THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2021 Grants will help start trail beside Elgin to Joseph railroad By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — The Joseph Branch Trail Consor- tium, the nonprofi t working to establish a 63-mile trail- with-rails between Elgin and Joseph in Northeastern Oregon, announced Tuesday, Nov. 9, it has received two grants totaling more than $272,000 that will fund construction of the fi rst trailhead and inaugural trail segment, as well as fi nal planning and design for another 13-mile segment. The trail has been in the planning stages for about 10 years and will eventually offer a nonmotorized alterna- tive transportation route to Highway 82 in the form of a trail that will run beside existing railroad tracks in the railroad right-of-way owned by the Wallowa Union Railroad Authority. With one end in Elgin, the other will terminate 63 miles later in Joseph. City offi cials at each end of the proposed trail are eager to see it accomplished, anticipating both economic and health benefi ts. Elgin, at 1,700 population, currently has no accessible trails from downtown, according to a press release announcing the grants. Joseph, with roughly 1,000 people, also will benefi t from the trail. Interest at each end As it turns out, Brock Eckstein has an offi cial inter- est at each end. He’s Elgin’s city administrator and also is interim city administrator for Joseph. “Our city staff, collaborat- ing closely with the Joseph Branch Trail Consortium and WURA, are prepared to lead and assist as needed to ensure the project is a suc- cess, because the potential economic and health impacts from this trail for our city, community, and region will be momentous,” said Eck- stein of the benefi ts to Elgin. “In the future, it’ll be really great for Joseph,” he added, lamenting the delays in the project over acquiring funding. A board member of the Wallowa Union Railroad Authority, which owns the right-of-way alongside the tracks, Eckstein sees the grants as a step forward in solving the fi nancial woes of the project. “I’m really excited getting two grants,” he said. One grant, from Oregon State Parks’ Recreational Trails Program, will fund construction of the trailhead, which will also serve as a pocket park for the city of Elgin. The trailhead/pocket park will be located on a parcel of city-owned land directly across from the train depot in downtown Elgin. Eckstein said there is a “time cap” of December 2024 to get the fi rst 13 miles done. “We’re just taking it piece by piece until we get the whole thing done,” he said. In addition to trail infor- mation, the trailhead/pocket park will include an electric vehicle and e-bike charging station (the only one between La Grande and Enterprise), an Americans with Disabili- ties Act-compliant parking place, ADA-compliant picnic tables, interpretive signage about the area’s earliest inhabitants and more recent history, a bicycle maintenance stand, a water fountain and more, the press release stated. The Oregon State Parks grant also will fund construc- tion of the inaugural 0.6 mile of the trail that will be an BAKER CITY HERALD — A5 LOCAL ning stages for many years now,” Kleiner said. “This fund- ing will establish a wonderful, fully accessible community asset for residents of Elgin (and Joseph) to enjoy while also generating an economic boost for the city from visitors stopping in town to hike or bike out of town along the Grande Ronde River on the initial trail segment … or to charge their electric vehicles.” He said students enrolled in Eastern Oregon Univer- sity’s Sustainable Rural Systems Program are helping research and develop content for the interpretive signage and other components of the project. The project also will help draw people to the Eagle Cap Excursion Train, which runs from the train depot in Elgin up to Minam and back about twice a week from late spring through fall. Previous small grants from the Schwemm Family Foundation and the Round- house Foundation also will support development of the trailhead/pocket park. Kleiner was enthusiastic to get state support for the trail project. “It’s wonderful to see the state of Oregon so supportive of this trail, which will offer Grants a perfect fi t users of all abilities and ages Kleiner, who joined the consortium as its fi rst project a safe way to get out and experience nature,” he said. coordinator in March, fi nds the grants a perfect fi t for the “And the interpretive signage will help hikers, bikers and project. horseback riders learn about “These two grants dove- the local history and the in- tail perfectly and will be a catalyst for the larger project, digenous people who lived — and still live — in this area.” which has been in the plan- ADA-compliant path run- ning out of town along the railroad tracks. A second grant, from the Oregon Department of Transportation’s Trans- portation Growth Manage- ment program, will fund development of a detailed refi nement plan for the 13-mile segment of the trail between Elgin and Looking- glass in rural Union County on the Grande Ronde River near Palmer Junction. This funding will also support local outreach and education about the trail. Parts of the trail, near trailheads located in towns, will mostly be ADA-com- pliant and made of hard- packed gravel, said Gregg Kleiner, project coordinator for the consortium. “The ADA-compliant sections will accommodate electric wheelchairs, and E-bikes will be allowed on other parts of the trail,” Kleiner said in an email. “Other parts of the trail will be a more basic gravel trail that can be used by hikers, bicyclists and equestrians. … We we hope it might be used by local school athletes, like cross country teams.” Turkey and the trimmings Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald The Salvation Army continued its tradition of providing free turkey dinner boxes at the Albertsons and Safeway parking lots on Tuesday morning, Nov. 16. Holli Diamond, the Eastern Oregon Field and Service Center director for The Salvation Army, said 180 dinner boxes were put together with money donated through the Turkey Bucks program at the two grocery stores. Customers could either round up their bill or choose an amount to contribute. From left, Albertsons employees Michelle Fisher, Sarah Lee, Annette Mauer as the Turkey Lady, and from The Salvation Army, James Bobo and Diamond. st Adopted or Rescue Pet e t u C photo contest Submit your photos and be entered for your chance to win a $30 gift certificate to a local restaurant of your choice View Rules and Prize information at bakercityherald.com/pet_contest NATIONAL RURAL HEALTH DAY Thursday, November 18, 2021 Celebrating the Power of Rural Movement! On November 18th, 2021, we are proud to support National Rural Health Day. We hope that you will join us in recognizing and honoring those who work every day to keep our community healthy. With respect and appreciation, Priscilla Lynn President and Chief Nursing Officer Saint Alphonsus Medical Center - Baker City