Port to install fence to protect spit rail line


Friday, June 06, 2008 | 3 comment(s)

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The Oregon International Port of Coos Bay plans to install sand fencing along the railroad corridor along a section adjacent to the TransPacific Parkway on the North Spit, beginning early next week.

The right-of-way area is on the northern boundary of an isolated 80-acre parcel of U.S. Bureau of Land Management managed property on the North Spit. Port officials hope the fencing will protect the rail line from damage to the ballast and ties caused by sand from drifting sand and illegal crossings.

BLM will begin enforcing unauthorized vehicle access on the same parcel and install “no motorized access” signs.

“Off highway vehicles crossing the railroad tracks to access this area are causing sand to drift across the tracks, which will ultimately compromise the railbed,” said Martin Callery, the port’s director of communications and freight mobility. “There is also not a legal ATV crossing at this location, and we want to help ensure public safety when rail traffic resumes.”

“Off-highway vehicle use has not been allowed in the open sand on this dune for the past 13 years, but our access enforcement was focused on other areas,” said Dennis Turowski, BLM Umpqua field manager. “We really need to focus on this area now.”

The parcel of public land is located on the south side of TransPacific Parkway, adjacent to the former Weyerhaeuser Paper Mill site and just north of the Roseburg chip facility.
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Joe Sixpack wrote on Jun 6, 2008 9:45 PM:

No motorized meas all motorized are not allowed, This means all includes the BLM too! If the BLM wants to save the tracks buy it and run it!!

Noel Ng wrote on Jun 6, 2008 6:17 PM:

“Off highway vehicles crossing the railroad tracks to access this area are causing sand to drift across the tracks" says Martin Callery . . .I disagree. I think drifting sand is caused by North Spit blowhards . . .

What railroad wrote on Jun 6, 2008 11:59 AM:

Great idea, lets make sure to keep people away from our extinct railroad. Maybe install more railroad crossings with stop signs. Then we can ticket people for not stopping to look for trains that will never come.

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