Author: Larry Glantz

Archived News

A leader on the trail (Nov. 28, 2010)

John Andrews is the motivating force behind southern Maine’s expanding off-road trail system.

By Deirdre Fleming dfleming@mainetoday.com Staff Writer

ARUNDEL – The trail was slick with sleet Friday morning and the rain was cold, but John Andrews happily covered ground in his work boots as he gave a tour through the wood-lined path leading to the Kennebunk River.

It was the newest section of the Eastern Trail, and after several trail “unveilings” in as many years, Andrews is getting used to showing off this ever-expanding off-road trail in southern Maine.

The Eastern Trail begins at Bug Light in South Portland and the plan is to extend it all the way to Kittery, some 70 miles. It currently travels off road in sections through South Portland, Scarborough, Saco, Old Orchard Beach and now, with the newest section, across Biddeford, Arundel and Kennebunk.

jandrews11282010

John Andrews points toward Kennebunk as he shows off a new section of the Eastern Trail in Arundel where it crosses the Kennebunk River with a new bridge. The trail is part of the 3,000-mile East Coast Greenway.

Read the full article online here.

Share this article:

Archived News

Outdoor enthusiast plans trail (Feb. 1998)

By Jack Beaudoin, Portland Press Herald – Thursday, February 12, 1998

Anybody who has ever tried to bike from Kittery to Portland knows one thing for certain: If you value your life, you can’t get there from here.

That’s because the world’s most pedestrian-unfriendly, bike-unfriendly road – Route 1 – dominates the north-south corridor through York County.

Overburdened by seasonal tourist traffic, narrow through the shoulders, rutted and pot-holed, Route 1 cuts across just about every other road in coastal York County and serves as a real barrier to safe alternative transportation and recreation.

But John Andrews, chairman of Saco Trails, may have found a way around it – the Eastern Trail. In his dream, the Eastern Trail provides a lush, beautiful four-season corridor for cyclists, hikers, inline-skaters, cross-country skiers and snowshoe enthusiasts to travel.

The best thing about Andrews’ dream is that the trail already exists.

You might know the Eastern Trail by its old name, the Boston and Maine Eastern Line. Until 1945 – the year it was abandoned – trains ran the 50-mile stretch of the Eastern Line from South Berwick to South Portland. Since then, the line has remained mostly dormant, an overgrown scar cutting across the heart of York County.

But Andrews plans to bring the Eastern Line back to life. Along with Alan Cone of Saco Trails, Dick Roberge of Old Orchard Beach Trails, Tom Daley of the Scarborough Conservation Land Trust and public officials from Saco to South Portland, Andrews has managed to secure almost all the approvals needed to complete the northern edge of the trail from Route 1 in Saco to Bug Light in South Portland.

With that part of the job steaming toward completion, the committee has turned its sights on the southern stretch, from Saco to Dover, N.H.

“I don’t see why this can’t be done in a matter of years,” says Andrews, a 61-year-old semi-retired engineer with a penchant for hiking, biking and cross-country skiing. “I believe if you get a bunch of people together in these southern communities, the trail will happen.”

In fact, the speed of the Eastern Trail’s development is nothing short of astonishing. Although Daley has been looking into the project’s feasibility for 11 years, Andrews and his conservationist friends formed an exploratory committee just about three weeks ago. Since then, Granite State Gas Transmission Inc. (which owns a natural gas pipeline on much of the proposed trail) has enthusiastically signed on to the project, as has the town of Arundel.

“We’ve already talked a lot about it,” says Arundel Planner Roger Cole, who has passed Andrews’ plans southwest to Kennebunk planners. “Who wouldn’t, with a corridor like that? The Eastern Line is just there for the using.”

According to Cole, the Eastern Trail would be a boon to residents and visitors alike. And if Andrews has his way, people could be coming to the state from as far away as Florida. Andrews has been talking to representatives of the East Coast Greenway project, a trail system that someday will connect Bar Harbor to Key West.

Parts of the Greenway, like the Eastern Trail, would be off-limits to motorized vehicles while other stretches would cut through the center of cities like Boston and New York. The more access, the Greenway philosophy goes, the better.

“It’s not their intention to make this an Appalachian Trail for bikes,” Andrews says. “They want it to go where the people are. And if that means going through cities, so be it.”

