UPOM strikes again.
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Corner crossing access bill tabled; fight planned
January 30, 2013 1:39 pm • By Brett French
The co-sponsor of a bill that would have allowed the public to cross private land at fence corners plans to attempt to blast the bill to the House floor after it was tabled by the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday morning.
"Obviously it was a pretty big surprise," said Rep. Ellie Boldman Hill, D-Missoula, the primary sponsor of the measure.
Even more surprising to her was the fact that her co-sponsor, Rep. Krayton Kerns, R-Laurel, voted against his own measure.
Hill said she hadn't seen so much interest in an issue since last session's medical-marijuana law was debated. Sportsmen gathered more than 2,000 signatures on a petition supporting the bill. And Hill said many of the people she heard from supporting the bill didn't "hail from bastions of liberalism."
House Bill 235 had been supported by sporting groups and opposed by landowner and agricultural interests.
The bill would have defined what so far has been a legal gray area. The bill read in part, “When crossing from one property in which a person is lawfully authorized to remain to another property in which the person is lawfully authorized to remain pursuant to subsection (1), a person is permitted to cross private land at the geographic point that represents the corner of one or more parcels of private land …”
A legal review attached to the bill said it may raise constitutional issues related to the taking of private property without just compensation.
"What this bill would have done, however, is create a dangerous precedent that the public has the right to trespass on private land to access public property,” wrote Chuck Denowh, spokesman for United Property Owners of Montana, in a prepared statement. “That's something only the radical fringe can support."
Hill disagreed.
"Frankly, I'm a lawyer, and I don't think it's a constitutional taking," she said. "You're not even touching other land."
Supporters said the bill would make it easier for hunters to access public land that now is unreachable where public lands intersect.
While acknowledging that some public land is difficult to access, Denowh said the state should be looking to divest itself of such properties to acquire parcels more easily reached.
"That's a solution that landowners and sportsmen can get behind," he wrote.
Hill said she thinks "powerful" nonresident landowners are the main opponents to the bill, not "fifth generation" farmers and ranchers.
"That's why we're going to fight for the blue-collar hunter," she said.
Before her attempt to blast the bill to the House floor for a vote, Hill said a rally is planned on the Capitol steps at 10 a.m. on Feb. 18. It takes a three-fifths majority to move a tabled bill forward.
"We know it's a high burden, but we think this bill is worth it," Hill said.
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