The Morning Call

Dirt bikes, ATVs on the streets help revitalize ex-coal town of Shamokin

- By Jason Nark

Most cities see dirt bikes and ATVs as a scourge of the streets, annoying on the best days, and deadly on the worst.

In Shamokin, a former coal town of 6,984 in Northumber­land County, foot traffic is a thing of the past, however, and city officials are banking on dirtbike riders’ muddy boot traffic to give its businesses the crowds they haven’t seen in decades.

“It’s the whole reason I’m opening up a business here,” said Ed Manning, a Berks County native who moved to Shamokin to start a cigar lounge.

While Philadelph­ia and Allentown contemplat­e how to combat illegal dirt-bike riding on city streets, Shamokin recently passed an ordinance allowing off-road vehicles to drive from a nearby off-road park’s trail onto specific streets in the downtown business district. Communitie­s in West Virginia and New Hampshire have passed similar ordinances. In Shamokin, the route connects the area’s only major tourist attraction, the Anthracite Outdoor Adventure Area in adjacent Coal Township, to a city that desperatel­y needs tourists.

“My first reaction? Absolutely not,” said Mayor John Brown. “I was a cop for 20 years, and I had to chase these things all over the place, trying to keep them off the streets.”

Today, Brown is a believer. He recalled Nov. 3, 2018, when Shamokin first allowed riders from the AOAA to drive into town for one day only. Nearly 1,000 showed up. The ordinance was given several one-day test runs before it went into effect last month.

On a recent Friday morning, the mayor stood outside a vacant building, a former bar called “Ye Old Coal Hole,” that is being turned into the unlikelies­t business for Shamokin: a hotel. He credits the riders for making it happen. “This is our ticket,” he said.

Many Shamokin residents, like many Philadelph­ians, weren’t thrilled with the idea of noisy dirt bikes onthestree­ts. Riders, however, are required to follow a specific route that avoids residentia­l areas,andareperm­ittedtodri­veintown only from 9 a.m. to 30 minutes before sunset, Friday through Sunday. They mustfollow­trafficlaw­s,includingh­aving a driver’s license, and wear helmets.

Residents “were only used to seeing our locals driving around, not following the rules,” said Doreen Annis, Shamokin’s administra­tive accountant.

Like most things in Shamokin, the story begins with coal. The city had more than 21,000 residents a century ago, when nearly every business benefited from the anthracite mined from the mountains rising around it. The coal industry waned and the population plummeted. Today, Shamokin has a fair number of downtown vacancies, but after six years andmajor reductions in budget shortfalls, it is in the process of exiting Pennsylvan­ia’s Act 47, a program administer­ed by the state Department ofCommunit­yandEconom­icDevelopm­enttokeepc­ities “experienci­ng severe financial distress” afloat.

Of all the vacancies, the most difficult to fill are former strip mines, thousands of acres on the outskirts of town often hard to reclaim and develop due to environmen­tal issues. For decades,

they served as unofficial dumps, places for teens to light bonfires after football games and, of course, to ride dirt bikes and ATVs illegally. But one former mine in adjacent Coal Township sees nearly 20,000 visitors per year, tourists flocking in from New York, New Jersey, and elsewhere in Pennsylvan­ia to ride dirt bikes, ATVs, 4x4 trucks, and other vehicles, legally, on the 8,000acre AOAA. The county-owned park opened in 2014 with support from a veritable alphabet soup of state and county agencies.

In Philadelph­ia, where the police department regularly confiscate­s ATVs and dirt bikes, city officials are also exploring the possibilit­y of an off-road park. Dave Porzi, the AOAA’s director of operations, said Philadelph­ia officials have visited the park to see how it operates.

TheAOAAgiv­esoffthelo­okofastate park,butthemain­attraction­ishundreds

of miles of trails, somerocky, others deep with mud, that snake out fromthepar­king lot. Riders pay anywhere from $28 for the day or $185 for a yearly pass; Northumber­landCounty­residentsg­eta discount. Afewdozent­rucksandre­creation vehicles from surroundin­g states filled the AOAA parking lot on a Friday in early October, most trailing ATVs and larger off-road vehicles. Those visitors said they were staying at the park’s campground, in their RVs, or renting nearby homes and cabins.

“There’s also about 30 Jeeps out on the course right now,” Porzi said.

Rick McGeady and his brother, Steve, drove from Quakertown to spend the weekend riding at the AOAA. They visited in 2018 when Shamokin first permitted riders to come in for a day and regularly hit the Hatfield-McCoy trails in Williamson, W.Va., where riders have been allowed into the town for several years.

“We went to a little bar and grill in Shamokin, and we ended up not even getting our food because they were so backed up. There were people standing outside waiting for tables,” McGeady, 64, said at the park.

Prior to the ordinance, AOAA visitors wanting to grab a beer and burger in downtown Shamokin, about three miles away, needed to lock up their off-road vehicles at the park or their rental homes and take their cars.

The ordinance permits Shamokin residents to ride along the business district route as well, as long as they follow the same rules. Riders at the AOAA can’t take Route 125 into town. Instead, they must traverse a rocky trail with a series of switchback­s that pass by apartments and run adjacent to a creek before ending at a coffee shop. One resident said he was unhappy the AOAA put up a gate at the trail’s end and felt that one rule — returning 30 minutes before sunset — was unfeasible. On this Friday, two men drinking cans of beer by the creek told Porzi a woman had tried to roll a log onto the trail, to block the riders coming down. Porzi said he was familiar with her.

Porzi said he anticipate­d the occasional infraction and accident in Shamokin. In Williamson, Police Lt. James Spence said the riders whohead into town from the Hatfield-McCoy trails have caused little trouble. “It’s been a real good thing here,” Spence said. “As far as the tourists, we have very few problems, but some local people try to abuse the situation and ride wild every now and then.”

In the AOAA parking lot, Sue and Galen Stevens, of Hershey, said they were members and hadn’t heard about Shamokin’s new ordinance but were excited to take part. Alog couldn’t stop their off-road vehicle, a “side-by-side” that retails for just under $19,000.

“It would be great to be able to drive into town,” Sue said. “It would be great to have other options. I would love it.”

 ?? PHOTOS BYSTEVEN M.FALK/PHILADELPH­IAINQUIRER ?? ATV signage is seen in downtown Shamokin, which plans to allow to dirt bikes and ATVs on streets in an effort to connect its offroad park to city businesses. In Shamokin, foot traffic is a thing of the past, and officials are banking on dirt-bike riders’ muddy boot traffic to give businesses the crowds they haven’t seen in decades.
PHOTOS BYSTEVEN M.FALK/PHILADELPH­IAINQUIRER ATV signage is seen in downtown Shamokin, which plans to allow to dirt bikes and ATVs on streets in an effort to connect its offroad park to city businesses. In Shamokin, foot traffic is a thing of the past, and officials are banking on dirt-bike riders’ muddy boot traffic to give businesses the crowds they haven’t seen in decades.
 ??  ?? Doreen Annis, left, an accountant for the City of Shamokin, and Dave Porzi, director of operations of Anthracite Outdoor Adventure Area Trails, talk about the town in Shamokin, Pennsylvan­ia, on Friday.
Doreen Annis, left, an accountant for the City of Shamokin, and Dave Porzi, director of operations of Anthracite Outdoor Adventure Area Trails, talk about the town in Shamokin, Pennsylvan­ia, on Friday.

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