Archived News

Eastern Trail Alliance and East Coast Greenway keeps us truckin’

SeaCoastOnline.com January 26, 2012 2:00 AM

The Eastern Trail Alliance got its start in 1980. The idea was to provide a 65-mile public access trail from Portland to Kittery. The completion of the pedestrian bridge over I-95 in Kennebunk is testament to the hard work and successful forging of partnerships with local, state, and federal entities.

ETA has expanded its goals and is now a part of the East Coast Greenway, a trail system that stretches 3,000 miles from coastal Maine to Key West, Fla.

Each community along the way offers a connection to the project; it might be an abandoned railway system or land running parallel to a natural gas line. Many trails offer long quiet stretches for hikes or bike riding. Horses are allowed but motorized vehicles are prohibited. Not all of the trail is off-road — more about that a bit later.

The East Coast Greenway started in 1991 with the vision, “For a long-distance, urban, shared-use trail system linking 25 major cities along the eastern seaboard between Calais, Maine and Key West, Florida. It will serve non-motorized users of all abilities and ages. A 3,000-mile long spine route will be accompanied by 2,000 miles of alternate routes that link in key cities, towns, and areas of natural beauty. This green travel corridor will provide cyclists, walkers, and other muscle-powered modes of transportation with a low-impact way to explore the eastern seaboard.” Cool, eh?

ECG provides a list of 53 maps, each averaging about 53 miles of trails. Each map shows elevation levels for its coverage.

Presently, 75 percent of the Greenway is on public roads and the traveler must be aware and conscientious of roadside safety. ECG recommends that only experienced cyclists use the sections that must share the road with motorized vehicles. Recommendations are listed at the end of this article. Hikers, less experienced cyclists, and equestrians will find miles of quieter off-road trails with beautiful natural settings.

Many of the off-road trails are in rural settings but even they eventually come close to local businesses that benefit from trail users stopping in for refreshments.

Volunteers maintain the trails with funds donated, membership dues (you don’t have to be a member to use the trails), and bond initiatives for large projects.

Today we have this opportunity to offer this great legacy to future generations of outdoor enthusiasts.

Find out more about the Eastern Trail Alliance by contacting: Eastern Trail Alliance, P.O. Box 250, Saco, ME 04072 or call 284-9260 or visit www.easterntrail.org

Some upcoming excursions on the trail:

  • Saco Bay Trails will conduct a snowshoe tour of the Middle Goosefare Trails and a section of the newest portion of the Eastern Trail in Saco from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Jan. 28, . Meet at the Saco Hannaford parking lot. Park on the far-right side of the lot (near where the Eastern Trail passes alongside). Snowshoe or walk, depending on snow levels. Visit trails@sacobaytrails.org.
  • There will be a moonlight walk from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 6, starting from Mill Brook Business Park, Route 1, Saco (across from Vacationland Bowling). Cross country ski, snowshoe or walk depending upon conditions. It’s an easy pace and those attending will vote on direction: Route 1 ET Bridge or OOB and beyond. Weather will not cancel. Optional refreshments to follow. Contact John Andrews, jandrews717@gmail.org.
  • Another moonlight walk is scheduled from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 7, starting from the Eastern Trail access behind the Southern Maine Medical Center parking lot, Biddeford. X-country ski, snowshoe or hike depending upon conditions. Easy pace. We will proceed on the trail toward Arundel. Contact Joe Yuhas, folk44@aol.com.

RJ Mere is a Registered Master Maine Guide and noted naturalist. He can be reached at rjmere@gwi.net.

User safety recommendations from East Coast Greenway:

  • Obey all traffic laws, signals, and signs.
  • When on streets, bicyclists should travel in the same direction as motorized traffic while walkers should face traffic.
  • All cyclists should wear an approved bicycle helmet. (Helmet use may be required by local or state law.)
  • Display front and rear lights at night.
  • Share the road and trail with other users.
  • On trails, bicyclists yield to pedestrians who yield to equestrians.
  • Be courteous and notify other users when passing.
  • Travel in groups whenever possible.
  • Be constantly aware of your surroundings and limit the amount of valuables carried.
  • Carry basic tools and repair materials.
  • Have a cell phone available for emergencies.
  • Carry sufficient water or fluids for hydration.
  • Carry a local road map for orientation in case you get off track.

