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In This Issue
1.
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Bridging Rural Economies
History
Mission
and history of the Methow Valley Sports Trail Association.
Planned
Development
Read the Planned
Development Ordinance that provides density bonus incentives for trails, open
space and other public benefits.
Economic Impacts
An analysis of the
economic impacts of the trails on the Methow Valley.
Slideshow of Methow
Valley
View pictures taken
from a hike in the Methow
Valley.
Archive
Retrieve past newsletters from the Spatial Interest Archive.
Is there a pending
private land conservation bubble?
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Bridging Rural Economies
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Methow Valley, WA
was home to a natural resource based economy, a familiar
pattern for many western U.S.
communities. The valley historically hosted timber, agriculture,
ranching and mining. In the 1950’s, trails primarily were used
for horseback riding. In contrast,
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today the trails are a multi-use recreation
infrastructure etched in the valley’s landscape and economy.
Two organizations in the valley shared the history of the area at the 2008
Northwest Land Trust Conference, held in Winthrop, Washington
May 1-3rd. The Methow Conservancy and the Methow Valley
Sports Trail Association (MVSTA) described the fifty year transition.
In the 1970’s, cross-country skiing
increased in popularity. With the completion of the North Cascades Highway
in 1972, the number of skiers arriving in the valley increased. Horse
trails were restructured to accommodate a trail design that includes a
skate lane on one side and a traditional skier track on the other.
Three separate ski areas evolved in response to the sport’s
popularity, but they lacked any connection. The Community Trail
eventually bridged the gaps, and contributed to the ski boom in the valley
which today draws 40-50,000 skier days annually on over 200 kilometers of
trails.
A public policy in the form of a Planned
Development Ordinance established an incentive. Private landowners
who conveyed land for the purpose of public recreation received a
development density incentive. This creative policy enabled the
Community Trail to develop without a single dollar spent for land
acquisition! The land value served as local match for grants needed
to financially support a complete trail system.
While many rural western communities are suspended
between economic eras, the Methow
Valley strategy has
bridged the old and the new. The economic impact of the
recreation infrastructure was evaluated in a report to MVSTA conducted in
2005. The analysis concluded that the cumulative annual impact of the
trail system and the supporting lands is $29.9 million. The success
combined a vision of the future, a private landowner incentive established
by public policy, and a long-term commitment to success by key group of
community residents.
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