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Public Works Committee 6.1. <br />Meeting Date: 05/19/2015 <br />By: Bruce Westby, Engineering/Public <br />Works <br />Title: <br />Review of Trail Maintenance Policy Framework <br />Purpose/Background: <br />Purpose: <br />The purpose of this case is to review the framework that staff proposes to use in developing the City of Ramsey's <br />draft Trail Maintenance Policy. <br />Background: <br />The City of Ramsey maintains over 50 miles of paved trails. Currently, maintenance of these trails occurs <br />sporadically on an "as -budgeted" basis. While this approach provides the greatest flexibility from a budgeting <br />perspective, it does not result in the most cost-effective approach to maintaining our trail system, nor does it result <br />in a trail system having a consistent or reasonable pavement rating/level of service. Staff is therefore developing a <br />draft Trail Maintenance Policy that, if followed, will allow the City of Ramsey to maintain its existing system of <br />trails to a specified level of service in as cost-effective a manner as possible. The policy framework below is <br />proposed to be utilized by staff to develop the draft policy. <br />Trail Inventory — <br />To maintain the City's existing system of trails as cost-effectively as possible, each trail segment must be <br />inventoried and cataloged in a database to be maintained and updated by staff on a regular basis. This database will <br />include the initial year of construction, termini points, type of pedestrian ramp, length, width, surfacing type, <br />pavement section, pavement rating, and maintenance schedule for each trail segment, which is very similar to our <br />street maintenance program database. This database does not currently exist but staff is currently in the process of <br />inventorying our trails and should have the database fully developed by the end of this summer. <br />Trail Rating System — <br />Staff proposes to use the same pavement rating system as used to rate our public streets which is the Pavement <br />Surface Evaluation and Rating (PASER) system. Staff is already familiar with this system so it would be a simple <br />and cost-effective system to implement for rating the pavement condition on our trails. <br />Trail Maintenance Improvement Strategy — <br />Staff proposes to employ a similar strategy for maintaining trails as is used to maintain City streets. This primarily <br />involves focusing our efforts on first maintaining all trail segments currently in good condition to prevent them from <br />quickly sliding into a state of disrepair thereby requiring more expensive maintenance treatments, while targeting a <br />fixed mileage of trail segments requiring overlay or reconstruction projects on an annual basis to slowly re -build <br />our trail system to a specified level of service using an average PASER rating as identified by Council. <br />As part of the City's trail maintenance program, various segments of paved trails having good or excellent ratings <br />will be proposed to receive cracksealing, fogsealing, and/or sealcoating improvements on an annual basis to extend <br />the useful life of these trail segments, while trail segments in poor condition will either receive overlays or be <br />reconstructed to return these trails to an excellent condition whereby they can be more cost-effectively maintained <br />in the future. <br />The benefits of each proposed maintenance treatment are as follows: <br />. Cracksealing - Seals existing cracks one-quarter of an inch or more in width with hot rubberized asphalt to <br />