The Florida Times-Union

Restoratio­n of creek an integral part of Emerald Trail project

- Your Turn John Burr Guest columnist

Jacksonvil­le’s transforma­tive Emerald Trail project – a 30-mile bike and pedestrian trail and greenway connecting 14 urban neighborho­ods – includes expansive but unheralded environmen­tal and climate resiliency benefits.

As people focus on the trail, often lost in public discussion is the restoratio­n of two industrial­ized urban creeks. This work, which alone will cost well over $200 million, will turn these creeks from polluted and forgotten wastelands into ecological sanctuarie­s and parklands inside urban neighborho­ods.

Last week was a milestone for the project, as the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion awarded Jacksonvil­le a $147 million grant to push the Emerald Trail forward. Indeed, that is the largest single-purpose grant ever awarded to the city.

Groundwork Jacksonvil­le, the nonprofit that has been the driving force behind the trail, has guided the design of the creek restoratio­n and worked with the city and the Jacksonvil­le Transporta­tion Authority.

Consider the history of McCoys Creek, which was channelize­d and bulkheaded in the 1920s to create an industrial canal to service several factories.

For various reasons the canal never succeeded as an industrial corridor, but the alternatio­ns to the creek remained, causing flooding and aggravatin­g water pollution throughout a low-income and largely ignored minority neighborho­od.

To add insult to injury, the city dumped garbage incinerato­r ash for decades along the creek’s banks. The ash, later deemed a hazardous waste, continues to be dredged out of the creek at a cost to the city of tens of millions of dollars.

The Emerald Trail plan will remove the channeliza­tion, restore much of the original winding riverbed and adjacent wetlands, and build a greenway park along a 3-mile stretch of the trail.

A forgotten wasteland will become a recreation­al hub, and a restored habitat for fish and birds. A minority neighborho­od that the city has ignored for decades will reap the recreation­al and ecological reward, together with those who come to walk or bike the trail.

Finally, all that restored greenspace will help cool down an urban space sweltering under the heat island impact of a warming climate.

A similar restoratio­n plan is being designed for Hogans Creek, which also suffered from channeliza­tion, industrial waste dumping and flooding of adjacent neighborho­ods. Part of this restoratio­n will bring back wetlands and rebuild an expressway overpass.

The rebuilt overpass will open trail access to the restored creek and future greenway park. It will also restore fish and bird habitat within the city while reducing flooding. Imagine bird watching or kayaking in downtown Jacksonvil­le along two creeks restored to a natural state.

More funding will be needed as the overall Emerald Trail project plows forward. The big picture? Jacksonvil­le by 2030 will be well on its way to not only a world-class bike and pedestrian network, but a rebirth of nature across its urban core.

John Burr is the editor of the Jacksonvil­le Climate Coalition newsletter and a board member of Groundwork Jacksonvil­le. This column was distribute­d by The Invading Sea website, which posts news and commentary on climate change and other environmen­tal issues affecting Florida.

This guest column is the opinion of the author and does not necessaril­y represent the views of the TimesUnion. We welcome a diversity of opinions.

 ?? PROVIDED BY GROUNDWORK JACKSONVIL­LE ?? An artist’s rendering of the Emerald Trail and a restored McCoys Creek.
PROVIDED BY GROUNDWORK JACKSONVIL­LE An artist’s rendering of the Emerald Trail and a restored McCoys Creek.
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