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Old 12-26-2006, 05:42 PM
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Kix Kix is offline
Machiavelli Incarnate
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Outside OKC
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nathanbforrest45 View Post
Kix, the problem is the rivers we are talking about here are small rivers, rivers that one might wade, its doubtful an oil spill would ever occur on such a river. The issue is that for the history of this country anyone was able to move down a river and fish the river. Now these people are claiming, as under British law, they own the river from bank to bank and everything in it. Also, in the past even when the river was privately owned the owners never stopped sports fisherman from using the river (the law has always been if I own both sides you can float down the river, you can fish in it but you can't walk on the river bottom on my section of the river). The new owners don't want to farm or ranch, they want to own the land and in some cases will not allow fishermen to even float down their portion of the river, much less wade the river.

Here in East Tennessee we don't have that problem yet. Most of the fly fishing streams are in the National Forest and the ones that are not have owners that don't care if you walk down the middle of the stream fishing. As these farmers and ranchers retire and their farms are sold off as Yankee vacation developments if Oregon is allowed to implement this the same will occur here I am sure.
One of the worst inland spills in this country occurred right here in Oklahoma on and around a small waterway known as "Tar Creek". A spill does not need to be oil related in order to be severly hazardous to the environment and the waterway does not need to be an ocean, sea or major river for it to experience an environmental disaster such as a spill. If it's deep enough for float a toy boat down stream it's deep enough for some unidentifiable company to dump barrels of some form of toxin in it. In fact it doesn't even have to be the result of anything man did. It could be something as simple as some chemical or other natural resource seeping into it from some tiny fissure in the earth beneath the creak/stream/river and damaging everything down stream. These are the kinds of spills I was referring to so I think I'd still take that approach.
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