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Green River Trail to Close –
Making Way for Giant Sandbags
KENT, Wash. – October 5, 2009 – In an effort to help prevent flooding in the Green River Valley, the City of Kent will place 20,000 giant sandbags along the Green River levee beginning October 7. The bags will be in place by November 1.
Click here to view the Green River Trail Alternative Routes (PDF, 608 KB).
The placement of the approximately three-feet square sandbags will require the closure of the Green River Trail, which runs along the top of the nearly 12 miles of levees through Kent.
“To maintain the stability of the levees, the giant sandbags must be placed in the center of trail,” according to Kent Mayor Suzette Cooke.
Trail users should watch for orange “trail closure” signs at major access points. Once the sandbags are in place, the trail will re-open for foot traffic only. “We couldn’t find a safe way to accommodate both foot traffic and cyclists,” Cooke said. “Unfortunately, bicyclists will need to use alternate routes.”
Frager Road between S. 200th Street and Washington Avenue/West Valley Highway can be used as an alternate route, while the Interurban Trail between the north and south City limits will also serve north-south bicyclists and pedestrians. East-west access roads will include S. 200th/196th, S. 212th Street, James and Meeker Streets.
Bicyclists can legally ride on most public streets and sidewalks in the city.
It is unknown how long the Green River Trail will be restricted. The giant sandbags may remain in place until the Corps has completed repairs to the dam, which could be up to five years.
The Kent Valley is facing a higher risk of flooding this winter due to water seeping more rapidly through an earthen bank next to the Howard Hanson Dam after record high water last winter. Until the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers can make repairs, it must limit the amount of flood water it stores behind the dam.