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Encore: Great Redwood Trail Proposal Unearths Painful History for Indigenous Tribes

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An aerial view of a landscape of mountains and forest with a railroad next to a body of water.
The now-defunct Pacific Northwestern Railroad snakes along the Xa-Cho or Eel River in Trinity County. This terrain is prone to landslides and sediment erosion, making it especially treacherous for large infrastructure projects. (Anthony Wells)

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Great Redwood Trail Proposal Unearths Painful History for Indigenous Tribes

California has grand plans to turn a stretch of abandoned railroad tracks into 300 miles of walking and biking trails, connecting the rolling hills of Marin County with the redwood forests near Eureka in Northern Humboldt. If completed, the Great Redwood Trail could become the longest rail-trail in the nation. But some Indigenous communities and other groups are not on board.  Reporter Sam Anderson explores how this grand idea has resurfaced the painful and complicated history behind the original railroad tracks that were built more than a century ago.

This episode originally aired on October 18, 2024.

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