Interesting case here...
9/17/2006 11:58:19 PM
wouldn't you support this because you think the right to property is the most fundamental right?after all, fishing and hunting on public property is tantamount to communism.
9/18/2006 1:31:26 AM
i like public/gov. property in many cases. it ensures we have nice parks to visit.
9/18/2006 1:48:24 AM
i like parks
9/18/2006 9:49:09 AM
parks are nice and coolas far as I'm concerned waterways=highwayspublic domainwater on private land however is just that, private[Edited on September 18, 2006 at 10:07 AM. Reason : .]
9/18/2006 10:07:24 AM
Of course property rights are fundamental, but in this case I disagree that the people own the waterway. Now we get to have legal wrangling over this for a decade or so before we decide how exactly we can settle this by declaring some/most waterways to be public property.
9/18/2006 10:10:53 AM
9/18/2006 10:36:22 AM
9/18/2006 11:26:14 AM
Most local districts require you to provide road access across your property if your property blocks a neighbor from accessing a road directly. This does not give you the right to plant crops on said road, only to drive/walk on it.
9/18/2006 11:51:14 AM
Holy shit this is ridiculous. I lived right on the Roanoke River, but I never thought I had fucking claim on the section of the river out to the middle.But on the other hand, I can see why these guys would get in trouble for going into this private lake. My boss owns a lake and sells access passes to it on his land. He doesn't owe anybody a road through his land to his lake since its his fucking lake. But to transpose that limitation onto open waters is fucking ridiculous.Probably should use the standard levels of the river as a basis for access. Flooding is a special case. I mighta been able to fish in the Lowe's parking lot in Rocky Mount during Hurricane Floyd, but that doesn't mean its the norm.
9/18/2006 12:48:26 PM
^ yeah... flooding is a compeltely different ball of waxdepends on if it is navigable or notif it is navigable your deed only reaches to the shoreif it is non navigable you have property rights to the centerline of the waterwaybeaches and tidal affected waterways are different alsobodies of water affected by tides are considered public domain (owned by the govt) up to the high tide mark which after the high tide mark, it's deeded property to the owner[Edited on September 18, 2006 at 1:17 PM. Reason : .]
9/18/2006 1:16:58 PM