Author: Larry Glantz

Latest News

Town & Country donates to trail fund

Published in the Scarborough Leader, Community News, 2/3/2107

Town & Country Federal Credit Union announced that it will make the largest philanthropic gift in credit union history to the Eastern Trail Alliance’s Close the Gap campaign.

A bridge will be built in honor of two board members who, between them, volunteered over 85 years at the credit union.

Town & Country Federal Credit Union, a leading Maine-based financial institution and active supporter of projects designed to connect communities across Southern Maine, will donate $100,000 to the alliance’s Close the Gap project.

The project aims to complete a 1.6- mile gap that interrupts off-road travel between South Portland and Saco.

This gift marks Town & Country’s largest gift to a single community initiative in the credit union’s 63-year history and the largest single gift ever made by any Maine credit union.

“This project is symbolic of Town & Country’s mission to create a personal connection with each of our members,” says CEO David Libby. “The Eastern Trail connects dozens of Maine communities and completing this missing piece in Scarborough will enhance that community connection and create accessibility for even more Mainers.”

Town & Country is making this donation in recognition of two long-time volunteer board members, who together dedicated over 85 years of service.

“We are pleased to make this gift in honor of Wilfred Couture and Edward Connolly, two people who worked tirelessly on behalf of the credit union and our community for eight decades,” Libby said.

The $100,000 gift will be earmarked to build the ‘Connolly-Couture’ bridge over the Nonesuch River on the trail between South Portland and Scarborough.

Wilfred Couture, a resident of South Portland, celebrated 40 years of service to Town & Country’s board in 2016.

Read the entire article on-line here

Go here to view a related article in the same Scarborough Leader issue about donations made by the Scarborough Community Chamber of Commerce, and the South Portland/Cape Elizabeth Chamber of Commerce.

Latest News

Credit union donates $100,000 to fill gap in South Portland-to-Kittery trail

The gift from Town & Country Federal Credit Union will be used to complete a 1.6-mile gap in the Eastern Trail as it runs through Scarborough.

By Kelley Bouchard, Portland Press Herald Staff Writer

Town & Country Federal Credit Union will donate $100,000 to the Eastern Trail Alliance’s plan to complete a 1.6-mile gap in the off-road trail as it runs through Scarborough, credit union officials announced Tuesday.

The gift is the largest made by the credit union in its 63-year history and one of the largest ever made by a credit union in Maine.

“This project is symbolic of Town & Country’s mission to create a personal connection with each of our members,” credit union CEO David Libby said in a news release. “The Eastern Trail connects dozens of Maine communities and completing this missing piece in Scarborough will enhance that community connection and create accessibility for even more Mainers.”

The Eastern Trail is a 65-mile section of the on- and off-road East Coast Greenway that runs between South Portland and Kittery. When the Scarborough gap is completed, the recreational pathway will have 16 miles of uninterrupted, off-road access from Bug Light in South Portland to downtown Saco.

Town & Country, which operates six branches in South Portland, Scarborough, Saco and Portland, is making the donation in honor of two longtime volunteer board members, Wilfred Couture and the late Edward Connolly, who together dedicated over 85 years of service to the credit union.

Libby described Couture and Connolly as “two people who worked tirelessly on behalf of the credit union and our community for eight decades.”

The $100,000 gift will be earmarked to build a bridge over the Nonesuch River that will be named after the two men, Libby said.

Read the entire article online here.

Go here to read an article about the donation in the Town & Country Federal Credit Union/s e-newsletter.

Latest News

Eastern Trail users celebrate extension of off-road path

The ambitious Eastern Trail project will add another key component next year, as work begins on a 1.6 mile section to connect South Portland and Scarborough.

By Deirdre Fleming, Portland Press Herald Staff Writer

SCARBOROUGH — While the first frigid gusts of winter swept across the Scarborough Marsh last week, Janice Cohen had warmer thoughts as she walked her black Labrador, Abe, along the Eastern Trail. When Cohen learned the trail would be extended, she stopped to envision the impact.

“We bought our home next to the Eastern Trail because of the Eastern Trail,” said Cohen, who moved to Portland from Hallowell two years ago. 

