The Mission of the Lassen Land & Trails Trust is to conserve significant natural areas & agricultural landscapes, and to promote and enhance a public trail system throughout Lassen County.

Modoc Line

Public Use

We are currently working on a management plan for the Modoc Line and have not completed any improvements to the trail.  If you chose to use the trail at this time, please be cautious of the unimproved surface and use at your own risk.

History

Lassen & Modoc Counties, CA September 5th 2008—

Effective Friday September 5th 2008, Lassen Land and Trails Trust (LLTT) acquired title to the Modoc Line Rail to Trail corridor from Union Pacific Railroad of Omaha, Nebraska.  The Modoc line runs 86 miles north & south from Wendel, CA to McArthur Siding, CA, and traverses a large portion of hard to access Bureau of Land Management property as well as valuable wildlife & game habitat.   The historic standard gauge Modoc Line came into existence not long after the original narrow gauge line, the “N-C-O” (Nevada, California, and Oregon) was built, and the corridor itself has long been a celebrated piece of railroad history.  The “N-C-O” was affectionately nicknamed the “Narrow, crooked, and Ornery” due to its meandering and oftentimes steep grades, and portions of the original N-C-O are still visible from the current Modoc line itself.

Southern Pacific purchased the N-C-O in 1925 and converted the railroad to standard gauge between 1927 and 1928. Union Pacific assumed control of the Line in 1996 and has not operated a through train over the Modoc since 1997. Rails and ties were removed between Wendel and the McArthur siding during 2003 and 2004.

The property was acquired through a process known as “Rail Banking” Rail banking is a federal law administered by the Surface Transportation Board (STB). It allows agencies to acquire railroad right-of-ways from an operating railroad and, “bank,” it until future rail use is applied for at the STB. The purchasing agency (in this case LLTT) has all the property rights held by the railroad including easements for rail use. The line is thus not officially abandoned, and irreplaceable infrastructure is preserved.  In the case of the Modoc Line, Union Pacific Railroad has right of first refusal to reactivate the line if rail use again becomes feasible.

Railroads have taxes to pay, and lines to maintain. It often makes good economic sense to rail bank an unused line, salvage the ties, rail, and other equipment, and work something out with an agency wishing to utilize the corridor until such time that any railroad reactivates the line with a request to the STB. If the corridor is not saved, there cannot be any future rail. In the interim, the corridor can be used as a trail, which helps preserve it.

LLTT anticipates that a myriad of recreation will occur in the interim use of the former rail line, including hiking, bicycling, agricultural & historical tourism, horseback riding, and significant sections open for vehicle & OHV use for wildlife viewing & public land access.  At this time, LLTT is not encouraging use of the corridor, as the management plan is incomplete, and access & safety issues have yet to be dealt with.  LLTT anticipates completing the management plan in mid-2009, and hopes to have an official dedication ceremony shortly thereafter.

The acquisition of the corridor has taken several years and several partnerships, but ultimately LLTT took the lead to raise funds to acquire the Modoc Line, as well as prepare a Management Plan for its long term operation and maintenance.  The funds to acquire the line came from the Wildlife Conservation Board of California, who viewed the line as high priority due to its proximity to sensitive Sage Grouse and pronghorn habitat as well as access for research and hunting.  In addition, the Sierra Nevada Conservancy has funded LLTT to prepare a management plan for the long term use and maintenance of the line, and has been invaluable in assistance with negotiations and meeting facilitation.  Other partners have included Lassen & Modoc Counties, the Rails to Trails Conservancy, and both the Eagle Lake & Alturas offices of the Bureau of Land Management.  Currently the Alturas Field office has agreed to a memorandum of understanding with LLTT to assist in the maintenance of the line, but LLTT (a California not for profit land trust) is the sole owner of this corridor.

 

A GREAT TRAIL EXPERIENCE–

85-MILE MODOC LINE RAIL TRAIL PLAN AVAILABLE FOR PUBLIC COMMENT

OPEN HOUSES:

Tuesday, September 13, 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m., Historic Susanville Railroad Depot, Richmond Rd., Susanville

Thursday, September 15, 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m., Elk’s Lodge, Main St., Alturas

The Lassen Land and Trails Trust’s development of the 85-mile long Modoc Rail Line, extending from Wendel to just shy of Alturas, is a project that offers opportunity to our communities and to each of us for hiking, biking, horseback riding, and off-road vehicles.

The Trust is inviting the public, and our members, to comment on the draft of a management plan for the long-term development of the trail. A copy of the draft of the Modoc Line Rail Trail Management Plan is available for download by clicking here. To learn more or to share your comments, please click here for a Comment Form or attend one of the scheduled open houses.

The first open house will be Tuesday, Sept. 13, from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Lassen Land and Trails Trust office in the Historic Susanville Railroad Depot at 601 Richmond Road, in Susanville. The second will be held Thursday, Sept. 15, from 5 to 7 p.m., at the at the Elk’s Lodge in the historic N-C-O railroad building on Main Street in Alturas.  For more information, please call (530) 257-3252.

In addition to the on-line access to the plan, printed versions can be reviewed at the Susanville Library, 1618 Main St., and at the Modoc County Library, 212 West 3rd St., Alturas, beginning August 15. A printed copy can also be reviewed at the Trust’s office in the Historic Susanville Railroad Depot. Comment forms will be available at each location. A limited number of printed copies are available by contacting Lassen Land and Trails Trust

Special thanks to the Bureau of Land Management, Eagle Lake and Alturas Field Offices, and the Sierra Nevada Conservancy for their assistance in the development of the draft of the Modoc Line Rail Trail Management Plan.

COMMENT FORM

Modoc Line Management Plan – Public Review Draft

Appendix A – Maps

Appendix B – Soils

Appendix C1 – Precedent Summary

Appendix C2 – Precedent Summary

Appendix C3 -Plans (cannot post due to size)

Appendix D – Structural and Trail Condition Report

Appendix E – Communications Plan and Stakeholder Survey

Appendix F – Adjacent Landowners

Comprehensive Map with Access Points

7 Comments to Modoc Line

  1. Janice L. Newton's Gravatar Janice L. Newton
    November 29, 2010 at 7:30 pm | Permalink

    lets get this thing done. Thanks!

  2. Janice L. Newton's Gravatar Janice L. Newton
    November 29, 2010 at 7:32 pm | Permalink

    I am glad you provided this opportunity to remark on the plans for the TRAIL…. MANY THANKS. Janice Newto…

  3. Janice L. Newton's Gravatar Janice L. Newton
    November 29, 2010 at 7:34 pm | Permalink

    I look forward to seeing this trail completed to Alturas.

  4. Janice L. Newton's Gravatar Janice L. Newton
    November 29, 2010 at 7:36 pm | Permalink
  5. November 29, 2010 at 7:37 pm | Permalink

    This trail will be a great benefit to our area. Thank you, Janice Newton

  6. steve welford's Gravatar steve welford
    November 30, 2010 at 12:31 pm | Permalink

    Cant wait to get this goin…great hunting and sightseeing access!!! I’ve already hunted antelope via the trail and it was amazing with the amount of terrain that is accessable now. Lets keep it that way.

  7. dave's Gravatar dave
    July 31, 2011 at 8:43 pm | Permalink

    This is a wonderful addition and can be a connector between the Bizz and Oregon’s O&C Trail from K-Falls to Bly (just a pesky little 90 miles or so to connect Bly to Alturas). Then from the Westwood end of the Bizz you can connect to the still-under-development Collins Pine Trail to Chester…then the Almanor Trail to Canyon Dam…

    All total: over 300 miles of bike route.

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