Hatfield-McCoy Trails

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The Hatfield-McCoy Trails, located in West Virginia, is a nationally known trail system most popular for its off-highway vehicle trails. The trail system is a multi-county project, including West Virginia counties Logan, Kanawha, Wyoming, McDowell, Mercer, Wayne, Lincoln, Mingo, and Boone. The trails are managed by the Hatfield-McCoy Regional Recreation Authority, a legislatively created quasi-state agency and its paid staff, which is governed by a multi-county board of directors.

The name was the trail system is derived from the names of two families, the Hatfields and McCoys, who famously feuded near the West Virginia and Kentucky border after the Civil War.

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[edit] Expansion

The trail system opened in October 2000 with 300 miles of trail operations. In 2002, the trail system added an additional 100 miles of trails in Boone County, West Virginia. In 2004, the trail system again added 100 miles of trail, to bring the trail system to 500 miles, making it the second largest off-highway vehicle trail in the world, second only to the Piute Trail.

Current trail system names (trailhead facility names in parentheses) include Browning Fork (Rockhouse), Dingess-Rum (Bearwallow), Pinnacle Creek (Castlerock), Little Coal River (Water Ways), and Buffalo Mountain (Delbarton).

[edit] Uses

The trail system caters to ATV, UATV, and motorbikes (dirt bikes), but hikers, mountain bikers, and horse riders can also use the trails.

The trail system staff not only markets the trail system globally (the trails now receive visitors from all 50 states and nine countries), but also builds, maps, and maintains the trail system. Law enforcement officers patrol the trail to assure compliance with safety regulations. Motorized users of the trail system must wear a DOT-approved helmet and are prohibited from "doubling" (having a passenger), unless their vehicle is designed for two people. These rules, and a host of others, have allowed the trail system to enjoy a quality safety record, despite an increase in ATV-related injuries around the country.

[edit] Leadership history

The management of the trail system is directed by a Chief Executive Officer or Executive Director, who is appointed by the Board of Directors. The first Executive Director, Leff Moore, was one of the two men who came up with the idea of the trail system. The heart and soul of the trail system, Moore passed away in 2005, but not before seeing the fruits of his hard work make his dream a reality: At the time of his death, the trail system had become its own economic engine for the southern coalfields of West Virginia, with record number of tourists visiting the trail system each year.

Moore was followed by Mike Whitt, a local Mingo County, West Virginia native who worked in coal-related economic development projects, who, in his brief tenure as Executive Director, is credited with opening the first 300 miles of trail. Whitt, in turn, was succeeded by his brother, Mark Whitt, who left the position in 2002, after which the Board of Directors appointed Matthew Ballard as director.

Ballard, who had a background in organization management, public policy, and politics, is credited with catapulting the trail system into a nationally recognized and award-winning trail system. Under his direction, the trail system expanded by 100 miles into Wyoming County, West Virginia, as well as into the towns of Pineville in Wyoming County and Williamson and Delbarton in Mingo County. Ballard managed the trail system through its first significant growth period, during a time when efficient organizational change and an aggressive marketing campaign helped to double revenues for the trail system.

After three years of managing the trail system, Ballard moved on, at which time the Board of Directors appointed Jeffrey T. Lusk to succeed him. Lusk currently serves as the Executive Director of the trail system and has expanded the trail system into McDowell County, West Virginia. Lusk has a strong academic and practical background in economic development, having served for 11 years as the Economic Development Director of the Wyoming County Economic Development Authority. The current Deputy Executive Director is John Fekete, of Man, West Virginia.

[edit] External links