The Trails and Open Space Partnership (TOSP)
TOSP is a coalition of over 50 agencies and organizations working to achieve the vision of "a continuous
linear trail, open space, and alternative transportation system along the Mississippi River in the Twin
Cities metro area while protecting the corridor's natural, cultural, and economic resources" (Vision). This
important vision was identified in the 1995 Comprehensive Management Plan (CMP) for the Mississippi
National River and Recreation Area, a unit of the National Park Service. The National Park Service,
with the support of the Metropolitan Council, the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, and
the MN Parks and Trails Council, established the TOSP in the Fall of 1996 to help local communities
in the MNRRA corridor realize this important vision. By Fall 2000 membership had grown to include
representatives of the twenty-five local governments and seven regional implementing agencies in the
72-mile Mississippi National River and Recreation Area, the Minnesota Department of Transportation,
the University of Minnesota, and many non-profit organizations like the Trust for Public Land, the Saint
Paul and Minneapolis Riverfront Corporations, the National Audubon Society, Friends of Parks, Friends
of the Mississippi River, and the Midtown Greenway Coalition. Below are some additional highlights of
the TOSP's accomplishments. Many of the trails along the river are part of the Mississippi River Trail
(MRT), which, in 2000, was designated a national millennium trail by President Clinton. The TOSP's goal
is to complete the MRT in the twin cities metro area by 2016, the National Park Service centennial.