Plan for West Royalty trail looking for public input - Action News
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PEI

Plan for West Royalty trail looking for public input

A public meeting will be held on Feb. 24 to discuss the idea of a West Royalty active transportation trail that could connect the community and potentially go through parts of the 150 acres of land known as the Upton Farmlands.

A public meeting will be held to discuss an active transportation trail at Upton Farmlands

Upton Farmlands has a popular off-leash area for dogs. (Sally Pitt/CBC)

A public meeting will be held on Feb. 24 to discuss the possibility of an active transportation trail in West Royalty, P.E.I., that would involve the Upton Farmlands.

The community group looking to move the idea forward is trying to connect the Confederation Trail in the northern part of the district to the southat Beach Grove Road.

MLA Gordon McNeilly, one of the organizers, said Capital Drive between Charlottetown and Cornwallkind of splits the district.

"We're trying to make sure that we can flow naturally and activelyfrom one area to the next and allow peopleto access that and be more healthy and get active," McNeilly said.

He said it is also in line with provincial goals around active transportation.

Gordon McNeilly, MLA for District 14, says they are looking for input on the proposed plan. (Jessica Doria-Brown/CBC)

One of the areas that the proposed trail would cross would be the 60 hectares, or 150 acres, of land known as the Upton Farmlands.

It is owned and managed by the Upton Farm Trust Inc., which saysit hasnot yet been formally involved with the proposed plan.

"While the abstract idea of an active trail is something that we're all very keen to see more information on, the trust has not yet approved anything," said Heidi Hyndman, president of the board for the trust.

"We haven't seen anything to approve."

Heidi Hyndman, president of the board of directors for Upton Farm Trust, says no trail has been approved in the Upton Farmlands. (Jessica Doria-Brown/CBC)

Decisions around the land would also have to be approved by a technicaladvisory committee ofthe Natural Areas Protection Act of P.E.I.

Hyndman said any proposed plan would be looked over by the trust. If it was something they were interested in, they would then send it off to the committee who would go over the plan in great detail.

There are lots of environmental considerations as well,Hyndman said from the wetlands andhedgerows to thethousands of new trees that havejust recently been planted.

And then there is the off-leash area that is used by many people in the greater Charlottetown area.

Hyndman said she's heardconcerns from dog owners since a promotional video showed the trail potentially running through that off-leash area.

People who are interested in the possibility of an active transportation trail in the area are encouraged to get involved in the public meeting. (Sally Pitt/CBC)

She said she has been reaching out to the Facebook group of roughly1,400 members to reassure them that the trail will not be going through the off-leash area.

"They love this park more than anything and the off-leash area is a prized jewel of Upton, as is the rest of Upton," Hyndman said.

"We would love to see more people use the property and if a trail becomes part of that, that would be wonderful. It just needs to be done very carefully."

Still in planning stage

McNeilly said they are looking at protecting Upton for the future and making sure people are active on the piece of property.

The public meetingwill be held at the Benevolent Irish Society on Feb. 24.

Due to public health restrictions, it will have a hard limit on the number of people allowed in, but McNeilly saidthey are planning to stream it so more people can take part.

"Your voices are important and we have to come together to make sure thatwe do this right and this is the time to do it," McNeilly said.

More from CBC P.E.I.

With files from Jessica Doria-Brown