The Woolwich Observer

G2G Trail projects look to boost trail accessibil­ity

This year’s projects include more improvemen­ts at Katherine St. access

- Damon MacLean

THE ABUNDANCE OF SNOW THIS month is a boon for skiers and snowmobile­rs, but for the volunteers with the Goderich to Guelph Trail (G2G), it’s a time to plan for the work to be done when the white stuff finally melts away.

Accessibil­ity projects will head the list when work resumes, says Doug Cerson, the organizati­on’s executive director.

“As we go into 2021, we want to keep working on our mandate to improve the accessibil­ity from all of the locations where we currently have access off of main roads, parking lots, and inside of each of our 13 communitie­s.”

In Woolwich, that means improvemen­ts to the Katherine Street part of the trail that is shared with the Kissing Bridge Trail. It’s an issue where users have complained for years about accessibil­ity issues, said Cerson.

“One of the areas that causes a bit of a problem and has been addressed a few times over the years to be improved – and it has been greatly improved – is at Katherine Street, where we currently have a staircase. And that staircase, as much as it was a huge improvemen­t from a dirt path point going up a very steep hill, for older generation­s and for younger generation­s is still a bit of a push to get a bike to roll up that track up the middle of the staircase.”

Cerson notes the organizati­on has about four acres of land in the area, allowing for an extension of the “sub-trail” to provide an alternativ­e to the stairway.

“You’ll now have an option between the staircase or bringing the level grade access to get up to Katherine. Or if somebody that’s walking their dog or just going out for a walk, they can just use as a loop – they can go down the staircase and walk down and come down on a loop. So, it’s got a lot of different functions. The primary thing is accessibil­ity, to make it easier for all people to be able to get from the level ground at the top of this staircase and down to the trail.”

Other ongoing projects in the area include plans for bridges being installed across the Grand River near West Montrose and the Conestogo River near Wallenstei­n, as well as plans for a bridge replacemen­t in Milverton.

The group is soliciting donations to aid with those projects, and looking for support from the local, provincial and federal government­s.

Support from Woolwich has always been strong, Cerson notes.

“The residents of Woolwich really were the pioneers behind this whole entire trail. The Lions Club stepped up years ago,” he said. “So it’s a big thank-you from our family at the G2G to the local residents for really embracing something that has become now a backbone of trails in southweste­rn Ontario.”

 ??  ?? Doug Cerson
Doug Cerson
 ?? Damon MacLean ?? G2G Trail executive director Doug Cerson at the Katherine Street section near West Montrose, where accessibil­ity has become the priority in renovation­s this year.
Damon MacLean G2G Trail executive director Doug Cerson at the Katherine Street section near West Montrose, where accessibil­ity has become the priority in renovation­s this year.

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