This story by Jordan Cuddemi was published by the Valley News on Nov. 13.

Quechee Gorge fence
Caity Bond, left, talks with Jamie Ferguson, while visiting Quechee Gorge from Amherst, Massachusetts, where they are graduate students at the University of Massachusetts, on Monday. Photo by James M. Patterson/Valley News

[Q]UECHEE — Most sightseers and nearby business owners say the temporary fence recently installed to prevent suicides at the Quechee Gorge Bridge has not significantly impeded the view that draws thousands to the spot.

The 9-foot-tall, chain-link fence, which was the latest in a series of measures to prevent suicides at the gorge, strikes a balance between improving safety and maintaining the views at the popular attraction, said Molly Hutchins, the store manager of nearby Strafford Saddlery.

โ€œItโ€™s a great thing,โ€ Hutchins said on Monday. โ€œIt can help deter people from jumping.โ€

A nice touch, she said, was the state Agency of Transportationโ€™s idea to cut rectangles in the fence that allow visitors to have an unobstructed view of the gorge and take pictures.

Kip Miller, the longtime owner of Quechee Gorge Gifts and Sportswear, who has expressed opposition to a fence, acknowledged that it โ€œcould be worse.โ€

โ€œThey did a nice job,โ€ Miller said on Monday. โ€œIt doesnโ€™t look like a prison fence, which is what I was afraid of.โ€

The fence is scheduled to be replaced in 2022, when a permanent solution will be implemented alongside an extensive bridge renovation. Just what that will look like isnโ€™t clear, but Miller said he hopes to see a net placed below the new bridge and the fence removed.

Washington state resident Ray Steiger, a Warner, N.H., native who had never before visited the gorge, said the fence makes him generally feel safer. There is a gap between the bridge railing and the new fence, so people can still look down and get a feel for the depth below.

โ€œIโ€™d feel a little bit funny without it,โ€ Steiger said. โ€œThis gives you a sense of safety โ€” even if you donโ€™t need it.โ€

Maine residents John and Candy Gass, who formerly lived in Bethel, said they were surprised a fence hadnโ€™t been erected sooner.

โ€œI think itโ€™s a necessary thing,โ€ John Gass on Monday. โ€œItโ€™s a little unfortunate you donโ€™t get an unobstructed view. … but I donโ€™t see it as a huge negative.โ€

Hartford Area Chamber of Commerce Executive Director P.J. Skehan said the feedback he has received about the fence has been positive. He noted, though, that this is the gorgeโ€™s slow season, and the fence has only been up for about two weeks.

โ€œIt doesnโ€™t seem to impact the touristsโ€™ view of the gorge and their experience here,โ€ Skehan said. โ€œPeople seem pretty happy with it.โ€

Not everyone was thrilled with the change, though. Itโ€™s common to see similar fences at bridges around the country, but that can prove problematic for a bridge known for its views, said Jeffrey May, of Boston, who has visited the gorge before.

โ€œIt changes the whole feeling,โ€ May said.

State Sen. Alison Clarkson, D-Woodstock, also was lukewarm about the chain-link fence option from an aesthetics standpoint when she spoke publicly at a meeting in July. She and others pressed Agency of Transportation officials to examine other types of fencing.

โ€œTo me, itโ€™s not the perfect solution,โ€ she said on Monday.

Clarkson said she hopes state officials take a long and hard look at what the permanent solution will be. Many states have customized their safety barriers to best fit their particular location, and she hopes Vermont finds a solution that liberates โ€œthat glorious viewโ€ while preventing suicides.

For David Cooper, whose son, Derek, died by suicide at the gorge in 2011, the fence accomplishes the essential task of making it more difficult to jump over the bridge railing. The gorge has been the site of 14 suicides between 2007 and July of this year.

โ€œWe are thrilled that it got this far,โ€ Cooper said of the effort he and his wife have made to prevent suicides at the gorge.

He, too, said the temporary fence was โ€œnot ideal.โ€

โ€œThe ideal will happen when the bridge is redone,โ€ he said. โ€œ โ€ฆ The positive is that it wonโ€™t be easy to kill yourself at the gorge.โ€

ย 

The Valley News is the daily newspaper and website of the Upper Valley, online at www.vnews.com.