Farmington’s Bicycle And Trails Advisory Committee Weighs Trail Repairs, Safe Routes, And A 15 MPH E-Bike Limit

Speed limits: easy. Enforcement: lol.

Key Takeaways ✅

  • The committee discussed a 15 mph trail speed limit concept, with talk of an ordinance and signage as the practical “enforcement” tool. 🚲
  • Bollard maintenance will continue through the year, with Farmington Highway staff pulling, cleaning, repainting, and re-taping as needed.
  • Trail edge cleanup along Meadow Road is slated for spring, after major repairs were completed.
  • A water fountain item stays on hold until spring, when seasonal reactivation makes fixes possible. 💧
  • Members pushed for clearer parking lot identification signage, including naming lots by intersecting road names for wayfinding. 🗺️
  • “Safe Routes to School” momentum continues: a walk audit was framed as a low-lift first step, with the incoming superintendent described as open to discussion.
  • A public Bike Walk forum was discussed with a target date of March 19, 2026, built around short talks and Q&A.

Farmington’s Bicycle And Trails Advisory Committee met via Zoom on Wednesday, December 10, 2025, for a one-hour session that kept circling the same hard truth: the trail keeps getting busier, and the town has to govern it with the tools it actually has—signage, maintenance crews, and a limited police schedule, not wishful thinking. Public comment opened the meeting; the chair noted the attendance of John Lucas and Mason, but no one spoke. 🙂

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Committee members present were Brian Connolly, Carolyn Fiederlein, Bruce Donald, Ron Goralski, Richard Moll, Andris Skulte, and Matthew Stuart. Bruce Cyr attended as Town Liaison, Mason attended from the Town of Farmington Public Works Division, and Daniel Rodriguez attended as Police Liaison. The meeting ran from 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. 🕖

Maintenance: Bollards, Edges, And A Spring List

Cyr said bollard maintenance remains ongoing: Highway staff will pull bollards, clean them, repaint them, and replace reflective tape over the year. It is the sort of work that never becomes dramatic, which is the point.

On trail repairs along Meadow Road, Cyr said major repairs were completed, with Highway staff planning to return in spring to clean and “edge it up” after the season ran out. A member noted the improved ride through the area—especially where debris had been an issue in a parking lot—and credited the Highway crew for the cleanup.

A water fountain item remains on the agenda but will wait until spring; Cyr said it will remain on hold until the seasonal restart makes work possible.

Wayfinding And Business Access: Small Connections, Real Payoff

On wayfinding signs and mapping in the Highlands, Cyr said he needed to return to the topic and speak with Russell Arnold, the Director of Public Works and Development Services, to develop a plan.

The committee also revisited access to businesses along the trail, referencing the prior Daily Grind connection and keeping a running list of future ideas. From there, the discussion turned to the League of American Bicyclists and the “bike friendly” designation program.

Members debated how to sell the concept to businesses when the town’s benefit—strengthening a future “silver” application—is easier to explain than a shop owner’s return. Andris Skulte said he believed the fee was about $50 for small entities (with scaling based on employee count), while recalling earlier assumptions that it might be higher. Bruce Donald supported the idea and cited Suburban Cycle in Berlin as an example, naming owner Keith Nappy and describing how a high-level designation can function as both marketing and a credibility signal: a placard out front, a mention on a website, a reason for a rider to pick one shop over another.

That conversation then turned to commuting and connectivity: members described Route 6 and Route 177 as poor for biking, with limited pedestrian infrastructure. A potential connection through condos into Spring Lane and the bike path was discussed, with the larger, slower idea lingering in the background: if a protected connection to the trail is ever going to happen on a state route, the town needs to start the CTDOT conversation early.

Signs At Trailheads: Naming Parking Lots So People Can Find Them

A subcommittee involving Farmington, Simsbury, and Avon discussed a shared approach to trailhead signage, with members aiming for some uniformity while still making the Farmington signs useful on their own terms. The meeting returned to a plain point: parking lots should be named, often by intersecting road names, because “Farmington” on a sign is not a location—at least not to someone trying to meet a friend in the dark.

The Brickyard Road sign came up as a priority. Cyr said quotes had been sent to the Farmington Valley Trails Council (FVTC) board for review and referenced conversations with Barb and Laura Rosoto. A replacement cost was discussed at about $7,000 installed, including about $1,000 for installation—prompting the practical suggestion that Highway staff could install and save money. A second bid idea emerged: Art Brody of Bell Meat Signs (Granby) was suggested as someone who might compete on a one-off sign quote. SignPro was discussed as a vendor used for a past project, with the Brickyard sign quote described as updated pricing.

