At age 71, after half a century in America, Rota Hart is leading her very first civic uprising.
She has gathered close to 100 signatures from neighbors saying it is absurd that they're being threatened with tickets for walking on a trail leading into Murphy-Hanrehan Park Reserve, located right across the street from their homes west of Lakeville, just because people on snowmobiles also use it.
"In Europe you can walk anywhere. They want you to walk in the woods and enjoy nature," the Vienna-born resident of Lakeville says. "I come to this huge America, and I can't walk in the woods? It doesn't seem right."
The dispute reflects the frequent tension between the desires of residents on the semirural metro fringe, who say they want to enjoy the nature around them, and those of snowmobile users, who say they want the same thing.
Both sides in this situation say they've been coexisting for years. Both seem confused about what the problem is. But the Three Rivers Park District, which oversees Scott County's parks, worries that it isn't safe for huge high-speed machines and often elderly walkers to be out in the same lanes, sometimes with little warning of one another's presence.
Signs went up this winter, and people began to be stopped and warned.
"I don't know why they took away that we can walk in the park," Hart said. "For a nature lover it's a real downer." The alternative is sidewalk-less roads, she added, "and people don't want to spend time with cars, they want to spend time contemplating quietness."
Gathering signatures, Hart recorded responses from snowmobilers insisting it can all work for both sides and from others who want the big machines banned. Wrote Vicki Steffan: "No snowmobiles on park trails at all! Ride next to the road."