“I believe in community. Walking on the same trail every day, you get to know the people who use it. People have a safe place to walk. It connects people. Roads don’t connect people, but trails do.”

This time next year, work will begin on the 1.6-mile section of the Eastern Trail that will connect South Portland to Scarborough, linking four towns along a 16-mile off-road path that runs along the coast in the most developed part of Maine. And users of the trail are delighted about the plans to close the gap over the Nonesuch River.

Read the entire article online here.

 

Latest News

Deadline looms for trail extension

By Michael Kelley Staff Writer, Scarborough Leader – published 12/9/16

The race is on to raise the remaining funds to extend the Eastern Trail and form a connection between Scarborough and South Portland.

While the gap is only 1.6 miles – from Defosses Avenue in Scarborough to Wainwright Recreation Complex in South Portland – making the connection has proven difficult, and costly, due to the need to cross over the Nonesuch River and Amtrak/ Pan American rail line. The gap is the only piece missing of an off-road trail between South Portland and Saco.

“It’s a small piece of mileage, but really a critical piece,” said Carole Brush, executive director of the Eastern Trail Alliance, the volunteer based organization that was formed in 1997 to develop the Eastern Trail.

The Eastern Trail, which covers 65 miles from Kittery to South Portland, is the northern section of the East Coast Greenway, a trail system spanning 2,900 miles between Calais, Maine and Key West, Florida.

Approximately $600,000 of the $3.8 million cost is still outstanding. Town Planner Dan Bacon said half the cost of the project – $1.6 to $2 million – is due to the need to construct a bridge and the associated approaches over the Pan-American railway, which is used several times a day by the Amtrak Downeaster and freight trains. The bridge over the Nonesuch River, by comparison, is much easier and cheaper. Because the bridge abutments are still in place from where the old Eastern Railroad crossed the river, and only a bridge is needed the cost is expected to be between $100,000 and $140,000.

You can read the entire article online here.

Latest News

Eastern Trail Alliance’s fundraising goal is in sight

The group is closing in on a financial target to construct a difficult portion of an envisioned 64-mile path.

[The following article, by Deirdre Fleming, Staff Writer of the Portland Press Herald, gives great exposure to the ETA’s current Close the Gap campaign]

SCARBOROUGH — The Eastern Trail Alliance announced Tuesday that it is close to a fundraising goal that would allow the trail to run 16 miles uninterrupted from Bug Light in South Portland to Saco.

The alliance needs just over $600,000 to complete a $3.8 million capital campaign that would allow for construction of a difficult section of the trail that spans a railroad track and the Nonesuch River.

The Eastern Trail is envisioned as a 64-mile off-road bike-and pedestrian path reaching from South Portland to Kittery. Already 22 miles of the trail runs through portions of South Portland, Scarborough, Old Orchard Beach, Saco, Biddeford, Arundel and Kennebunk. The non-profit Eastern Trail Alliance and the municipalities along the southern Maine coast are behind the effort to extend the trail.

By far the trickiest section to build is the 1.6-mile stretch that will run over the Pan Am Railroad and the Nonesuch River in Scarborough, said Dan Bacon, Scarborough’s town planner and a member of the alliance.

“Getting over the railroad is a huge feat for many different reasons,” said Carole Brush, the Eastern Trail Alliance executive director. “Obviously crossing an active rail line with a trail that has to be … made a certain grade and also has to be a certain number of feet above the railroad tracks makes it a really long bridge. It will be longer than the Eastern Trail bridge over the (Maine Turnpike). The trail will then be wonderful for recreation and commuting on a section of the trail that is heavily used.”

The Eastern Trail Alliance estimated through a 2014 survey that roughly 90,000 people use the trail annually and spend a total of $1 million while using it, Brush said.

The 1.6-mile section will connect the trail from the Wainwright Sports Complex in South Portland to the other side of the Nonesuch River in Scarborough off Black Point Road.

Roughly $2 million of the estimated $3.8 million cost of the project will go toward the railroad bridge due to the bridge’s height – rising 20 to 22 feet above the tracks, said Bacon, who has worked with the engineering firm – HNTB Corporation of Westbrook – that designed the new section of trail.

