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Sheep farming is a way of life for some Loudoun residents. (Washington Post photo) |
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Map by Tim Mek, WP, from Loudoun County data |
The battle of unpaved vs. improved is so contentious that "Loudoun County Supervisor Caleb Kershner refers to it as the 'road wars.' Similar fights have played out in other localities across the country as the movement to preserve unpaved roads has gained traction in recent decades," Jouvenal, Mount and Orenstein write. "A network of roads is an atypical pick for the National Park Service's register. . . . Supporters say Loudoun's roads belong there because they span the sweep of American history."
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Sheep have the right-of-way in Loudoun. (Washington Post photo) |
The battle continues. "These competing visions erupted at a Board of Supervisors meeting in September, where residents clashed for over an hour over paving a handful of roads — including just 300 feet of one," according to the article. "The Virginia Department of Transportation launched a pilot project about six years ago that put a layer of concrete beneath the gravel to stabilize the road — a sort of middle ground between paving and not paving."
To read out about a hidden but pivotal piece of U.S. Civil War history that took place at Beaverdam Ford along Loudoun gravel roads, read the full story here.
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/cXqj37x Residents in Virginia spar over gravel or paved roads; some want progress, others want historic preservation - Entrepreneur Generations
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