BuzzH
Well-known member
Vikingsguy,
About everything you listed is already on the books.
1. The FS/BLM have camping limits on public land and do enforce it. Not sure how additional legislation would be of any benefit.
2. Corner crossing in Wyoming is not illegal, but not exactly legal either. Here is what I can tell you about it, since you seem like legal language is important to you:
a. There is State AG opinion, written by a now GF commissioner that states corner crossing with NO INTENT to hunt the surrounding private is not trespassing to hunt.
b. The GF has been instructed to NOT write tickets for corner crossing.
c. I know of one over-zealous warden that scratched a ticket for it last year, and it was promptly ripped up and done away with.
d. Judge Castor in Albany county heard a corner crossing case and found in favor of the person who crossed the corner, but unfortunately was not at a high enough level to set precedent.
As JLS pointed out, it would be extremely difficult to move legislation forward to clarify corner crossing. The landowners don't want to see it taken to court, as they have the most to lose. Unfortunately, the vast majority of Sportsmen are too passive, disorganized, cheap (look at how they howl about license fees), and lack the fundamental drive it would take to move this kind of legislation forward.
This isn't an issue where a couple motivated sportsmen can throw their coffee money together and ask their friends neighbor, who is an attorney, to scribble out some legislation. This one will take considerable money, and the absolute best access/public lands savvy attorney money can buy. Hell, its a big ask to get people to fund WY's AccessYes program...let alone something like this. Also, we're probably only going to ever get one bite at the apple on this issue...and I would want to be damn sure its done correctly.
As to landowners posting public lands, already against the law. I ran into a case last year, on one of my hunts, where this was done.
With a few phone calls to the right people, that landowner was given 2 choices, take the signs down or get a ticket. Other than the 10 minutes it took to take a couple photo's and a couple calls, this didn't disrupt my hunt at all. I drove right around the sign like it wasn't there.
The items you listed have either already been dealt with, or in the case of corner crossing, something that would require a financial and time investment that 99% of sportsmen would not be willing to take on. I'm not tackling that 900 lb gorilla on my own...cant do it.
About everything you listed is already on the books.
1. The FS/BLM have camping limits on public land and do enforce it. Not sure how additional legislation would be of any benefit.
2. Corner crossing in Wyoming is not illegal, but not exactly legal either. Here is what I can tell you about it, since you seem like legal language is important to you:
a. There is State AG opinion, written by a now GF commissioner that states corner crossing with NO INTENT to hunt the surrounding private is not trespassing to hunt.
b. The GF has been instructed to NOT write tickets for corner crossing.
c. I know of one over-zealous warden that scratched a ticket for it last year, and it was promptly ripped up and done away with.
d. Judge Castor in Albany county heard a corner crossing case and found in favor of the person who crossed the corner, but unfortunately was not at a high enough level to set precedent.
As JLS pointed out, it would be extremely difficult to move legislation forward to clarify corner crossing. The landowners don't want to see it taken to court, as they have the most to lose. Unfortunately, the vast majority of Sportsmen are too passive, disorganized, cheap (look at how they howl about license fees), and lack the fundamental drive it would take to move this kind of legislation forward.
This isn't an issue where a couple motivated sportsmen can throw their coffee money together and ask their friends neighbor, who is an attorney, to scribble out some legislation. This one will take considerable money, and the absolute best access/public lands savvy attorney money can buy. Hell, its a big ask to get people to fund WY's AccessYes program...let alone something like this. Also, we're probably only going to ever get one bite at the apple on this issue...and I would want to be damn sure its done correctly.
As to landowners posting public lands, already against the law. I ran into a case last year, on one of my hunts, where this was done.
With a few phone calls to the right people, that landowner was given 2 choices, take the signs down or get a ticket. Other than the 10 minutes it took to take a couple photo's and a couple calls, this didn't disrupt my hunt at all. I drove right around the sign like it wasn't there.
The items you listed have either already been dealt with, or in the case of corner crossing, something that would require a financial and time investment that 99% of sportsmen would not be willing to take on. I'm not tackling that 900 lb gorilla on my own...cant do it.