The bridge over the Nonesuch River, which can use existing stone abutments, will cost around $100,000, Bacon said.

The 1.6-mile section also will cut through wetlands, three private residential properties and land owned by Central Maine Power. The alliance is working on securing easements.

“We’ve been working with private landowners and knitting together a passable route for this trail that will have minimal impact,” said Scarborough Town Manager Tom Hall. “There are three landowners and there have been hurdles to get over, but I’m confident we will.”

The project received $1.5 million from the Maine Department of Transportation and $1.2 million from the Portland Area Comprehensive Transportation System, a federally mandated organization that works to improve transportation in Greater Portland.

Joyce Taylor, the Maine transportation department’s chief engineer, said there’s no time frame for the alliance to secure the $1.5 million grant.

“I think it’s a very important section and it helps close the gap in an area where we think people will get the most use and it will really make a difference,” Taylor said. “We’re in it for $1.5 million if they’re willing to match it. We want to see this done. We want to work with them. They’re showing a great effort.”

The campaign also received $216,000 this year from the town of Scarborough as well as $44,000 from the town in 2014. South Portland contributed another $26,000, and the alliance contributed and raised $100,000 through donations, Brush said.

Read the entire article online here.

Latest News

New “Close the Gap” Promo Video

Please take a minute to watch and share this drone video shot by Black Fly Media for the Close the Gap Campaign.

If you can, please share on your social channels, share in your eNewsletters, and tag @eastern trail and @blackflymedia as you see fit.

“Close the Gap” is a formal fundraising campaign…

… which has already raised well over $3 million toward the goal of $3.8 million. A key piece of trail is missing in Scarborough. A 1.6-mile “gap” interrupts off-road travel between South Portland and Saco. The construction of this critical trail segment, which includes two bridges will close this gap and provide 16 continuous off-road miles reaching from South Portland’s Bug Light to Downtown Saco.

More information on the Close the Gap campaign can be found here.

Uncategorised

Get to Know the ETA Trustees and Staff

Meet The Team

Eastern Trail Alliance Trustees

bbowkerBOB BOWKER, INTERIM PRESIDENT

Bob is an avid cyclist and president of Bowker & Associates, an environmental engineering firm located in Portland. He has been commuting by bicycle from Scarborough to Portland for over 25 years. Bob founded the Maine Lighthouse Ride in 2003, a fundraising cycling event for the Eastern Trail Alliance that has grown to become the largest single-day ride in Maine with 1,200 riders. He also helped develop Commute Another Way Day, an event designed to promote alternative transportation in Maine communities. Bob is a Licensed Cycling Instructor who enjoys cycling, kayaking, and hiking.


Jessica RiceJESSICA RICE, VICE PRESIDENT

As a resident of Gorham, Jessica is the Member Engagement Manager at Town & Country Federal Credit Union. She enjoys riding her bike and taking lunch break walks on the Eastern Trail. Off trail, she enjoys hiking, rock climbing, backpacking and all outdoor adventures. Jessica believes the Eastern Trail helps connect communities and allows nature to be accessible to everyone!


Ralph Hiltz, TreasurerRALPH HILTZ, TREASURER

Ralph is a retired accountant with a Bachelors Degree in Accounting from Husson College. He currently works part time as a Job coach at L.L. Bean. He lives in Saco with his wife Terry and Sheltie Lucy. They have three adult children, two boys and one girl. Two are school teachers teaching special needs children and other child operates his own company doing web page design. In addition to being an accountant Ralph spent 11 years coaching sons Little League teams, and three years as President of Biddeford Youth Hockey. When youngest son decided at age 11 to be a youth hockey referee he became one also and did that for about 10 years. Now in his semi-retirement he enjoys all sports as well as traveling with his wife.


Tim Lambert, SecretaryTIM LAMBERT, SECRETARY

Tim started to get involved with the Eastern Trail Alliance in 2008. He has a vested interest in seeing the project completed: he wants to ride the entire 2,900 mile East Coast Greenway once completed, so he felt that getting involved in his home state just made sense. Tim works full time as a system engineer in South Portland. Originally from Biddeford, Tim recently purchased a house adjacent to the trail in Scarborough. Tim and his wife have one son and two dogs. The Lambert family favorite pastimes include walking, biking, camping and hiking.