East Coast Greenway information can be found by contacting: East Coast Greenway Alliance, 5315 Highgate Drive, Suite 105, Durham, NC 27713 or call 919-797-0619 or e-mail info@greenway.org.

Read this article online at SeaCoastOnline.com

Share this article:

Archived News

Senate Transportation bill passes with trail funding

ETA note:  Coverage on this site of the federal Transportion bill, and what it might mean for trails and bicycling programs, started on February 13. This latest version of the report was updated March 14.

As some of you may have heard, there is a major legislative battle going on around the federal transportation bill. Many friends in the national bike advocacy groups have pulled out all the stops to get the Senate version of the bill passed containing provisions that help trails and bicycling programs. Click here for one news report on the bill’s passage.

Many friends here in Maine were also active in contacting Maine’s two Senators to urge their support for the bill. Click here to read the City of Saco’s Resolution in Support of Transportation Enhancement, Recreational Trails and Safe Routes to School (passed Feb. 28, 2012)

THANK YOU very much for your efforts to help protect trail funding.

The Senate passed its version of the transportation bill on Wednesday, March 14.

An email alert sent March 13 by Kevin Mills of the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy provides some good information on the eve of the bill’s passage:

“Thanks to your valiant support, I am thrilled to report that because of bipartisan bill changes just filed by Senate leaders, we expect that a final Senate transportation bill will include two amendments that restore the integrity of trails, walking and bicycling programs.”

“Under the bill as passed by the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee last November, Transportation Enhancements (TE), Safe Routes to School (SRTS) and the Recreational Trails Program (RTP) would have become severely crippled.”

“But the incorporation of these two amendments is a huge step forward for trails and active transportation. A vote on final passage of the bill is expected very soon, but I couldn’t wait to tell you about this important breakthrough for trails and active transportation. The bill will ensure greater local access to funds and a fair shot at approval for the most beneficial projects, and it preserves decision-making structures that enable public participation and well-balanced trail systems. The messages you sent your senators made an enormous difference.”

Mr. Mills goes on to report on what is happening in the House of Representatives:

“Meanwhile in the U.S. House of Representatives, the draft transportation bill (H.R. 7) failed to attract enough support. We do not yet know whether the House will change its own bill, take up the Senate’s bill, or simply move to extend funding under existing law.”

“But House leaders must act fast, as the clock is ticking on the current transportation law, set to expire on March 31. As always, we will seek your assistance when necessary to defend TE, SRTS and RTP so they can continue to make our communities healthier, wealthier, safer, cleaner and more enjoyable. (For more on the bill debate, see this excellent Hill article.)”

Archived News

Two Major Awards Honor ETA Emeritus President John Andrews

Two major organizations in Maine, the Bicycle Coalition of Maine, and the Biddeford/Saco Chamber of Commerce, bestowed honors in January 2012 on John Andrews, the founder and President Emeritus of the Eastern Trail Alliance.

Bicycle Coalition of Maine logoBiddeford Saco Chamber logoThe Bicycle Coalition of Maine honored John Andrews with one of their annual awards for “individuals for their work to improve bicycling in Maine.” The Biddeford/Saco Chamber of Commerce honored John with the William Kany Leadership Award.

From the 1/19/2012 Bicycle Coalition of Maine announcement:

John Andrews photo“Andrews, a retired engineer, served as founding president of the Eastern Trail Alliance until last summer.  For 15 years, he led the effort to create a multi-use trail from Kittery to South Portland.  Along the way, he secured funding, convinced municipalities to work together, won support from politicians and overcame many other obstacles.  The trail now extends for nearly 21 miles in southern Maine.

Andrews “met an enormously wide array of people with all sorts of connections to his Eastern Trail dreams – directors of corporations, everyday common citizens, Mainers, people from away,” said Jim Bucar, an Alliance trustee.  “He stores all their names and histories and details in his voluminous memory, ready to extract them when it would benefit the trail to reach out to them.” “

John Andrews holding his award artwork

The Biddeford/Saco Chamber of Commerce honored John on January 24 with the William Kany Leadership Award.  The award came with an original work of art commisioned specifically to honor the recipient. In this case, the art represents the new Route 1 footbridge and part of the trail. We’re so proud of you, John!

