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Open Space Committee proposes updated trail-usage rules and clearer driveway-scoring guidance
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Summary
The committee agreed to update trail-usage rules (some dating to 1975) and to develop practical driveway-scoring details (equipment, example specifications and rental sources) to help homeowners and contractors comply and reduce encroachment and safety problems.
The Portola Valley Open Space Committee opened a multi-part discussion on April 15 about modernizing trail-usage rules and giving clearer technical guidance for driveway scoring to protect trails and equestrian crossings.
Chair said the current trail-usage rules are outdated — "I think it's from 1975" — and proposed that committee members each review the existing document and suggest one or two rules to clarify, update or add. The chair asked staff to compile suggested edits into a draft the committee can review and, if appropriate, recommend the town adopt.
Public-works staff and members emphasized the need for technical, evergreen guidance so homeowners and contractors know how to comply. Robert and other members urged providing specific examples rather than vague language such as "roughen or grind a quarter inch." Robert suggested creating a packet with clear construction details and equipment guidance: "Rather than saying this being rented from this location... saying this is the tool that would typically be used."
Members also discussed practical matters such as rental costs for scoring equipment (examples cited in the discussion ranged under $600 per day) and whether the town's homeowner packet — historically given at closing — still exists and could include encroachment and trail information. Robert warned that compiling individualized packets is staff-intensive and suggested the committee aim for evergreen, general guidance and references to equipment types and rental sources.
Why this matters: inconsistent driveway scoring and unclear trail-usage rules lead to variable contractor work that can damage trail crossings, create hazards for equestrians and hikers, and require inefficient remediation. Clear standards and examples would help homeowners, reduce repeat fixes, and give town staff objective metrics to enforce when necessary.
Next steps: Chair will circulate the current trail-usage document; members will submit suggested rule changes or clarifications before the next meeting. Robert and other members will reach out to Woodside and rental companies to document practical equipment and rental options to include in a guidance packet.

