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Started by Neill_Prater, June 22, 2024, 09:04:55 AM
Quote from: GobbleNut on June 29, 2024, 08:16:37 AMQuote from: dah on June 29, 2024, 12:32:54 AMI cant wait till the states say camping , hiking , driving roads , boating , bird watching , sightseeing , entering , leaving , climbing , taking pictures on federal lands is regulated and restricted to you differently because your house is on the other side of the line . Even though they used the resources from your house side of the line in the federal land for camping , hiking , driving roads , boating , bird watching , sightseeing , entering , leaving , climbing and taking pictures . They already have a name for me , called non resident , proud to be a citizen , I still have that. For any of those things mentioned, restrictions are increasingly being put in place in a lot of places. The common thread in almost all of those instances is that there are too many people doing too many things that are negatively impacting the landscape and resources to a degree that managers have no choice but to put those dreaded restrictions in place. That is not just related to federal lands, but also to any public lands, federal or state, that need protection. It is also not restricted just to nonresidents. Most of those types of restrictions apply to everybody. Regarding equal hunting access to all on federal lands, that issue is waaayyy more complicated than many seem to believe it is. ...And it also opens a waaayy bigger "can of worms" than any of us might think it will. Again, be careful what you wish for...
Quote from: dah on June 29, 2024, 12:32:54 AMI cant wait till the states say camping , hiking , driving roads , boating , bird watching , sightseeing , entering , leaving , climbing , taking pictures on federal lands is regulated and restricted to you differently because your house is on the other side of the line . Even though they used the resources from your house side of the line in the federal land for camping , hiking , driving roads , boating , bird watching , sightseeing , entering , leaving , climbing and taking pictures . They already have a name for me , called non resident , proud to be a citizen , I still have that.
Quote from: PalmettoRon on June 29, 2024, 08:05:17 AMQuote from: dah on June 29, 2024, 12:32:54 AMI cant wait till the states say camping , hiking , driving roads , boating , bird watching , sightseeing , entering , leaving , climbing , taking pictures on federal lands is regulated and restricted to you differently because your house is on the other side of the line . Even though they used the resources from your house side of the line in the federal land for camping , hiking , driving roads , boating , bird watching , sightseeing , entering , leaving , climbing and taking pictures . They already have a name for me , called non resident , proud to be a citizen , I still have that. States have been regulating wildlife on federal lands for many years. The scenarios you propose represent a strawman argument. It is not a new phenomenon for state wildlife agencies to regulate and restrict NR hunting on federal lands.Everyone is paying taxes for the upkeep on federal lands, so no one's access for non hunting or non fishing activities will be restricted. No one is paying the freight to maintain non migratory wildlife in a state other than their own whether on private or federal land. I don't see the strawman argument . We have been loosing our rights before the ink dried on the paper granting them . You know the list . I was an Inspector for 17 years in the capitol of Oklahoma and saw the peoples rights taken away just to replace a ceiling fan , water closet or fix a leak in their own yard . On and on. Restrictions for all to protect the recourse might be warranted as long as it is enforced equally . Federal land hunting and tribal land hunting are very similar. The tribes in Oklahoma challenged the state on their hunting rights on tribal land . They stated they never gave up the right to hunt on tribal land , therefore , no license is required on their lands . Went to court and they won . Therefore they are granted non fee hunting license with some tags . I have never heard anything restricting a hunter who is not native American from hunting tribal land . This is land that was regulated by the Department since the agency was formed and changes were made . Because an agency has been regulating something does not mean that it is untouchable. You admit that everyone is paying taxes for upkeep on federal land but yet support regulating its use differently to the citizens . I just don't feel we bend the knee on property owned by the people for the people to 50 different agency's to restrict as they see fit. I worked for one and saw where that gets you.
Quote from: merriamsman on June 29, 2024, 11:27:49 AMGuys, this issue has already been litigated in the courts. A case concerning differential fees for elk licenses in Montana went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Court reaffirmed Montana's right to regulate resident and nonresident hunters as the state sees fit regardless of land ownership. While this case specifically dealt with license fees, if you read to the bottom it's mentioned that this may be used to regulate hunter numbers. I've attached a screenshot of a summary of the case. I've also attached a link to a more detailed article about the case.https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/436/371/Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
Quote from: merriamsman on June 29, 2024, 12:45:08 PM"Just because the supreme court states the argument isn't supported by the immunities and privileges clause doesn't mean the litigation has been finalized. It just states that the specific clause used in argument is not valid. It means the entity bringing argument before the court chose the wrong basis for its argument. It told them to go back to the drawing board and bring a valid argument."Well, that case was in 1978 and no one has successfully challenged the outcome, so...
Quote from: joey46 on June 28, 2024, 09:24:48 AMQuote from: arkrem870 on June 28, 2024, 09:18:35 AMI wonder what influenced so many non resident hunters to converge on big cypress all of the sudden. Gee I don't know. The WA couple I met at BC was in about 2006. THP was still in short pants. Meateater was still a concept. Nobody even heard of YouTube. I was the only one at the Bear Island camp with a Florida tag on my truck. LOL at the "all of a sudden".
Quote from: arkrem870 on June 28, 2024, 09:18:35 AMI wonder what influenced so many non resident hunters to converge on big cypress all of the sudden.