Share this article:

Archived News

Bicycle and Pedestrian Trails in Maine: A Guide to Maine’s MultiUse Connections (Summer 2010)

bikepedreportBackground: This report provides a listing of Maine Bicycle and Pedestrian Shared Use Trails in Maine, including the Eastern Trail. This report is divided into two sections. The first section lists the bicycle and pedestrian connections that are for nonmotorized uses only. They generally have improved surfaces of either asphalt or stone dust The second section includes Shared Use Paths which also allow ATV’s. All of these trails have been built with partnerships at the local, state, and federal level. They are all open to the public and are built to connect neighborhoods, villages, business areas and towns. This report is meant to be a general outline of bicycle and pedestrian offroad opportunities in Maine.

Walking and Bicycling Trails:

  • Acadia Carriage Roads (Mt Desert Island)
  • Androscoggin River Bicycle and Pedestrian Path (Brunswick)
  • Auburn Riverwalk (Lewiston, Auburn)
  • Beth Condon Pathway (Yarmouth)
  • Bethel Pathway (Bethel)
  • Collins Pond Pathway (Caribou)
  • Calais Waterfront Walkway (Calais)
  • Eastern Trail (Kittery, Old Orchard Beach, Scarborough, South Portland)
  • Foundry Road Path (Livermore Falls)
  • Kennebec River Rail Trail (Augusta, Hallowell, Farmington, Gardiner)
  • Lisbon Trails (Lisbon)
  • Mountain Division Trail (Windham, Gorham, Standish)
  • Mousam Way Bike Path (Sanford)
  • Narrow Gauge Pathway (Carrabassett Valley)
  • Portland Trails – Back Cove/ Eastern Promenade/Bayside Trails (Portland)
  • Presque Isle Bicycle and Pedestrian Walkway (Presque Isle)
  • Sipayik Trail (Perry)
  • South Portland Greenbelt (South Portland)
  • University of Maine Bicycle Path (Old Town, Orono)
  • Westbrook River Walk (Westbrook)

Shared Use Paths: Motorized and NonMotorized Use:

  • Aroostook Valley Rail Trail (Washburn, Van Buren)
  • Down East Sunrise Trail (Ayers Junction to Ellsworth)
  • Four Season Adventure Trail (Newport to DoverFoxcroft)
  • Greenville Junction to Shirley Mills Rail Trail (Greenville Junction)
  • Lagrange Rail Trail (LagrangeMedford)
  • PattenSherman MultiUse Trail (Patten)
  • Sanford Rail Trail (Sanford)
  • Solon/Bingham (Solon to Bingham)
  • Southern Bangor and Aroostook Trail (Houlton, Phair Junction)
  • St. John Valley Heritage Trail (Fort Kent)
  • Turner Bike Path (Turner)
  • Whistle Stop Trail (Jay, Farmington)

Read the full report here.

Archived News

Equestrian Use of the Eastern Trail

At a meeting with a group of equestrians on January 11, 2012, the Eastern Trail Municipal District lifted the moratorium on horseback riding on the Kennebunk-Arundel-Biddeford section of the Eastern Trial until March 1, 2012, with the understanding that members of the local equestrian community will work with the ETMD to define, by that date, a set of rules and responsibilities to govern their use of the trail, and which they would publicize and support to ensure that the trail can be maintained for all users.

The equestrian community plans on developing rules for equestrians use of the trail to present at the next ETMD meeting on February 8th. FMI, contact the ETA by email or by phone at 207-284-9260.

Archived News

Deirdre Fleming: Funding for projects may be headed to Maine

by Deirdre Fleming, Portland Press Herald, December 25, 2011

[Ed.’s Note: This article describes USM Professor Richard Barringer’s tale of an outdoor funding windfall heading for Maine, one which might happen in 2012. Key Quote: “And in southern Maine this year, a windfall of bicycle and pedestrian grant cash allowed the East Coast Greenway, called the Eastern Trail here, to get a bridge over Interstate 95 in Kennebunk and another over Route 1 in Saco — nearly turning it into a contiguous off-road trail through seven urban towns.”]

Professor Richard Barringer likes to start at the beginning when he begins the tale of the outdoor funding windfall heading for Maine. But really, the good timing and hope in this story is in what could happen in 2012.

Either way, his story is one worth telling on Christmas Day.

Last year the University of Southern Maine professor handed a report he was commissioned to write by the New England governors to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar who, he said, passed it on to President Obama. And the chiefs at the helm of America’s outdoors policy liked what they saw.

