East of Aspen Trail coming through

by Curtis Wackerle, Aspen Daily News Staff Writer

A proposed trail that passes within footsteps of some homeowners’ patios but provides a connection in an area where pedestrian amenities are lacking was approved by Aspen City Council at a work session Tuesday.

What’s being called phase one of the East of Aspen Trail will follow the route of the Salvation Ditch and connect the Snyder Park Trail to further trail connections off of Highway 82. The city is projecting a cost of $90,000 for the connection.

The trail is opposed by homeowners in the Woerndle subdivision whose properties are adjacent to the trail.

“There will be literally no sense of privacy for these homeowners,” said Jody Edwards, an attorney representing the homeowners association. The 2- to 4-foot-wide unpaved trail would essentially run through the backyards of some homeowners.

The proposed trail runs along a trail easement granted to the city as a condition of the subdivision’s approval in 1974.

Council members said it is unfortunate that some homeowners will be negatively impacted by the trail, but the public benefits of the trail connection were compelling enough to take advantage of the 34-year-old easement. Only Mayor Mick Ireland cast a dissenting opinion.


 Zach Ornitz/Aspen Daily News
Tom Valenza, in town for work, walks along the East of Aspen Trail on Tuesday. City Council approved an extension Tuesday that will connect the trail through a subdivision to the Snyder Park Trail.

Homeowners in the Woerndle subdivision have been fighting the trail since it was raised to a high priority by the city’s Open Space and Trails Board in 2004. They proposed an alternative alignment that would run closer to the highway that the homeowners association would pay to construct with an estimated cost of $42,000.

That option was passed over in part because the city eventually wants to build a sidewalk along that portion of the highway. With no sidewalk currently in the area, many are concerned about safety. Although he supported the trail, Councilman Dwayne Romero said the trail as a priority “pales in comparison” to improving public safety along the highway.

The trail was blasted by the homeowners who said it does not address the area’s safety concerns. The fact that it runs alongside the Salvation Ditch, a trench that carries about 35 cubic feet per second of water, was also identified as a safety risk.

City trails coordinator Austin Weiss said he agrees that a sidewalk should be built along the highway, but that had little to do with the proposed trail. City open space officials see a difference between the “sidewalk experience” and the “trail experience,” and open space advocates must promote the trails experience, Weiss said.

The city’s parks department estimates about 25 to 30 people per day use the Snyder Trail during the busiest times. The East of Aspen Trail would not be plowed in the winter, but like the Snyder Trail, users would be free to pack the snow down.

curtis@aspendailynews.com