Nameless Range
Well-known member
A landowner has closed a road in my neck of the woods that has been open to the public for decades if not 100 + years. The landowner began doing this last fall. There is a gate and a sign that says "Call for permission". The first mile of the road does go through private property.
At this point I won't bring up all the evidence I have to believe that this road is public, outside of saying I have been acquiring a collection of historic maps, dozens of local accounts spanning the last 5 decades, newspaper articles, C.O.S.'s and Deeds. I have driven up this road my whole life - for hunting, fishing, firewood, and fun.
I have reached out to the USFS. They agree they have an easement and that it is a public road. They have said they are, "Working to resolve the issue." That was months ago, and my follow-up email has not been answered.
My concern is that the longer this road stays gated, the weaker the case will be that this is a public road. I reached out to a local 4x4 club and people within that group have been calling the number to get access, which only fortifies a precedent that this is not a public road. Bothersome.
Is it appropriate to pester the USFS more - like show up and bug them in person to explain what their plan is? Their priorities are board feet and fire resilience right now, they are wildly understaffed, there's a virus afoot, and I am concerned that this will go by the wayside long enough that the case will weaken to the point of being defeated. The country this road gives access to is accessible via other means, it's just over an hour detour either way. I don't want to raise hell over something that progress is being made on, but what does "working to resolve the issue" mean and how long is acceptable before I get many more people involved?
Though this is a USFS road and not a county one, my next step was to bring this up with the County Commissioners.
Here's a photo of some of the wonderful country this road gives access to.
At this point I won't bring up all the evidence I have to believe that this road is public, outside of saying I have been acquiring a collection of historic maps, dozens of local accounts spanning the last 5 decades, newspaper articles, C.O.S.'s and Deeds. I have driven up this road my whole life - for hunting, fishing, firewood, and fun.
I have reached out to the USFS. They agree they have an easement and that it is a public road. They have said they are, "Working to resolve the issue." That was months ago, and my follow-up email has not been answered.
My concern is that the longer this road stays gated, the weaker the case will be that this is a public road. I reached out to a local 4x4 club and people within that group have been calling the number to get access, which only fortifies a precedent that this is not a public road. Bothersome.
Is it appropriate to pester the USFS more - like show up and bug them in person to explain what their plan is? Their priorities are board feet and fire resilience right now, they are wildly understaffed, there's a virus afoot, and I am concerned that this will go by the wayside long enough that the case will weaken to the point of being defeated. The country this road gives access to is accessible via other means, it's just over an hour detour either way. I don't want to raise hell over something that progress is being made on, but what does "working to resolve the issue" mean and how long is acceptable before I get many more people involved?
Though this is a USFS road and not a county one, my next step was to bring this up with the County Commissioners.
Here's a photo of some of the wonderful country this road gives access to.
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