Monday, March 23, 2015

Nevada county gets help in road fight

RENO, Nev. – Nevada’s attorney general for the first time is joining a rural county in a 15-year-old legal battle with the U.S. government and environmentalists over control of a remote national forest road – one of the longest running of many similar disputes across the West. The states of Arizona and Idaho have mounted claims to such roads before, and Utah’s attorney general has filed dozens of lawsuits in recent years asserting county rights of way on more than 14,000 roads on federal land. Nevada hasn’t tried to intervene since the federal government first sued Elko County in 1999 to halt the reopening of a washed-out road near the Idaho border for fear of harm to the threatened bull trout in the Jarbidge River. But newly elected Attorney General Adam Laxalt announced the change of course this week when his office filed a request in U.S. District Court in Reno for friend-of-the-court status in the proceedings. “Nevada’s voice deserves to be heard,” according to the filing. U.S. District Judge Miranda Du has scheduled an April 27 evidentiary hearing in a case that centers on the interpretation of an 1866 law that established so-called RS 2477 roads by granting states and counties the right of way to build highways on federal lands. The goal was to help settle the West and applied in some cases even to crude paths, such as wagon trails. Congress repealed such rights of way in 1976, but recognized those roads that were established on lands before national forests were formed or the land was placed into a federal reserve. Elko County’s lawyers maintain the Jarbidge South Canyon road enjoys such status because miners and ranchers traveled the route in the 1890s before President Teddy Roosevelt effectively established what is now part of the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest in 1909. Environmentalists argue that’s not necessarily the case. Other states that have proved their claims to RS 2477 roads did so under their own state laws that allowed for establishing public highways on the basis of “continuous public use,” said Michael Freeman, a Denver-based lawyer for The Wilderness Society who has been involved in the court battle from the beginning. However, Nevada law in effect at the time required action by the Elko County Board of Commissioners to establish a public highway and the county has no evidence that ever occurred, he said. The case is unique because, while the U.S. government denies Elko County has established such a right of way, the Forest Service signed a settlement agreement in 2011 that included its assurances it no longer would challenge the county’s claim it exists...more

3 comments:

Brewster said...

I hope this message gets to Frank DuBois as I couldn\'t find any contact information on The Westerner BlogSpot.
Frank
There is good news for the OHV advocates in California that could also spill over to all of the different forest service districts, depending on the outcome. This is a legal challenge to the Travel Management Plan of the USFS.
https://us-mg204.mail.yahoo.com/neo/launch?.partner=sbc&retry_ssl=1

Thank you for all of the time and effort you put into The Westerner BlogSpot.

Bruce Brazil
CORVA assistant director

Frank DuBois said...

Thanks Bruce, but I can't get your link to work...keeps sending me to an ATT sign in.

Frank DuBois said...

I did find this on your website:
http://corva.org/FS.Lawsuit/

Is that what you are talking about?