James Riley
Banned
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2015
- Messages
- 1,821
I'm not sure your point on statement one. The states have been granted ownership of navigable waterways to be held in trust for the public. The law review may be 32 years old, but I've seen nothing since then that has overturned the numerous federal court decisions declaring that states own the navigable waterways, including the streambeds, and those are to be held in trust for public use.
Just because Colorado has gone contrary to what federal law/courts say they should do doesn't mean that's the way it should be.
The western states were granted ownership under the equal footing (with eastern states) doctrine; just like the school trust and land grant lands can be dealt with by state statute/regulation in the public interest, as they see fit, including sale or recognition of private ownership rights, so too the state can acknowledge private ownership of the bed and banks of the river while retaining ownership of the water. On that point, the states have their own water law too, which can allow a river to be dried up, much like the lower Arkansas is in summer. CA, ID, MT have chosen one route; CO another, and their way is NOT contrary to federal law. Just like ID leases grazing rights on school trust lands but the leased lands are otherwise open to the public for hunting, fishing etc, while CO grants the grazing lease AND excludes the public from entry when those lands are so leased. "Public Trust" in this case is delegated to the states. Your own law review article does not argue that what CO has done is contrary to federal law or legal decisions. It merely notes a trend in some states like CA toward a recreation right which can be supported in federal law by a state that wants to make it. In other words, CA is in good stead with federal law if it wants to move in the direction it is moving. The question of what "should be" is up to the States. I have heard of a federal reserved water right for fish and wildlife and trees, but that is a water right, not a bed or banks land ownership or easement right.
Reading the "Conclusion" of your law review article pretty much sums it up.
Last edited: