By Deb Murphy

This story started with the Big Pine Civic Club, years ago.

BartellVeterans 011

Walt Sharer, Earl Wilson and Bob Steele envisioned a path that led from the north edge of Big Pine, where sidewalks end, on the east side of U.S. Highway 395 to State Route 168, the site of the Roosevelt Pine and the veterans’ memorial display. Pedestrians and cyclists have to brave traffic revving up to highway speeds on a narrow strip of gravel in what District 4 Supervisor Mark Tillemans described as a no-man’s land.

The club teamed up with Big Pine American Legion 457, developed a project description and maps and met with the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, recalled Sharer. “It was all misplaced and redone,” he said. The concept was expanded to include repaving the worn parking area at the memorial site where the community congregates for national holidays and Christmas tree lightings.

BartellVeterans 010

Now, with the help of Great Basin Unified Air Pollution Control District dust mitigation grant funding and Cal Recycle, the project is on its way to actually happening.

Great Basin funding totals $135,000; Cal Recycle’s portion is $26,000 to “incorporate recycled tire rubberized asphalt into the path, if feasible,” according to Inyo County Chief Administrative Officer Kevin Carunchio.

There’s still work to do, said Tillemans. Since the original concept, a portion of the highway frontage, a LADWP re-greening project, has been fenced. The eventual path will be built inside the existing fence, so the parties will work with the current lessee. County staff will work out the options and Doug Brown, county campground manager, will provide in-kind services, said Tillemans.

The path and re-paved parking lot may not be done for this Fourth of July, but maybe by Veterans’ Day this fall.

 

Discover more from Sierra Wave: Eastern Sierra News

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading