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Paving the Bolin Creek greenway: a closer look

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I walked part of the future Bolin Creek Greenway through Carrboro yesterday in advance of Monday night's Greenways Commission meeting.

When the controversy over whether to pave the path between Estes Drive Extension and Homestead Road erupted, associate editor Dave Hart and I didn't get it. Paving the Chapel Hill greenway hadn't detracted from people's enjoyment of the scenery, and paving would clearly improve access.

But the more you report, the more you learn. So here are thoughts from my walk with Linda Haac, of Save Bolin Creek. You can read her guest column, by the way, in today's Chapel Hill News.

The most important thing I learned is the path through Carrboro isn't a single entity. In spots, the span between the railroad tracks and creek (flowing briskly after this past week's rain) is barely wide enough to fit the proposed 10-foot pavement, much less the clearing that would adjoin it on either side. 

We stopped on the footbridge by Haac's home, near where Dry Gulch Creek meets up with Bolin. Here the public access comes within feet of her neighborhood's children's playground. We saw joggers, a mother and her children and people with their dogs. I asked Haac whether the paving issue is aesthetic or environmental. I asked what having this space the way it is now means to her.

"I like to breathe," she said.

I looked up from my camera. She said when people come down to the creek, they breathe more deeply. Though you can hear the rustle of Estes Drive just over the ridge, you truly are in nature.

There are already routes north along Pathway Drive and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, she said. If government puts pavement along the creek, it will have shattered that escape forever.

Or will it? We'll continue to report on the Bolin Creek controversy, I hope, with more perspectives and information about its potential impact on stream quality and the life that depends on it. But in the end, the unmeasurable may be just as important as the facts.

Click here to read Linda's column.

 

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Must be a joke, right?

Are you for real? The caring & sensitive thing to do? Spend $4 mil of taxpayer money so folks in wheelchairs can access the area? Why stop at Bolin Creek. Surely the AT discriminates against the handicapped, too. Let's pave that. And, talk about stimulus!

Nature sucks. The answer must be just to pave everything.

For all you Chapel Hill / Carrboro citizens opposed to paving please sign the petition:

http://www.bit.ly/a7p6RW

Wow

So much angst over a stupid path!  I was joking!  Who cares whether they pave it or not?  Not me.  The world will certainly not stop spinning if they pave the path.

Of course, there will be some eco-nut out there to argue with me, I am sure.

 

 

Pave, baby Pave

After all, that is the sensitive and caring thing to do.  Anything else would exclude those who are handicapped.

I get the impression that this is yet another NIMBY issue, which Chapelboro liberals are so good at.

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About the blogger

Mark Schultz is the editor of The Chapel Hill News and The Durham News.

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