Home / Featured / No Sign Of Damaged Trails Reopening Anytime Soon
Frank A. Douglass Insurance Agency

No Sign Of Damaged Trails Reopening Anytime Soon

The local trail system remains badly damaged following the Father’s Day Flood and many are still closed.  While work is being done to repair those trails, the public is being asked for patience because it will be a long process.

“We continue to work diligently to repair the trails and to make them safe and to reopen them for the public. We’re continuing to move forward. We know that the trails are very important to people in the area for tourism and for livelihood. And of course, people are already eyeing the snowmobile season coming up. We’re working as hard as we can to try to get trails repaired and safe so they can be reopened,” said John Pepin of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.

Trails that are currently closed include the Chassell to Houghton trail, The Freda Grade, and the Lake Linden Grade is also closed south of Norman Road.

Pepin said, “We still have several sections of trail that are closed and will remain closed for quite some time as well as three boating access sites.”

Those boating sites are: Jack Boot, Boston Pond, and Lilly Pond and could remain closed for most of the summer due to initial damage resulting from last month’s flooding. But there are still plenty of access sites throughout the Keweenaw that are open and available for public use.

“McLain State Park Remains open, although it is accessible on M-203 only from the north. The south still remains closed because of a washout there,” he said.

Current assessments calculate trail damage at $19.9 million.

“We have been able to reopen some segments with additional reroutes in the City of Hancock, but in some places that initial flood event, some call it a 500 year flood, you’re talking about dramatic washouts in these trails that are severe. It will take a lot of time and work and a lot of money to repair those,” said Pepin.

One thing that the department asks of the public is to not use the trails as a dump site.

Pepin said, “We want folks to contact their local waste management authorities to find out where they should be dumping. We have noticed some dumping of refuse on some of the trails which could lead to more problems. We strongly encourage folks to consult their local waste management authority to find out where they can legally be dumping their refuse and debris from the flood events.”

Check Also

Northern Michigan University will oversee a $2.5 Million research grant addressing poverty and opioid use disorder

Northern Michigan University will oversee a 2.5 million dollar grant program to address addiction, employment, …