A proposed 10-foot greenway path along Bolin Creek faces delays as complications with the state transportation department surface.
Carrboro Greenways Commission Chairman Robert Kirschner said meeting N.C. Department of Transportation requirements has pushed back the project’s completion date.
“The plan requires the path to be paved,” Kirschner said. “They would prefer concrete because it won’t wash away.”
Voters approved $4.6 million in bonds for sidewalk and greenway projects in 2003, but the Carrboro Board of Aldermen, which initially planned to issue the funds this November, pushed the date back to 2013 at its last meeting.
And Kirschner said it would be at least five to 10 years before construction on the Bolin Creek greenway could even begin because necessary funds haven’t been allocated yet.
Despite the hurdles the greenways commission would need to clear, Kirschner said the proposed path would provide students and bicyclists with a new and improved corridor of transportation.
But some residents are concerned with how greenway and other impending construction will disturb the area’s natural balance.
Recent urbanization in Chapel Hill and Carrboro has hurt Bolin Creek, one of many streams and creeks that flow into Jordan Lake.
Increasing amounts of concrete and asphalt surfaces have created a lack of soil near the creek, leaving runoff with nowhere to go and damaging the stream’s bank.