TRAIL IN MADISON COUNTY MEETING SOME
RESISTANCE
Six-mile path near Big Darby would link Metro Parks, could be part of
larger trail
Thursday, October 2, 2003
By Steve Stephens
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
A proposed bicycle and hiking trail near Big Darby Creek would link
Prairie Oaks and Battelle-Darby parks and could eventually join a
longer trail stretching between Lake Erie and the Ohio
River. But owners of nearby property wonder whether the
trail will be more trouble than it's worth.
Battelle has offered to donate an easement across land it owns in
eastern Madison County for a 6-mile trail, said John O'Meara, director
of Franklin County Metro Parks. The easement would run between
just north of Rt. 40 and just south of I-70. Metro Parks would need to
buy short stretches of easement from other property owners to complete
the link. The new trail would link to other trails in the two
parks and would someday comprise a stretch of the proposed Ohio to Erie
Trail between Cincinnati and Cleveland.
The average width of the easement is 25 feet, O'Meara said. The
path would go by several woodlots but primarily would pass through what
are now fields Battelle leases to farmers, O'Meara said. The path would
not preclude farming of the surrounding land.
"We have every intention to put in appropriate agricultural crossings''
to allow farm equipment to cross the trail, he said. Metro Parks
could also plant trees and shrubs along the path in some areas.
"I think this would bring an awful lot of benefit to the local
community out there as well as the region,'' O'Meara said.
But Dottie Richeson, whose family owns farmland adjacent to Battelle
and very near the proposed path of the trail, fears that people will
stray from the path and damage farm fields. "We have an
awful lot of problems with our fields already, with the
four-wheel-drive vehicles and snowmobiles'' trespassing and doing
damage, she said.
The proposed new trail would run well west of the Big Darby, almost to
the village of West Jefferson and to Little Darby Creek at one point.
It would cross Rt. 142 twice. A path should have been
chosen closer to the Big Darby, Richeson said. "Wouldn't you
rather see the creek and the trees than miles of cornfield? Once you've
seen one cornstalk, you've seen them all.''
But O'Meara said Battelle chose the path to route it away from the
institute's classified-research facilities. And West Jefferson
officials have expressed interest in linking a proposed village bike
path to the trail, he said.
Jefferson Township Trustee Rudy Denes said many questions remain.
"We're not against the concept of a bicycle trail, but we need to know
more,'' he said.
Trustee Mark Forrest said, "We know that (Metro Parks) projects are
pretty nice. Our big concern is pedestrians crossing (Rt.) 142.''
Metro Parks estimates the trail would cost more than $120,000.
Richeson questioned the spending. "The only people who really
enjoy these paths are the ivory-tower people who have time after their
9-to-5 jobs to go out and ride,'' she said, "not the people who are
working two jobs just to get by.''
Metro Parks has pledged to buy land or easements only from willing
sellers, Forrest noted. Additional meetings will be scheduled between
officials from the county, township and Metro Parks and concerned
citizens, he said.
sstephens@dispatch.com