trail is not a “public good” or an “essential” government service. We’ve lost our ability to distinguish “want” from “need.”
It may be too fine a distinction, but the Connect Oregon program is funded not so much through Gordon’s “taxing power” but through bonds backed by lottery proceeds. The lottery embodies all kinds of ethical questions, but Oregon voters answered those even if we don’t like the answers, and in fact buying lottery tickets, unlike paying taxes, is not compulsory. As for what’s a “public good” or a want versus a need, I suppose people merely want rather than actually need public parks and libraries, so should the public not pay for those things? (hh)
Thanks for the clarification on lottery bonds. While use of lottery money is a target rich environment, I will leave it alone. But lottery money only covers $2M of the $4.8M est cost. $1.2M must come from matching funds, i.e., sources undefined and TBD. $1.6M is not even addressed.
Any guesses on where the remaining $3.8M will come from? The general funds of the multiple governing bodies like Albany, Corvallis, and Benton County?
Good news indeed.
Sorry, $2.8M, not $3.8M. It’s late in the day….