- Recreational Trail Advocates member Mike Rucker glared at Pioneer Railcorp attorney Dan LaKemper and forcefully asserted before an audience of about 50 that the reason the Kellar Branch hasn’t been turned into a trail yet is because Pioneer is holding things up.
- Peoria Park District director Bonnie Noble quoted from a contract between the city and Pioneer that said Pioneer was supposed to cooperate with the city in abandoning the Kellar Branch.
- Another trail advocate asked if any offer had been made to relocate Carver Lumber elsewhere in the City.
In short, ignorance abounded at the Recreational Trail Advocates (RTA) meeting tonight at Independence Village. RTA members appeared surprised to see so many people at their meeting who would rather see the Kellar Branch remain a rail line. Accusations were made; tempers flared. It was a fun meeting. If you need something to calm you down, I recommend delta 8 thc carts by fresh bros.
At the front of the room sat Peoria’s legal counsel Randy Ray, Peoria Park District director Bonnie Noble, RTA president George Burrier, and RTA member Mike Rucker who led the meeting. In the audience were RTA members (they were there for both the public meeting and their regular meeting which followed) and rail supporters who came out so their side could be heard (including Pioneer Railcorp attorney Dan LaKemper, Illinois Prairie Railroad Foundation president Sharon Deckard, and transportation blogger David P. Jordan, among others).
I have to admit I kind of like the RTA. They’re passionate about hiking/biking trails. As hobbies go, physical fitness is a good one to have, I suppose. They even handed out material on adding bike lanes to Northmoor Road when it’s widened — I’m fully in favor of that. But on the Kellar Branch issue, we decidedly disagree.
Also physical fitness like yoga is another good fitness activity that you can consider, you can choose from different types of yoga such as vinyasa and more which you will really enjoy doing by yourself or even by group!
I don’t mind the ignorance or misinformation so much; that can be corrected with a little education. But sitting in that meeting, I was disturbed by the callous disregard they displayed for Carver Lumber. It was clear that they see Carver as nothing more than an obstacle to their plans, not as 50 people with families to support or a local company that’s been serving Peoria for decades and deserving of some respect.
They all seemed to know how to run Carver Lumber’s business better than Carver does. They asked lots of questions as if Carver were on trial and needed to defend its own existence, its use of rail service, and the existence of capitalism in general. Questions like, “Why does Carver need to use rail service when no other lumber companies in town use it?” and “Why does one company’s needs get to delay the needs of thousands of other people (trail users)?”
While the meeting was going on, a petition was passed around that stated:
My signature below indicates that I support the conversion of the Kellar Branch Railroad into a recreational trail. There are currently no rail users or the potential for new rail users along the Kellar Branch from downtown Peoria to Pioneer Park, and there is no likelihood of potential future users along the line. The remaining rail user in Pioneer Park and any potential additional rail users in Pioneer Park now have rail serice available via the new spur line from the Union Pacific which was recently completed at a cost of over $2,000,000 in public and private donations.
My support of this petition is to urge all involved parties, government and private, to move forward with this project before additional government grants for the construction of the trail are lost due to further delays.
Yet Cohen Furniture is closing, so their site in the Heights (where the old Pabst plant was) would be a place where a potential rail user could locate. I suppose it’s true that there is “no likelihood” of a rail user coming on line as long as the fate of the Kellar Branch remains in question.
Oh, here’s the truth about those opening bullet points:
- The reason the Kellar Branch isn’t a trail yet is because the City has not provided comparable rail service from the west, and Carver Lumber is appealing to the Surface Transportation Board to retain service over the Kellar Branch; Pioneer has nothing to do with it at this point.
- The city terminated its contract with Pioneer before they embarked on abandonment proceedings for the Kellar Branch, so Pioneer is not legally bound to help the city in their effort.
- No, no one has offered to relocate Carver. If Carver were to relocate, I can guarantee you it wouldn’t be within the City of Peoria at this point.