Just announced. Nice that people advocating for the preservation of public lands get to participate in the case and their knowledgeable voices are not shut out.
Is this a road? This is a San Juan County “highway” claim in the Bridger Jack Mesa proposed wilderness south of Moab.
From KSL https://www.ksl.com/article/50094211/utah-kane-county-suffer-supremecour...
SALT LAKE CITY — The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday ruled against taking up an appeal by the state of Utah and Kane County over whether two environmental organizations have the right to intervene in a controversial roads case.
The state of Utah and Kane County had fought a 2019 decision by the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals that agreed the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance and the Wilderness Society had a right to plead their case over so-called RS2477 roads carved out in the Civil War era to develop a transportation system in the West.
"We're pleased the Supreme Court denied these petitions and look forward to vigorously defending our members and the United States' interests in the wildest, most remote corners of southern Utah," said Stephen Bloch, legal director for the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance. "The state's litigation, claiming highways in stream bottoms and cow paths, has always been about who controls federal public lands in Utah, with the goal to riddle these landscapes with roads and make them ineligible for congressional wilderness designation. This absolutely cuts to the core of our mission."
Multiple counties and states across the West have filed right-of-way claims on thousands of these roads, asserting they have been an integral and vital part of ranching, mining and residents' access as part of a remote transportation network that needs to remain in place to foster movement of both people and animals.
Claims to the roads have been entangled in litigation for years and in this latest case, both Kane County and the state of Utah argued unsuccessfully that the conservation groups had no place to intervene.
But Phil Hanceford, conservation director at the Wilderness Society, said the court rightly recognized the environmental groups' rights to have a voice in the case.
"Today's decision not to review our participation in this important case recognized that our input is valuable when decisions are made about the impacts development could have on our shared public lands," Hanceford said.
"There are appropriate places for roads, but cutting through Utah's spectacular red rock wildlands and creek beds are not those places."
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Today's announcement from SUWA's site https://suwa.org/supreme-court-declines-to-review-court-decision-on-cont...
Info on the RS 2477 Issue https://suwa.org/issues/phantom-roads-r-s-2477/
It sounds innocuous enough. Revised Statute 2477, enacted as part of the 1866 Mining Law, simply provides that “[t]he right of way for the construction of highways across public lands, not reserved for public uses, is hereby granted.” Now, the State of Utah and its counties are trying to wield this simple phrase as a means of invalidating millions of acres of proposed wilderness.
Congress repealed RS 2477 when it passed the Federal Land Policy and Management Act in 1976, but any claims deemed valid in 1976 may remain valid. Thirty-six years after RS 2477’s repeal, in 2012, the State of Utah filed more than 25 lawsuits in federal district court in an attempt to gain rights to approximately 14,000 “highways” totaling 35,965 miles.
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: Ken D. Portland_ken
on Monday, January 25, 2021 – 09:07 pm
Well, I can picture a large
Well, I can picture a large cartoon roadrunner cruising through and kicking up a cloud of dust.