ITC
Members
Iowa
Trails Directory
American
Discovery Route
Iowa
Trail News:
ITC negotiates for
five more rail-trails
Iowa
Trails Council
Post
Office Box 131
Center
Point IA 52213-0131
Telephone
319-849-1844
Email
ITC
Email
Webmaster
Foggy
fall run on
Cedar
Valley Nature Trail
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The
Iowa Trails Council (ITC) was formed in 1984, within a year after the passage
by Congress of an amendment to the National Trails System Act, which provided
for the "banking" of certain abandoned railroad rights-of-way.
Founders of the ITC
were inspired by this law which provided for the preservation of these
rights-of-way by establishing trails within the corridors.
Prior to 1984,
founders of the ITC had been instrumental in creating two of the
earliest rail-trails in the nation: the 52-mile Cedar Valley Nature Trail
and the 26-mile Heritage Trail. At that time, the CVNT was the longest
rail-trail in the nation and the first to connect two metro areas.
This was several
years before any national
rail-trail organization
had been formed. The difficulties encountered in establishing those
two trails steeled the ITC leadership for what was to come.
Their efforts were
not without opposition. Rural residents believed that these rail
corridors should be reattached to their land once abandonment had taken
place. Because Iowa is largely an agricultural state it had many
rail lines crisscrossing the state that were gradually being replaced by
highway transportation.
The U.S. Department
of Transportation was slow to set the procedural rules for "banking" of
these corridors under the law Congress had passed. The ITC, in its
early efforts to create more of these narrow parkways, helped the U S DOT
to formulate its rules, learning the best means of accomplishing the end
Congress intended, together.
The ITC was able
to establish the first-in-the-nation rail-trail conversion under the federal
legislation in Carroll County.
This law was challenged
in the courts and eventually reached the US Supreme Court on appeal.
There it was unanimously affirmed as constitutional. From the first
hearing in 1985 until the U.S. Supreme Court reviewed the case in 1990,
the ITC established 11 rail trails under the 1983 law. There were
only two others established in that same period in all of the other 49
states.
Today Iowa continues
as a rail-trail leader with over 700 miles of such trails constructed or
under development in more than 50 projects.
A great effort is
being made to continue acquisitions and to connect these into an across-the-state
system. This effort includes off-road connections for completing the coast-to-coast
American Discovery Trail through Iowa. |
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