John Andrews, Trustee and Father of the ETJOHN ANDREWS, FOUNDER OF THE EASTERN TRAIL

The Founder of the Eastern Trail and an ETA President Emeritus, John was an inspiring man of vision and untiring spirit. John’s vision to create the Eastern Trail started in the early 1990’s. He was persistent, but patient, and made tremendous progress in a relatively short amount of time.

Sadly, John passed away on February 20, 2017.

Read more information about John, including some of the many public tributes to him on this page.


Jim Bucar, TrusteeJIM BUCAR, TRUSTEE

Jim’s earliest biking was on country roads in Ohio, and he began obsessing about photography first in high school, combining both of those pastimes while teaching English at a private day school in New Haven. He’s convinced that photography is a serious art form, and he was equally convinced that putting your life on two wheels— rather than four— was such a compelling idea that he joined a group of faculty who commuted to campus on their bikes. Was it only coincidental, then, that retirement to Maine allowed even closer bonding of those two activities via volunteering for the ETA?


Bill DehaisBILL DEHAIS, TRUSTEE

Bill first was exposed to trail riding in 1978 on the Warren County Bikeway (NY) riding from Glens Falls to Lake George frequently and was a early believer in the rail to trail conversion process. In addition to bicycling bill enjoys most anything outdoors including motorcycling, kayaking, hiking and fishing. He is also a collector of breweriana, mostly Schlitz memorabilia. Professionally he is a career banker and currently is the Senior Sales Officer for Kennebunk Savings Bank. He also serves as finance chair and volunteer on the Board of the Cumberland Woodbank. Bill resides in Cumberland with his wife. They have two grown children.


Deborah Erickson-IronsDEBORAH ERICKSON-IRONS, TRUSTEE

Deborah is a healthcare management and public health professional from York, Maine. As a writer and singer she is passionate about the connection between nature, health, and creativity.  Deb is a strong advocate for bringing the off-road Eastern Trail south of Kennebunk. She enjoys cycling and walking on the ET and the many conserved lands in Southern Maine, and can’t wait until her grandbabies are old enough to join her for outside adventures!


bgallantBRYAN GALLANT, TRUSTEE

Bryan is honored to join the Eastern Trail Alliance as a trustee. He is an avid triathlete and outdoor enthusiast. Originally from New Hampshire, Bryan moved to Maine nearly 10 years ago and spends as much time as he can in the White Mountains skiing, hiking and biking. His career has been in the ski and bike industry as a freestyle ski coach and an employee at Rodgers in Scarborough, Maine. Bryan competes in local triathlons as well as Ironman races around the country. You can find Bryan running on the Eastern Trail, swimming along the coast or on his bike in southern Maine.


Gloria LegereGLORIA LEGERE, TRUSTEE

Gloria Legere, RN, MS, JD, CPHQ is a hospital accreditation and patient safety consultant. Her focus is assisting hospital in developing practical, long-term strategies for continuous readiness for accreditation compliance. She lives on a lake in Lyman. Gloria is an avid biker (on trail and road), hiker, skier and photographer and the Eastern Trail provides an excellent resource for all of those. Last summer, biking from Kennebunk to Bug Light (and back) in a day, allowed the opportunity to vividly understand the need to “Close the Gap” and to extend the trail to southern regions as well.


Tom McCullomTOM McCOLLUM, TRUSTEE

Tom is a South Berwick resident since 1980 with his wife, Jannette. Tom worked at Civil Consultants, a Survey and Engineering company since 1978 and is a licensed Professional Land Surveyor. Retired, Tom is an active cyclist, has ridden the Pan-Mass Challenge for 15 years and is an active volunteer for South Berwick events.
Tom is currently the Town of South Berwick representative to the ETMD.
We welcome Tom to the ETA board.


