Category Archives: Bike Trail

Man Pulled from American River Identified

The body of a 59-year-old man pulled from the American River near Sacramento State Tuesday was identified later that afternoon.

Mark Lauchli was last seen Feb. 12 at his home on McQuillan Circle. The Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department says Lauchli was reportedly distraught and left a note that he was going to the river.

His family filed a missing person report after finding his car near La Riviera Drive and Howe Avenue.

Until Tuesday, searches of the area came up empty.

More at Fox40.com >>>

 

Man’s body found in river near Sac State

Firefighters responded to the American River near Sacramento State University around 7 a.m. on Tuesday after an employee at the Fairbairn Water Treatment plant spotted a body floating in the water.

Sacramento City Assistant Fire Chief Chris Costamanga confirmed the body of a white male was found, and said it appeared the body had been in the water for quite some time due to its condition.

Multiple supporting agencies, including the Sacramento Police Dept. were called to the scene to investigate the discovery.

Costamanga said it was too early to determine whether the man’s death was a result of suicide, homicide, or accidental. However, Sacramento Police said initial findings did not indicate signs of foul play.

From News10.net >>>

City Survey Shows Support for New American River Bridge

A City of Sacramento public opinion survey about possible bridge construction has been completed. The Department of Transportation says more than three-quarters of respondents ranked a new crossing over the American River between Interstate 5 and State Route 160 as important or very important. Six out of ten people agreed a bridge should have vehicle, public transit, bicycle and pedestrian access.

“Unscientific” survey shows 78% think a new bridge connecting Sacramento with Natomas is a good idea.

Six percent said nothing new was needed.

More at CapRadio.org >>>

American River flows increasing to boost Folsom Lake flood-control capacity

Flows on the American River through Sacramento will increase by 50 percent tonight to ensure enough flood-control capacity in Folsom Lake.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, which operates Folsom and Nimbus dams, will boost flows from 4,000 cubic feet per second to 6,000 cfs between 6 and 8 p.m.

The increase is enough to fill an Olympic-size swimming pool every 45 seconds and is expected to raise water levels in the American River by one foot. This is not enough to cause flooding problems. But people traveling or recreating along the river are advised to use caution near the water and watch for rising water levels and faster flows.

Read more at SacBee.com >>>

 

Conservancy deal would add Camp Pollock site to American River Parkway

In what could mark a turnaround for a troubled section of the American River Parkway, a nonprofit group is poised to take over a former Boy Scout camp across the river from downtown – with plans to transform it into a major recreation spot.

The Sacramento Valley Conservancy is expected to get the state’s go-ahead this month to begin what could be a half-million-dollar upgrade of Camp Pollock, a rustic campground established by the Boy Scouts in 1923.

The State Lands Commission agreed Wednesday to buy the property from the Scouts. It will lease the land to the conservancy, which plans to open it to the public as a nature and recreation center.

Conservancy Executive Director Aimee Rutledge said her group hopes to have the site open for public visits soon after it takes control in January. “This is the first step in a long-term project we are really looking forward to,” she said.

The 11-acre property, nestled among cottonwoods and willows just west of Highway 160, is relatively small. But the effect of Wednesday’s state agreement is potentially large.

Camp Pollock sits near a forbidding section of the 23-mile-long parkway. Known as an illegal camping area for several hundred homeless people, the area has gained a reputation among some parkway users as a place to avoid.

More at SacBee.com >>>

Folsom Dam to Boost Water Releases

River levels in Sacramento County will rise within a matter of days with a boost in water releases at Folsom Dam.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation announced Friday that is will increase water releases though Monday to make room for the expected rainfall. Officials want outdoor enthusiast to be aware of the increased velocity of the river.

The American River is expected to rise by 2 feet.

From Fox40.c0m >>>

California’s River Parkways Get $34 Million In Funding

More than $34 million in funding is being allocated to 33 proposed river parkway projects statewide by the state Natural Resources Agency. Of the total, nearly a third – over $10.2 million – is going to projects in the Central Valley.

The projects will create recreation opportunities for families, restore fish and wildlife habitat, provide flood management, and enhance California’s river parkways, the state says.

“Our river parkway grants help communities connect children with nature, promote public health by providing families with greater outdoor recreational opportunities, and protect the rivers that provide us with clean water,” says Secretary for Natural Resources John Laird. “The river parkways program is a great example of local agencies working together with the state to create increasingly sustainable communities in California.”

Central Valley projects getting money include:

• American River Conservancy – Cosumnes River Parkway – $1,800,000. The money will be used to buy 2,566 acres of riparian habitat and blue oak woodland to protect native fisheries and wildlife corridors adjacent to the main fork of the Cosumnes River in El Dorado County.

More at CentralValleyBusinessTimes.com >>>

Weekend cleanup on tap for American River Parkway

A cleanup this weekend will target the lower portions of the American River Parkway where homeless campers have left litter.

The American River Parkway Foundation is staging the cleanup on the stretch of land just east of the confluence of the American and Sacramento rivers. The cleanup occurs between Mile 1 and Mile 3 on the parkway.

“It’s been more challenging to control the impact the homeless have had on the parkway, but we want to make sure that the community can come to this area and enjoy its natural resources,” said Dianna Poggetto, executive director of the foundation.

More at SacBee.com >>

 

Fight looms over Sacramento’s fenced-off levees

Two rivers converge in Sacramento. By at least one important measure, however, they couldn’t be more different.

The American River provides wide-open public paths on both levees that frame it, all the way to Folsom Lake. A cyclist or an ambitious hiker can freely travel more than 30 miles along the river’s edge.

The Sacramento River, however, brings a walker or cyclist up short. From the confluence with the American River, the public path along the Sacramento runs about five miles, to 25th Avenue, where it abruptly ends in a locked gate spanning the levee. It is the first of 12 such impediments that chop up public access to the Sacramento River shore in the Pocket and Little Pocket neighborhoods.

The city of Sacramento is reviving a long-stalled plan to bring down the fences. The goal is an unbroken public path running another 10 miles to Freeport. The idea is stirring old emotions that kept the plan in the shadows for 15 years.

More at SacBee.com >>