Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cities look to join interstate bike route plan

- THOMAS SACCENTE

FORT SMITH — Two major cities in the River Valley have expressed a desire to be part of a proposed state-spanning bike route that leaders say could be a valuable asset.

Fort Smith’s Board of Directors unanimousl­y approved developmen­t of U.S. Bicycle Route 51 with the Arkansas Department of Transporta­tion during its meeting Tuesday. The move included a request the bike route be extended in the future through Fort Smith to the Fort Smith National Historic Site at 301 Parker Ave.

The move comes after Van Buren’s City Council unanimousl­y approved the proposed route Aug. 23, according to the City Clerk-Treasurer’s Office. It likewise asked the route be extended later through Van Buren, although it didn’t specify an endpoint.

Van Buren Mayor Joe Hurst said having part of U.S. Bike Route 51 through Van Buren would benefit the city economical­ly, calling bicycle tourism “a really burgeoning industry in the country.” It would also come with environmen­tal and health-related perks.

Van Buren wants to encourage bike travel in the region as much as possible, according to Hurst.

“I think we can follow in the footsteps of Northwest Arkansas and see the millions of dollars that have been poured into their economy, just bringing people in,” Hurst said. “When they do go through your route, many of them will stop at various locations and spend money in your town, and so we know that that’ll have a direct contributi­on to the economy.”

Hurst believes the proposed route would also give Van Buren a desirable amenity encouragin­g people to move there. The city opened the Mr. Chad and Betty Ann Colley Wilderness Park last year, which has about 3 miles of mountain-biking trails.

Jeff Dingman, Fort Smith’s deputy city administra­tor, said the city recognizes bicyclists of all types comprise “a good portion” of its community. Inclusion in U.S. Bicycle Route 51 goes hand-in-hand with the different amenities the city has recently completed promoting cycling, such as the Greg Smith River Trail and Riverfront Skate and Bike Park.

“When somebody talks about bicycle tourism in our area, we want to be a part of it,” Dingman said.

Dingman said while Fort Smith wants a piece of the benefits coming from visitors, it likes being involved in projects providing something residents can enjoy as well.

Dingman wrote in a memo included in Tuesday’s meeting packet that, should U.S. Bicycle Route 51 be extended through Fort Smith as requested, it would link from Midland Boulevard to the Greg Smith River Trail near Fort Smith Park and provide direct access to the downtown area.

Kimberly Sanders, bicycle-pedestrian coordinato­r for the Arkansas Department of Transporta­tion, said U.S. Bicycle Route 51 is a proposed corridor running through western Arkansas. The department worked with Springdale-based Northwest Arkansas Regional Planning Commission to identify a potential alignment for a part of the route between the Missouri line and Alma, consisting entirely of existing infrastruc­ture and spanning about 89 miles.

A map created by the Department of Transporta­tion and provided by Hurst shows the route would run north from Alma on U.S. 71 through Mountainbu­rg, Winslow, West Fork and Greenland until it reached Fayettevil­le. The route afterward would merge with the Razorback Greenway, a 36-mile shared-use trail that’s primarily off-road, and go through Johnson, Springdale, Lowell, Rogers and Bentonvill­e before continuing on U.S. 71 through Bella Vista.

However, as its name implies, U.S. Bicycle Route 51 would be part of a larger, nationwide system of routes called the U.S. Bicycle Route System, according to Sanders. The system is a planned network of 50,000 miles of “urban streets, county roads, greenways, trail systems and state highways for the purpose of interstate long-distance bicycle travel.”

The National Corridor Plan was approved by the American Associatio­n of State Highway Transporta­tion Officials in 2008, Sanders said. The associatio­n also works with the Adventure Cycling Associatio­n, a nonprofit group, to promote and establish the U.S. Bicycle Route System.

“To date, 17,734 miles of the [bike system] have been designated in 31 states by the [associatio­n’s] Special Committee on Route Numbering,” Sanders said.

A copy of the National Corridor Plan available on the Adventure Cycling Associatio­n website shows that U.S. Bicycle Route 51, if completed, would go through Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas and Louisiana.

Sanders said the Department of Transporta­tion has correspond­ed with regional planners in the River Valley, specifical­ly Fort Smith-based Frontier Metropolit­an Planning Organizati­on, about routing U.S. Bicycle Route 51 through the region. Nothing can be concretely establishe­d until the American Associatio­n of State Highway Transporta­tion Officials approves a designatio­n for the route. A timeline for that hasn’t been establishe­d.

One of the necessary steps to apply for a designatio­n is to secure support from each jurisdicti­on that would have authority over a part of the route.

Sanders said extending the proposed route to include Fort Smith and Van Buren would require following the same process as getting the initial designatio­n. In addition, “most of Washington and Benton counties” have passed similar resolution­s.

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