Brown's Creek State Trail is Not Just a Benefit, It's a Responsibility
The Brown's Creek State Trail project will not only address a public health issue but would make Gandhi happy too.
Now that it's official, I don't have to feel sheepish about throwing my editorial weight behind the Brown's Creek State Trail project in Stillwater.
In the spirit of full disclosure, I'm a huge fan of it.
A six-mile stretch that will eventually connect to a 600-mile statewide trail system and serve up to 200,000 people annually is not just an "asset to area businesses" as Washington County Commissioner Gary Kriesel said when the contract was signed on Feb. 16, but it's a social responsibility.
That's right, I said 'responsibility', which is more than just a fiscal conversation.
If it were up to me, I'd support any project or initiative that helps combat the obesity epidemic that has for so long plagued our citizens and, more recently, found our nation's youth particularly easy pickings.
But it's not up to me. It's up to Stillwater, Washington County and the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources to make it happen in a way that serves the community while also addressing what has become a serious public health issue.
Here's the thing—and there's really no way of getting around it—we live in an age when authorities have a duty to plan projects and institute initiatives that make sense not only financially but socially and culturally as well.
The Brown's Creek State Trail is one of those projects.
Both Minnesota and Wisconsin are familiar with this debate. Late last year a joint committee reopened a discussion about including a bike/pedestrian path that would connect the communities of La Crescent and Dresbach in Minnesota to La Crosse in Wisconsin when it rebuilds the I-90 Mississippi River crossing.
A plan that was initially shot down, the Minnesota Department of Transportation is planning to accept bids in 2012 for a bridge that includes a bike/pedestrian path—depsite a price tag of between $25-37 million—after government and athletic groups applied the requisite pressure on its behalf.
Mahatma Gandhi once said, "Action expresses priorities."
The Brown's Creek State Trail demonstrates the priorities of Stillwater, Washington County and the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources and I, for one, applaud their actions.
John Leinen
9:32 am on Saturday, February 18, 2012
Stillwater, Washington County and the State of Minnesota need to be thanked for supplying its citizens with such a wonderful asset. It will certainly be the boon to Stillwater businesses that Commissioner Kriesel touts but that benefit is no more important than the benefits it brings to every resident of Stillwater and Washington County. The opportunity it provides to citizens and families to recreate together in such a beautiful natural setting is exactly the experience they need today. Wholesome, healthy, active, inexpensive, fun, you can't get more family friendly then that. Reconnecting kids to nature will happen by itself just walking through that green tunnel with all its plants, flowers, critters and the other wonders of nature there, in addition to the churning Browns Creek rushing along beside you. Improved health will too. When we go for our walks and rides we'll increase our fitness. Obesity, diabetes, heart disease, even mental health will all see improvement along with our overall health in general. For all this benefit, we're just taking a few minutes to go out and enjoy our wonderful valley. I'm certainly not underestimating the importance this resource brings to our business community while I celebrate the other benefits it will bring to our community as a whole.
Jeff Roberts
10:51 am on Saturday, February 18, 2012
"Obesity, diabetes, heart disease, even mental health will all see improvement ..." Well said, John. Well said indeed.