The Herald, Sharon, Pa.

Community

July 8, 2009

UPDATE: Planners OK cash for Trout Island Trail

SHENANGO VALLEY — Shenango Valley Metropolitan Planning Organization has granted the Mercer County Trails Association $229,000 to help build the Trout Island Trail.

The money allows PennDOT to accept bids for the project, and work could be completed this year, said Matthew Stewart, senior planner for the Mercer County Regional Planning Commission.

PennDOT should advertise for bids in the next few weeks, said Edward Winslow of Winslow Engineering Inc., Hermitage, which handled design of the project.

Plans for the trail, which have been about 10 years in the making, were bogged down in setting the path and getting rights-of-way from property owners, most notably the Army Corps of Engineers, which owns most of the land.

“The administrative work is done,” Winslow said.

PennDOT recently estimated the work would cost $409,000, more than the $180,000 the association has from a PennDOT construction grant. The association asked the MPO for a share of its discretionary funds set aside for urban areas, and the MPO approved the allocation in a telephone ballot June 22, Stewart said.

“Hopefully, this will cover it,” Stewart said of construction. “PennDOT wanted to make sure the trail association had the money before it went to bid.”

The association wants to build an eight-foot-wide, paved trail from Mercer Avenue in Sharpsville to Orangeville along the abandoned Pennsylvania Railroad and Erie Railroad lines.

The first phase, which is subject to the upcoming bid process, will start in Sharpsville, curve along the south side of the Shenango River past the Shenango River Lake dam in Hermitage, and then run along Trout Island Road into South Pymatuning Township and to the lake, across from the Shenango Recreation Area. This segment will measure 2è miles.

In a subsequent phase or phases — all contingent on getting funding — the trail would head northwest along the lake to Ohio, and also could extend to Transfer and Greenville.

The state Department of Conservation and Natural Resources also awarded the association a $103,000 grant, from which Winslow was paid for design.

If all goes as hoped, construction on the first phase could finish this year, although there is a chance it will carry over into next year, Stewart said.



Information: www.mctrails.org

Text Only
Community
  • Curry promoted to Allied editor

    Herald copy editor and page designer Kim Curry has returned to lead sister paper Allied News -- where she began her full-time journalism career -- and staff writer Monica Pryts is reporting from Allied’s Grove City office.

    February 9, 2012

  • Vets’ clubs coordinate coupon clipping for troops

    The next time you come across coupons for items you don’t buy or that have expired, hang on to them; military men and women overseas can use them for their own groceries.

    February 6, 2012

  • American chestnut topic of workshops

    If you have an interest in helping contribute to the eventual return of American chestnut to our forest ecosystems, one of these workshops might be your cure for spring fever:

    February 4, 2012

  • Farrell grad a classic(al) example

    A Farrell High School graduate will return to the Shenango Valley next weekend to perform with an elite classical guitar quartet from the State University of New York at Fredonia.

    February 2, 2012

  • Kids meet challenge with 3-D creations

    When Sharpsville Area Elementary School fifth-grade teachers asked students to create their own cities, they were expecting colorful drawings of buildings, parks and streets.

    February 1, 2012

  • Student revives animation technique for feature spot in band’s music video

    Westminster College sophomore Joe Ligo knew the process of incorporating stop-motion animation into the video wouldn’t be easy.

    January 29, 2012

  • New coffee house Hallowed grounds

    Churches look to infuse faith in believers in all kinds of ways.

    At First Presbyterian Church of Sharon, leaders are hoping a little bit of coffee might help.

    Last week the church hosted its first Cana’s Corner Coffeehouse. Twice a month the church will open its doors to musicians and set up a coffee and snack bar.

    January 24, 2012 1 Photo

  • Hallowed grounds

    Churches look to infuse faith in believers in all kinds of ways.
    At First Presbyterian Church of Sharon, leaders are hoping a little bit of coffee might help.

    January 15, 2012

  • Satellite office

    For nearly 30 years, Sharon native Edward “Ted” Cattron was bound by threat of treason charges to keep a big secret from his family and friends and only recently has been able to share the truth.

    December 11, 2011

  • Artist creates with fabric

    Evian Zukas-Oguz said her husband calls her “the nutty professor of fabric” because of the way she goes into her own world when crocheting, sewing, weaving on a loom or working on a knitting machine.

    December 8, 2011