Major Sequim Bay trail gap filled

SEQUIM — Clallam County will pay a higher price to take a lower road across Melvin Baker’s land. County commissioners Tuesday approved spending $60,000 for an easement across his 40 acres between West Sequim Bay Road and U.S. Highway 101.

The easement will carry the Olympic Discovery Trail on the abandoned grade of the old Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railway that much of the trail follows east of Port Angeles.

The county appraised the land at slightly more than $22,000, using a July 2005 evaluation.

ADVERTISEMENT
0 seconds of 0 secondsVolume 0%
Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts
00:00
00:00
00:00
 

It originally had offered to pay Baker $33,000 for it but increased its offer by $27,000 to avoid rerouting the trail along the highway.

“They raised the ante,” the 83-year-old Baker said after commissioners signed the agreement.

Neither he nor the county liked the alternative route, by which the hiking/biking trail would have to climb 60 feet up a steep bank to cross Baker’s property, then drop again to rejoin the railroad grade.

Baker had offered to give the county the higher easement for free, but he decided it wasn’t acceptable after he saw the county’s engineering plans.

“It was a choice of destroying some timber up by the road, and I didn’t like that,” he said.

The American Land Rights Association became interested in the case when members learned that the county was considering eminent domain to secure a right of way along the railroad grade.

The association called for mass e-mailing by its members to convince the county not to go to court, but commissioners received only about 20 messages, said Commissioner Steve Tharinger, D-Dungeness, whose district includes Baker’s land.

Only two of the 20 came from Clallam County, he said.

Property uses

Baker bought the property in 1941 before entering the Army, serving in the Philippines and earning the Purple Heart for wounds from a Japanese artillery shell.

After the war, he cut timber and milled on the site. He also raises beef cattle on the land.

The county’s agreement will fence the east side of the easement with five-strand barbed wire on heavy posts and a 10-foot-wide gate for Baker to move his cattle.

Despite the increased cost of the land, the county will spend less than it would to switchback the trail up and down the bank.

More in News

Facilities district for pool paused

Jefferson County does not receive grant

From left, Port Angeles school board members Sarah Methner, Mary Hebert, Stan Willams, Superintendent Marty Brewer, Kirsten Williams, Sandy Long and Nolan Duce, the district’s director of maintenance, turn the first shovel of dirt on Saturday at the location of the new construction just north of the present Stevens Middle School. An estimated crowd of 150 attended the ceremonial ground breaking. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Port Angeles School District breaks ground at new middle school

Building is expected to open to students in 2027

Family displaced following house fire

A Clallam County family has been displaced due a… Continue reading

Two investigated for burglarizing home

The Clallam County Sheriff’s Office has arrested two individuals… Continue reading

Beach cleanups set for Earth Day weekend

Beach cleanups, a seed exchange, seed planting and music will mark Earth… Continue reading

Easter egg hunts scheduled for Saturday

Easter activities, including egg hunts and pictures with the Easter bunny, are… Continue reading

Four Quileute Tribal School students take a salmon offering into the ocean as part of the annual Welcoming the Whales ceremony at First Beach in La Push on Friday. (Christi Baron/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Welcoming the Whales

On Friday, Quileute Tribal School students performed the annual Welcoming the Whales… Continue reading

Former USAID worker Miguel Reabold, shown with a colleague in Honduras in 2018. (Miguel Reabold)
USAID worker fears damage

Reabold worries about relationships

No flight operations scheduled

There will be no field carrier landing practice operations for… Continue reading

Caro Tchannie and her daughter Lola Hatch, 9, of Tulallip try a long string of beads at Squatchcon on Thursday at the Vern Burton Community Center gym in Port Angeles. Kevin VanDinter of Port Angeles was one of 60 vendors at the four day event, which continues through Sunday. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Squatchcon underway

Caro Tchannie and her daughter Lola Hatch, 9, of Tulallip try a… Continue reading

Capital budgets include Peninsula

Millions in state funds earmarked

Mike Chapman.
Chapman asks not to employ legislative privilege

State senator removes an exemption to Public Records Act