Utah Supreme Court weighs dispute over roads in federal lands
LINDSAY WHITEHURST Associated Press Updated 59 min ago
... Utah is suing the federal government to guarantee access to the roads that run though large swathes of the state. Environmental groups are pushing back, saying the state is trying to claim every faint track in the desert as a local right of way ...
The case that came before the Utah Supreme Court on Monday deals with a series of nearly two dozen lawsuits filed by the state before the public lands debate began making national headlines. The legal arguments are rooted in a Civil War-era law known as R.S. 2477 that allows states or localities to claim ownership over historic routes crossing public lands.
Congress repealed such right of ways in 1976, but it recognized those roads that were established on lands before national forests were formed or the land was placed into a federal reserve ...
Attorneys for Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance argued before the Utah Supreme Court that the states move to stake their claim came decades too late. They say the lawsuits should have been filed within seven years after the repeal in 1976. State lawyers contend they filed in plenty of time about five years ago because the legal deadline is actually a 12-year window triggered by an event worth suing over ...
http://elkodaily.com/news/state-and-regional/utah-supreme-court-weighs-dispute-over-roads-in-federal-lands/article_81c4698d-8bb9-593b-8d25-9a5bedda319e.html