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Zookeeper
December 19th, 2006, 08:26 PM
December 17, 2006
Clash Over Canyon Near Death Valley
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 10:46 p.m. ET

BALLARAT, Calif. (AP) -- Whoever named Surprise Canyon got it right. Mere miles from bone-dry Death Valley, the canyon cradles two unexpected jewels: a gushing mountain stream and what's left of a once-bustling silver mining town.

These treasures have attracted visitors for decades -- and now they're at the heart of a legal battle between off-road drivers and environmentalists.

Five years ago environmentalists successfully sued to get the narrow canyon and its spring-fed waterfalls closed to vehicles, arguing that the federal Bureau of Land Management was not carrying out its duty to protect the land.

In response, more than 80 off-roaders purchased tiny pockets of private land at the top of the canyon, and now they're suing the federal government for access to their property, arguing that the canyon is a public right of way.

It is one of several recent cases that could unlock thousands of miles of roads in federally protected parks around the West.

The fight over Surprise Canyon boils down to whether the rights of private property owners trump the protection of a fragile oasis on public land. The off-roaders have dusted off a Civil War-era mining law that places the public access rights of local governments and private individuals above the rights of the federal government.

Environmental groups allege that, before they won protection for the area in 2001, off-roaders destroyed the canyon by cutting trees, dumping boulders in the water and using winches to drag their Jeeps up the waterfalls. They are seeking to intervene in the off-roaders' lawsuit.

Since 2001, the canyon has regenerated, with new vegetation attracting wildlife.

''It's almost unbelievable what's up there. It's precious, it's pristine,'' said Tom Budlong, an activist who regularly hikes the canyon about 200 miles northeast of his Los Angeles home. ''I shudder to think of the extreme four-wheelers getting back into the canyon and making a road where there is now no road.''

Once there was a road -- a 130-year-old gravel route that flash floods washed away nearly two decades ago. Off-roaders continued driving up the rugged canyon stream bed to reach the ghost town of Panamint City, which has easily explorable mine shafts, the remains of a smelter, some mine carts and a few cabins.

The canyon grows from an arid plain just north of the one-house desert outpost of Ballarat and climbs 3,700 feet over five miles to Panamint City, inside Death Valley National Park. Most of Surprise Canyon is outside the park boundary.

Flycatchers flit among thick stands of willows and cottonwood trees that crowd along the stream. Less common birds have been spotted since the area was closed to vehicles, notably the endangered Inyo California towhee, said Chris Kassar, an Arizona-based biologist with the Center for Biological Diversity. Other sensitive species such as the Panamint daisy and the Panamint alligator lizard also are flourishing, she said.

Kassar and others believe the canyon's ecosystem could crumble if the off-roaders prevail in their lawsuit, filed in August.

The off-roaders argue that, under an 1866 mining law, the canyon still is a public right of way even though the road is long gone.

''The issue is not off-roading and environmental issues. The legal issue is access,'' said plaintiffs' attorney Karen Budd-Falen. ''If the road was once there and it's eroded out it's still a public access. The fact that it has been flooded out doesn't make the legal issue go away.''

Similar arguments are being used in right-of-way lawsuits elsewhere in the West.

In 2004, San Juan County in Utah sued the National Park Service, claiming a creek in Canyonlands National Park was once a county road. Environmental groups have sought to intervene in that case, which is before the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Inyo County recently sued the same agency over four dirt roads in Death Valley National Park, and San Bernardino County sued over 14 roads in the Mojave National Preserve. Both suits allege the roads were county property before the federal government closed them.

Off-roaders say they just want to visit their property and explore the ghost town.

''I respect what was there and I want it to be there for my kids to see,'' said Dale Walton, a member of the Bakersfield Trailblazers off-roading club and a property owner.

''I resent people who go in and destroy things, but I resent more people that say 'You just can't go in there because we don't want you to go in there,''' he said.

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Trail_Fanatic
December 19th, 2006, 09:09 PM
This could ahve implications here in Michigan with our Seasonal and Unimproved roads. If they win, it sounds like the easement would trump the environmental concerns. That would be a BIG boon for some of the roads around here. I know they're legal for travel but to do so would be to 'create' and erosive condition.

If they lose, same **** - different day.

Renegade II
December 19th, 2006, 10:41 PM
Have you ever seen what log skidder and hydro axe tires do to the soil conditions? That's what smokes my tail. They tear up more foliage and ground in a day than all of us GLFWDA members might accidentially disturb in a lifetime, but because they are big business and have a political lobby group $$$$$ they get away with it.

:phittie1100:

kb8ymf
December 20th, 2006, 09:31 AM
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Renegade II &#064; Dec 19 2006, 10&#58;41 PM) 20762</div>

but because they are big business and have a political lobby group &#036;&#036;&#036;&#036;&#036; they get away with it.
[/b]

Ding, ding, ding ding, we HAVE a winner Bob&#33;

This is what Certified Forest&#39;s is all about too. The only way we&#39;ll be allowed to recreate on public land is if we can do it without disturbing the &#39;sensitive&#39; ecosystem by moving some dirt and gravel around.
Remember too, we have our own battle brewing here with the DNR&#39;s new management plan for adding 25% more miles. It is sorely lacking content for full size vehicles. Has anyone/everyone written letters about this looming disaster?
j-kb8ymf

Renegade II
December 20th, 2006, 12:19 PM
It&#39;s been about 5 years since I&#39;ve been up there, are the lumber companies still clear cutting sections in the Huron-Manistee? If so..... someone needs to go hiking and video tape the damage that they do to the "sensitive" ecosystem. Even when if some cutters do flatten the ruts out after they leave, they still leave exposed unvegitated soil that with the first rain will run off into god knows where.

I remember an area just a bit to the east of the Cabrfee entrance that was being clear cut after we had the first or second Jeep Jamboree. They did more damage to that trail in one day than we did with over 100 Jeeps in two days. And unlike us they did not fill in and compact any ruts they may have left. :angry:

edit---&#62; :phittie1100:

Trail_Fanatic
December 20th, 2006, 10:19 PM
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(kb8ymf &#064; Dec 20 2006, 09&#58;31 AM) 20780</div>

Ding, ding, ding ding, we HAVE a winner Bob&#33;
[/b]

LMFAO :lol:

<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Renegade II &#064; Dec 20 2006, 12&#58;19 PM) 20794</div>

It&#39;s been about 5 years since I&#39;ve been up there, are the lumber companies still clear cutting sections in the Huron-Manistee? If so..... someone needs to go hiking and video tape the damage that they do to the "sensitive" ecosystem. Even when if some cutters do flatten the ruts out after they leave, they still leave exposed unvegitated soil that with the first rain will run off into god knows where.

I remember an area just a bit to the east of the Cabrfee entrance that was being clear cut after we had the first or second Jeep Jamboree. They did more damage to that trail in one day than we did with over 100 Jeeps in two days. And unlike us they did not fill in and compact any ruts they may have left. :angry:

edit---&#62; :phittie1100:
[/b]

They&#39;re still at it.
Now they say they&#39;re doing it to create Karner Blue Butterfly habitat though.
You can say goodbye to a LOT of forest, they&#39;re just ramping up.

Do you remember anywhere from Jamboree that you&#39;d like to see designated for 4x4 use?
PM me . . .