Jim Munroe, TrusteeJIM MUNROE, TRUSTEE

Jim has been member of the Eastern Trail for 7-8 yrs. Currently a Trustee, Jim is part of our outreach team participating in various corporate presentations and events. He is busy keeping many of our Kiosk information boxes full, and helping with our Maine Lighthouse Ride. He’s retired and enjoys volunteer work; Big Brothers, ETA, Mercy Hospital, working with patients who are in Detox for Drug & Alcohol abuse. Jim mentored a young man for Sweetsers Home and is still looking for other areas where he can help. Jim has resided in OOB for 20 years.


Joe Yuhas, TrusteeJOE YUHAS, TRUSTEE

Joe leads the monthly full moon walks on the Eastern Trail and has been doing so for 4 years now. A biker both on and off the trail, he can also be seen snowshoeing and x-c skiing during the snow season. He has a background as a naturalist and is very interested in environmental issues and teaches courses on Climate Change and Natural History at York County Senior College. A retired teacher/professor, when not on a bike, he volunteers as a train host on the Downeaster, works with youngsters at Community Bike Center and enjoys singing with his church choir and with Harbour Singers.



Eastern Trail Alliance Staff

Nancy Borg, Assistant to the Executive DirectorNANCY BORG, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

Nancy joined the Eastern Trail as a volunteer in 2013, became a part time employee in 2015 and in 2019 became the Eastern Trail’s Executive Director. You will find Nancy at most Eastern Trail events enthusiastically sharing the vision of the trail. When she’s not at an event, she enjoys singing, loves to travel, listening to opera, reading non-fiction and spending time with her husband, Charles and their dog, AJ.


Carole BrushCAROLE BRUSH, ETA TRAIL DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, ETMD

Carole is Executive Director of the Eastern Trail Management District (ETMD) and Trail Development Director of Eastern Trail Alliance (ETA). For the past decade, she was Executive Director of the ETMD and ETA, leading both organizations through a period of growth and progress, including doubling off-road mileage and developing an amazing staff. Carole is excited to now focus on ET funding and expansion through campaigns such as: “Blazing the Trail South” from Kennebunk through the Berwicks, and “Over the River” to connect the off-road trail sections in Biddeford and Saco. She is a Registered Maine Guide who shares her passion for wild, natural places through hikes and retreats, teaches Yoga, Pilates, and mindfulness, and enjoys sunset and moonrise with fellow trail-goers during monthly full moon walks at Scarborough Marsh ET.


JenSteeleSkillingsJEN STEELE SKILLINGS, EVENT COORDINATOR

A Scarborough native and resident, Jen became a stay-at-home-mom after the birth of her son in 2013. As the Event Coordinator for the ETA, she is responsible for planning the trail’s annual fundraising events including Taste of the Town, John Andrews Memorial 5k, Mend the Gap 10k, and the Annual Meeting. Jen enjoys biking, running, snowshoeing, and cross-country skiing on the Eastern Trail with her husband James and son Andrew.


hollonHOLLON OLIVER, OFFICE MANAGER

Hollon is a Pacific Northwest native, married a Mainiac, and after living all over the world has settled in Wells for retirement. She joined the Eastern Trail as the Office Manager in March of 2019. Hollon enjoys spending time with her family and friends, cooking and baking, traveling, listening to great live music, playing with her dogs (Sprocket and Claire), and doing DIY projects.


Larry Glantz, ETA  Website ManagerLARRY GLANTZ, WEBSITE MANAGER

Larry got involved with the Eastern Trail after reading John’s Feb. 1998 article in the Press Herald. In those early years he served as a founding Trustee and Vice President of the ETA. He created ETA’s first web site in 1999 to showcase the Eastern Trail vision to the region, state and beyond. The web site won American Trails’ best local trail website award in 2003. Leaving the ETA board (designated as one of the first Trustees Emeritus!), he continued as a volunteer but returned as a part-time staff member in 2011 to manage the ever-growing ETA website. Larry lives in Cape Elizabeth and works for L.L.Bean.


Latest News

Letter to the editor: Please donate to help close the gap in the Eastern Trail

According to a 2014 survey by the Eastern Trail Alliance, almost 90,000 people per year use the Eastern Trail, running from Bug Light in South Portland to Kittery – 62 miles.