Safe Routes To School: “Free” Still Requires Alignment

A committee member shared an update from James Radcliff, who could not attend but had reported a positive initial discussion with the incoming superintendent about Safe Routes to School. The superintendent was described as wanting time to get settled before anything moves, but the tone of the conversation was presented as receptive.

The committee spent time distinguishing two tracks:

  • The walk audit, described as a low-commitment first step—“free,” “no obligation,” and valuable even as a baseline report.
  • The broader Safe Routes curriculum program, described as a heavier lift that touches school resources, staffing, and logistics.

Members discussed a strategy: start with Union School as a manageable audit target, then use that as a bridge to harder problems, including Irving Robbins and East Farms, which were framed as higher-need locations tied to broader traffic and access planning. They also raised internal town concerns about who bears responsibility for roads and sidewalks around schools and suggested keeping Kathleen A. Blonski (Town Manager) in the loop before the town takes any formal step. A practical outside example was offered: members suggested contacting Canton, described as having implemented a Safe Routes program and therefore able to share structure and lessons.

The Public Forum: Short Talks, Then The Questions

The committee discussed a public-facing event described as a Bike Walk “Vibrant Community” forum. The format proposed was simple: brief presentations, then Q&A—using note cards to keep questions manageable. The Senior Center was discussed as a venue option. Potential presenters mentioned included Amy Watkins of Watch For Me CT and the head of the Farmington Police Department, with Bruce Donald explicitly invited to participate in the Q&A portion. A target date of March 19, 2026 was discussed.

During the meeting, Donald also mentioned a scheduled CTDOT meeting in the second week of January with CTDOT “TA folks,” and named Mike Turpak as head engineer. Members urged the committee to keep bringing up the “jug handle gateway to the Farmington Trail” concept and the need for signal work toward West Hartford, described as something that would have to be a CTDOT project.

A 15 MPH E-Bike Limit: Policy Meets Staffing

The most honest exchange came around speed limits and e-bikes. Donald said statewide discussion has coalesced around 15 mph as a practical target and described work underway on a prototype ordinance. He framed the reality: policing is limited, but a posted rule can still shape behavior through self-enforcement and give officers a clearer basis to intervene when speed and conduct are obvious.

Rodriguez, speaking from staffing reality, noted the department cannot realistically dedicate officers to trail speed enforcement and referenced how summer community service officers riding the trails can issue town code tickets, if the town’s structure supports it. The committee’s center of gravity landed where most municipal conversations land: post clear signs, set expectations, and treat enforcement as targeted rather than constant.

Cyr said he would raise the topic with town leadership and the Traffic Report Board, starting with a speed limit discussion as the “low hanging fruit,” while the statewide ordinance prototype continues to develop.

Scheduling, Minutes, And The Holiday Exit

Members agreed to keep monthly meetings, with Wednesdays described as workable. There was a request to include ICS calendar attachments with future Zoom invites, because calendars are how adults acknowledge their limits. ☕ The committee approved the November 12 minutes by motion and second, and adjourned with holiday well-wishes.

So what? The committee can write a 15-mph rule tomorrow. The real work is making it legible—signs, norms, and a shared expectation that a multi-use trail is not a private test track. 🚲


About the Author

Jack Beckett drinks coffee the way towns adopt policies: slowly, in drafts, with a final version that still needs edits. ☕ If you want more Farmington reporting—zoning, schools, committees, the stuff that runs your week without asking—start at About The Farmington Mercury and then roam: Editorial, For Sale, Law Enforcement, Historic District Commission, Wetlands Committee, Farmington CT High School, Zoning, Board Of Education, and Positions Available. Tips, corrections, and polite outrage go to Contact Us—or message us on Twix (yes, Twix) at WeFarmington On X. 😉


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This article, “Farmington’s Bicycle And Trails Advisory Committee Weighs Trail Repairs, Safe Routes, And A 15 MPH E-Bike Limit,” by Jack Beckett is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0.

“Farmington’s Bicycle And Trails Advisory Committee Weighs Trail Repairs, Safe Routes, And A 15 MPH E-Bike Limit”
by Jack Beckett, The Farmington Mercury (CC BY-ND 4.0)

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