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H.B. 208 and why we should oppose this legislation
#1
H.B. 208 should be opposed in my opinion, and I urge you to contact your representative to let them know.  NOT EVERYONE WILL AGREE WITH ME, AND THAT'S O.K., its your right to do so.  But here is the letter I wrote to my representative, Kera Birkeland today.  Feel free to copy and paste my letter as your own to your representative.  Act quickly, since this is the type of bill that gets passed quickly in the late nights just prior to the legislative session ending.  

Dear Rep Birkeland,
I am writing to you to ask that you please oppose H.B. 208.  This bill capitalizes on lack of clarity of which rivers in Utah are "navigable" and "non-navigable" and authorizes law enforcement to issue a class B misdemeanor to individuals who touch the streambeds and banks of non-navigable waterways that flow through private land. While I support measures to protect private property rights, i.e., enforcement of existing trespass laws that have been codified in the Public Waters Access Act, among others, this bill is sure to cause further confusion from both an access and enforcement perspective because the navigability status of many of our rivers and streams has yet to be determined. The Utah Stream Access Coalition's navigability lawsuit on the upper Weber River was successful in restoring access from Holiday Park to Echo Reservoir, the navigability status of our other major waterways remains unsettled. H.B. 208 exploits this gray area. 

Furthermore, the ability to enforce H.B. 208 is dependent on a river or stream being "non-navigable" and flowing through privately owned land. Utah's legislature and state agencies have been unable (or unwilling) to define which rivers are "navigable" and therefore open to public use, or "non-navigable," and subject to the penalties proposed. Yet this bill requires that critical distinction to be made without a proper review of historical use supporting navigability. This could result in several of our major, and arguably navigable, rivers being closed to public use.

Current trespass laws, in conjunction with the Public Waters Access Act, already prohibit the touching of privately owned stream beds without the permission of the owner of those beds. See Utah Code Sections 73-29-101 et seq. (Public Waters Access Act), 76-6-206 (Criminal trespass – general), 76-6-206.3 (Criminal trespass on agricultural land or range land) and 23-20-14 (Criminal trespass while hunting or fishing). The penalties in these existing provisions are the same as those in H.B. 208, which makes this proposed legislation superfluous and redundant.

H.B. 208 fails to establish any repercussions for landowners misrepresenting a navigable stream or river as a non-navigable stream or river, or harassing, or seeking the citation and/or removal of a member of the public exercising their legal right to use the beds and banks (up to the Ordinary High Water Mark) of navigable streams or rivers of the State for lawful recreational purposes that utilize the water. Simply put, it's not up to landowners or the Legislature to decide which rivers and streams are non-navigable, it depends upon their historical use by the public.

The Utah Supreme Court is currently deciding the Utah Stream Access Coalition's appeal on the Provo Case, which addresses the threshold question of whether the public has a constitutional right to touch privately-owned stream beds while engaged in recreational activities that utilize the publicly-owned waters of the State. The Court heard oral arguments in the matter of Utah Stream Access Coalition v. VR Acquisitions, LLC (Victory Ranch) on January 9, 2023, and the matter is presently under advisement. Enactment of H.B. 208 in advance of the Supreme Court’s ruling in this case is bound to create confusion for law enforcement and the public alike.

Thank you Kera for representing us here in Garden City.
Scott Xxxxxxxx
PO Box XX
Garden City, UT  84028
435-881-XXXX
xxxxx@yahoo.com
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#2
I just sent this to my Rep. Thank you for providing this information.
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#3
I prefer the idea of privet property rights.

In my opinion most politicians would throw your letter straight in the trash as soon as they see how long it is.
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#4
(02-27-2023, 08:30 PM)BearLakeFishGuy Wrote: H.B. 208 should be opposed in my opinion, and I urge you to contact your representative to let them know.
Good call, Scott.  My letter has been sent.  ?
Bob Hicks, from Utah
I'm 81 years young and going as hard as I can for as long as I can.
"Free men do not ask permission to bear arms."
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#5
(02-28-2023, 04:46 AM)castnshoot Wrote: I prefer the idea of privet property rights.

In my opinion most politicians would throw your letter straight in the trash as soon as they see how long it is.

I'm totally for private property rights.  However, this is about historic uses of streams..... and landowners should not be able to control access to streams that were historically "navigable".  The property owners do not own the water.  The MAJORITY of other states recognize this and have legislation protecting public access within the ordinary high water mark of the stream channel.  That is all that the Stream Access Coalition is supporting and that is all that I think should be supported too!  Let the Supreme Court rule first, then make the legislation.....not the other way around.  I encourage you to read the court cases, then the current case before the court, then review how other states regulate streambeds, and then read H.B. 208.
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#6
Right, no one owns the water, only the right to use the water. I own and pay out of my own pocket to maintain my own water rights. I say that just to let you know I understand how the water it’s self works.

I also own property that sets on a body of water in Utah, I am perfectly ok with the fact that people walk along the bank of this water on my privet property so that they can enjoy the water. Again just mentioning this so you know I do actually deal with this.

Several years ago (as you probably know) by way of a single judge’s ruling, he opened a 19 month window that pretty much opened up any body of water in Utah to trespass.

It only lasted 19 months because one it was a huge overreach, two the the Utah legislature quickly, and rightfully past a law putting the trespass parameters back to where they should be. NAVIGABILITY

That judge’s over reach and the Stream Access groups agreement with that over reach in my opinion has made it harder to to get water ways classified as “historically navigable “.

With the socialist movement taking a grip around the neck of real American citizens I would caution against any laws or rulings that weaken our property rights.
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#7
Typical biologist only wanna hear what they want, did I hurt your feelings nudda crisco!!! Why did you delete my post??
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#8
(03-09-2023, 03:52 PM)bearlaker7 Wrote: Typical biologist only wanna hear what they want, did I hurt your feelings nudda crisco!!! Why did you delete my post??

I don't know who deleted your post, but it wasn't BearLakeFishGuy.  Only moderators and administrators have the ability to delete individual posts in a thread.  He could have deleted the entire thread, but that is the only way he could have deleted your post.
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#9
(03-09-2023, 03:52 PM)bearlaker7 Wrote: Typical biologist only wanna hear what they want, did I hurt your feelings nudda crisco!!! Why did you delete my post??

It might be a good idea to read your PM's before you accuse another member of deleting your post.
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#10
(03-09-2023, 03:52 PM)bearlaker7 Wrote: Typical biologist only wanna hear what they want, did I hurt your feelings nudda crisco!!! Why did you delete my post??

I deleted your post in my role as the forum moderator. It violated the forum rules by suggesting you would shoot someone on your property. Read the PM I sent you when I deleted it. 

There is a big difference between an open debate on this issue, which is appropriate, as we are landowners too...vs suggesting shooting, even in if was intended as humor.
Remember: keep the lid on the worms, share your jerky, and stop by to say hi to Cookie and the Cowboy-Pirate crew
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