On this trail, people of all ages, locals and those from away, enjoy exercising in a safe, clean environment. The annual economic impact of its use is estimated at over $850,000.

The Eastern Trail is part of the East Coast Greenway, which goes from Calais to Key West, Florida. Much of the trail is off-road, but several miles are still on unsafe roads.

The goal of the Eastern Trail Alliance is to close a 1.6-mile gap in the trail where the Greenway ends at Wainright Field in South Portland. Two major obstacles – railroad tracks and the Nonesuch River – stand in the way.

The funds needed to close the gap, $3.8 million, will pay for the construction of two bridges plus leveling and widening the rest of the trail to make it handicapped accessible. Once this gap is closed, the trail will offer 16 miles of continuous, off-road access from Bug Light to downtown Saco.

So far, $1.55 million has been committed by the Maine Department of Transportation and $1.1 million has been contributed by the Portland Area Comprehensive Transportation System. About $1 million more is needed by the end of 2016 to close the gap. A real concern is that if the additional needed funds are not raised by the end of this year, then the state funds earmarked for this project may be diverted to other projects.

Please help with a donation, an investment in our future, by going to the Eastern Trail website, www.easterntrail.org, and clicking on “Close the Gap.” Then get outside and enjoy it!

Betsy Hanscom

Scarborough

Latest News

Students inaugurate new OOB trails park

By LIZ GOTTHELF Staff Writer | Pub. 10/8 in JournalTribune.com

OLD ORCHARD BEACH — About 50 local sixth-graders hit the trails Friday morning at the grand opening of Milliken Mills Trails Park.

Fall colors peaked out through the changing foliage of the woods on the beautiful autumn day, and the students trekked through the well-designated trails, stopping to read information about the area posted on signs and kiosks.

About a third of those students had a hand in creating the park while in fourth grade through a partnership with the town’s Conservation Commission.

Milliken Mills Trails Park encompasses 70 acres of wooded area on Portland Avenue, and connects with the Eastern Trail. In 1999, Janice Milliken Andrews donated 53 acres to the town to be used for a conservation area, and the town acquired the additional 17 acres from a failed subdivision.

Parking is available at 192 Portland Ave., where the town’s former animal shelter was located.

The project was funded with the help of an $8,000 Project Canopy grant, awarded in 2014. Project Canopy is a partnership between the Department of Agriculture, Conservation, and Forestry’s Maine Forest Service and GrowSmart Maine.

As part of a fourth-grade project, local students researched the history and habitat of the area, and compiled information for signs, kiosks and the website millikenmillstrails.weebly.com. Then, with the help of high school students, they designed and built signs, kiosks and picnic tables, said Conservation Commission member Kimbark Smith.

“It is our hope this will become a new cornerstone of the community,” he said.

Read the entire article online here.

Latest News

Little library a big hit on Eastern Trail

Published in KeepMECurrent -By Kate Irish Collins -September 15, 2016

The Eastern Trail in Scarborough now features an unusual structure – a library.

A new Little Free Library, which was erected through a partnership between the Scarborough Public Library and the Scarborough Kiwanis Club, stands adjacent to the trail parking lot off Pine Point Road.

The goal for the little library, part of the international Little Free Library network, is to provide free books for youngsters, young adults and adults, as well as to help build a sense of community.

“The Little Free Library is a wonderful way to build a sense of community while encouraging reading,” Nancy Crowell, director of the Scarborough Public Library, said. “There is a wonderful serendipity in browsing a (Little Free Library) collection. You never know who will have left what title. (And while it’s) not essential for a library visitor to return or donate a book, the spirit of sharing encourages an exchange.”

The Little Free Library on the Eastern Trail has gotten a lot of use in the month or so since it was put up, said Joyce Leary Clark, president of the Kiwanis Club, with Kiwanis members replenishing the stock of books available multiple times already.

This little library is the second one in Scarborough, according to Crowell, who said that Emily Read, president of the library board, also has a Free Little Library in her Windward Lane neighborhood, which includes a geocache, as well.

Read the entire article online here.

https://www.easterntrail.org/