Barringer’s report very closely aligned with Obama’s goals laid out in America’s Great Outdoors initiative rolled out by the president in April 2010. It highlighted seven projects around major natural corridors in New England that with relatively little funding could change the way Americans here live, work, play, recreate and relate to the environment.

These projects would fight childhood obesity, reinvest our collective passion in land, and bring nature and good health into our everyday lives.

But like a seasoned professor, Barringer takes even a bigger view of the history that could play out here.

“Let me take you back further, all the way back to 1908 when the governors of New England gathered to talk about the devastated headwaters, the logging practices,” Barringer said Thursday. “The result of that meeting was the Green Mountain and White Mountain national forests. In 2008, the New England governors memorialized that meeting and created this commission on land conservation.”

Read the full article on-line here.

Share this article:

Archived News

Unwelcome at any speed? Irresponsible ATV riders create hostile climate for all operators (March 2002)

Lead Editorial Reprinted from the Journal Tribune, March 29, 2002

It’s a beautiful day. Spring is waking up the birds and trees all around us and the last patches of wet spring snow are disappearing, for now at least.

Damage on Eastern Trail caused by ATV use

Of course this means the all-terrain vehicles are returning to our back woods and hillsides, threatening to turn both into noisy, rutted wastelands.

The reputation of ATV riders probably couldn’t be much lower than it is right now in Maine. There are reports of riders ignoring and even cutting down “no trespassing” signs, eroding stream banks and treating trails so badly that property owners kick out snowmobiles, too.

Some of the worst offenders are cutting noisily through our own back yard. The Kennebunk Plains conservation area has been damaged and Portland Natural Gas lines endangered by riders who’ve moved boulders that were supposed to block their way. In Sanford, irresponsible riders have done damage around the industrial park, despite enforcement actions police and the warden service.

A case in point: Last Sunday, a lone ATV rider shot through an intersection on Route 109 near the Center for Shopping and passed cars by traveling on the wrong side of the road, so fast that if drivers had blinked they might not have seen him.

This kind of reckless behavior endangers pedestrians, drivers and ATV riders themselves as well as harming wetlands, streams and hillsides and destroying the peace of the countryside.

It’s tempting to say we ought to get rid of them all, the way the state ordered dealers to stop selling 3-wheel ATVs in favor of more stable 4-wheelers a few years ago. But the problem is not the vehicles, and it’s not all the riders.

It’s the yahoos among them that make life difficult for all of us. Those people should lose their right to continue terrorizing us.

Police have yet to catch up with this issue even though they’ve tried, and continue to do so. Possibly more of them need to get out of their cruisers and onto ATVs of their own or other vehicles that will allow them to follow rogue riders into the woods. Maybe the minimum age for riders ought to be raised. (Ten-year-olds may ride now, within limits.) Or possibly the safety classes that are mandatory for the youngest riders should be required for all ages.

If they were generally responsible, ATV riders would have wider access to trails and fields in York County. There would be fewer barriers and “no-trespassing” signs. But that’s a big “if” at this point.

Riders need to show they’ve got the maturity to deserve something other than the yahoo label. Or they need to turn in the keys to their toys.

Archived News

Lighthouse pedal pusher Cyclist organizes a lighthouse ride to raise money for the Eastern Trail

By DEIRDRE FLEMING – March 15, 2010

phot of Bob BowkerCAPE ELIZABETH: Bob Bowker pointed at two lighthouses that sat back from the lush vegetation some distance from the park named for them on the Cape Elizabeth peninsula.

At one time, they were used by mariners to help navigate into Portland Harbor, he explained. ”They would line up the two lights,” he said.

And just as Bowker offered this impromptu history lesson about Two Lights State Park, a motorist with a Maine license plate pulled up and asked the cyclist for directions to Portland Head Light farther up the coast.

Bowker obliged, but quickly added with a wave to Cape Elizabeth Light east and west: ”There are two lighthouses right there.”

As the creator of the Maine Lighthouse Ride, Bowker is a bit of an advocate for lighthouses. The charity ride, which will be held for the fifth year Sept. 13, winds by five lighthouses and within view of three others that sit offshore: Wood Island Light, Ram Island Ledge Light and Halfway Rock Light.

Read the full article online here

Share this article:

https://www.easterntrail.org/