

The Ute Pass Regional Trail will pass through meadows and also along steep, winding, rocky passages west of Manitou Springs as it climbs toward Cascade. Courtesy El Paso County Parks Department

The Ute Pass Regional Trail west of Manitou Springs will travel along a Colorado Springs Utilities service road for a stretch.
David Johnson is a retired teacher and an avid hiker. Brags he’s done all the area trails and many more.
“I’ve hiked all over the country,” Johnson said. “I enjoy it.”
I figured he’d be the last guy trying to block construction of a trail connecting Manitou Springs with Woodland Park.
But Johnson is campaigning loudly against efforts by El Paso County to complete the Ute Pass Regional Trail.
To rally his neighbors and convince the county it shouldn’t build a 3-mile stretch of trail that includes a frontage road along busy U.S. Highway 24 in Cascade,
Johnson is using scare tactics, painting one extreme scenario after another.
“I’ve seen a lot of cigarettes thrown into the brush,” Johnson said. “I’ve seen fire rings where they’re not allowed. Booze bottles.
“There are so many idiots using public facilities. If they build this trail, we’ll have all these people coming in and it only takes one.”
You’ve probably figured out the trail would run past Johnson’s home, one of a half-dozen or so on the frontage road.
Johnson insists he doesn’t want to stop people from enjoying their public land.
“I’m not against anybody hiking or learning about nature,” he said.
But he said the frontage road is private land. A trail would violate his privacy.
“I’m objecting to them being on my property,” Johnson said, though county officials say it’s public and a utility easement gives them the right to build the trail.
He also suggests upwards of 30,000 people a year will tackle the steep, twisting trail officials hope to build between Manitou Springs and Green Mountain Falls, where the trail now ends.
Eventually, Johnson gets to the heart of his opposition: “Our goal is to re-route the trail away from our neighborhood.”
He doesn’t care where it goes as long as it’s not in his front yard.
His wailing has achieved some success.

This is the view from GoogleEarth of the frontage road where neighbors are fighting a stretch of the Ute Pass Regional Trail.
The county abandoned an idea of building a trailhead at the end of the frontage road, easing fears of traffic and parking.
“The trailhead has been completely ruled out at this time,” said El Paso County Commissioner Sallie Clark, “because of the concerns of the neighbors.”
But the frontage road remains a possible link in the trail, depending on the outcome of upcoming meetings to gather opinions.
“We’re going to do a more robust public hearing process and get input from all residents and stakeholders on that leg of the trail,” Clark said.
She noted there aren’t a lot of options for threading a trail through the steep, narrow terrain of Ute Pass.

Here's the approximate route of the trail from Ruxton Canyon in Manitou Springs as its heads west of Ute Pass.
And, frankly, she believes it will attract only a fraction of the volume Johnson predicts.
Still, it’s an important link and the county is committed to completing it.
After all, even boozing, pyromaniacal idiots deserve to hike!
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disappointing.
NIMBY is right.
Think he’d have a problem building a trail near YOUR house?
Actually, I’d say more than just disappointing, but outright deplorable. I hate that people want things, just as long as they are not in their backyard. We’re talking a frontage road, people, and this is a hiking trail! So there might be a couple of bottles and a little firewood along the trail. Is that really worth not having a worthwhile connection in the region?
Typical. Lets block access to public land and keep it all just for yourselves. Public trails are just that – public. The elitist arrogance is astounding – basically Mr Johnson views the public as evil and that nature is his own private domain. It’s already a pain to access the Catamount trail head in the Green Mountain Fall area – made so just to intimidate people from using the trail.