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Cycling, Rail Advocates On Collision Course Over Proposed Portland-Yarmouth Bike Path

Fred Bever
/
Maine Public
Molly Henry, regional coordinator for the East Coast Greenway Alliance, at the Portland terminus of the proposed new bike and walking path.

A proposal to create a new bike path along an existing rail line between Portland and Yarmouth is drawing strong interest from the communities it would pass through. It’s also raising worries that it would interfere with a plan to extend passenger train service from Portland to the Lewiston-Auburn area.

The rail line in question starts at the edge of Casco Bay, next to an imposing brick factory building.

“Right now we’re actually behind the B&M baked beans facility looking at what would be the southern terminus of this,” says Molly Henry, regional coordinator for the East Coast Greenway Alliance, the group that has been working for more than 25 years to realize the dream of a contiguous, protected walking and bike path from Maine’s border with Canada to Key West.

Henry says the path is about 30 percent done.

“Our longest continuous stretch of East Coast Greenway actually is in Maine, and it’s the 87-mile Downeast Sunrise Trail, which stretches from Ayers Junction just south of Calais and all the way into Ellsworth,” she says.

The group now has its eye on this stretch of rail corridor, which runs seven miles from the bean plant along Interstate 295 through Falmouth and Cumberland to a junction in Yarmouth. The state Department of Transportation owns it, and the St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railroad has a renewable lease for use of the line, although it actually dropped service to the bean plant two years ago.

The corridor’s course parallels an on-road route popular with cyclists of all types, from squadrons of neon-spandexed racers and family outers to lone commuters, such as Ted Reed.

“I’m an executive at Unum. I ride about 4,000 or 5,000 miles a year from the middle of Cumberland Range Road area, every day, till about last week, and I pick it up again around March,” he says.

Reed was one of about 60 people who turned out for a recent presentation on the proposal in Falmouth. And he was one of many applauding the idea of a dedicated bike route into Portland.

“I am terrified in a few places on my commute. I cannot use Route 9 in Cumberland. It’s dangerous — it’s deadly dangerous,” he says. “This would be really, really welcome to people like me. Now, there are not many people like me, but there might be more if you put one of these things in.”

Bike and walking path boosters point to southern Maine’s Eastern Trail, stretching 65 miles from Portland’s Bug Light to Kittery — with 22 miles of it off-road — as a prime example of how they can contribute to local economies, creating new community gathering places, tourism assets and even boosting nearby real estate values.

But there’s opposition, too. Cumberland resident Paul Weiss reeled off a list of rail corridors whose potential he says has been degraded by their conversion into bike paths.

“The Mountain Division, the Sunrise Trail, the Augusta-Gardiner branch, the Union branch, the Maine Eastern Railroad. Those are all railroads that have been ripped up and destroyed or damaged by putting in these trails. And it costs a huge amount of money to ever rebuild by doing this,” he says.

Weiss is a member of the Maine Rail Transit Coalition. So is Tony Donovan, who is also co-chair of the Maine chapter of the Sierra Club. Donovan says the Sierra Club emphasizes preservation of rail lines for their potential to reduce Americans’ dependence on fossil-fueled power automobiles.

Donovan says there’s simply no room for a bike path on the Atlantic-St. Lawrence corridor, a likely route for an emerging plan to start passenger service between Portland and the Lewiston-Auburn area.

“Once it’s there, it will be very difficult to dislodge it,” he says.

Donovan and others say the growth of Amtrak’s Downeaster service to Boston demonstrates the future potential for expanded rail.

“The goal is Montreal, which is the route that is being designed for this trail. The word is it’s going to take us 30 years to get the train to Montreal. My response is, ‘That’s right, we’ve been working on it for 25 years, we’re almost there,’” he says.

Bike path advocates such as Henry insist that their vision is compatible with future rail projects, and that with good design and planning — and enough funding — co-location with safe separation between trains and bikers can be maintained.

Henry says she’s perplexed by opposition from an environmental group such as the Sierra Club.

“That’s focused on how to lower carbon emissions, how to lower energy consumption, how to connect people with nature, and I feel like this trail is doing all of those things,” she says.

The tension could leave lawmakers such as state Sen. Catherine Breen, a Falmouth resident who sits on the Legislature’s Appropriations Committee, trying to thread a needle. She told the Falmouth meeting that in Burlington, Vermont, where she grew up, a bike path on a rail corridor around Lake Champlain has been an enormous success.

“However, taking up those rails was an enormous mistake, and Burlington, like Portland, has growing demographics and all sorts of traffic problems,” she says.

Breen says the pursuit of a comparatively cheap project such as a bike path might be tempting, but that should not get in the way of seeking big-money projects such as new rail service.

Later this month the Greater Portland Council of Governments will release a preliminary report on the bike path proposal. A half-million dollar, state-funded consultant’s study of Portland-to-Lewiston passenger rail is not expected to be completed for a year.

A Columbia University graduate, Fred began his journalism career as a print reporter in Vermont, then came to Maine Public in 2001 as its political reporter, as well as serving as a host for a variety of Maine Public Radio and Maine Public Television programs. Fred later went on to become news director for New England Public Radio in Western Massachusetts and worked as a freelancer for National Public Radio and a number of regional public radio stations, including WBUR in Boston and NHPR in New Hampshire.