LENGTH: 16111 words
SYMPOSIUM: PUBLIC LANDS MANAGEMENT AT THE CROSSROADS: BALANCING INTERESTS IN THE 21st CENTURY: SYMPOSIUM ARTICLE: RECREATION WARS FOR OUR NATURAL RESOURCES
NAME: By Jan G. Laitos, *Rachael B. Reiss**
BIO: * © Jan G. Laitos, 2004. John A. Carver, Jr. Professor of Law and Director, Environmental and Natural Resources Law Program, University of Denver College of Law.
** © Rachael B. Reiss, 2004. J.D. 2004, University of Denver College of Law.
HIGHLIGHT:
Natural resources law has progressed through three separate eras - from laws encouraging the exploitation of minerals, timber, and commodities, to laws designed to control the environmental abuses associated with this first era of extraction, to the current era, where preservation and recreation are fast becoming the dominant uses of our natural resources on public lands. In this current era, there are competing preservationist and recreationist interests in conflict. Pure preservationists wish to limit low impact, nonmotorized hikers. Low impact, nonmotorized hikers seek to exclude high impact, nonmotorized mountain bikers and commercial nonmotorized operations. Both low impact and high impact nonmotorized recreationists fight to prevent motorized recreationists from taking over the public lands. Federal government agencies and then courts must sort out these competing and conflicting uses that increasingly dominate the public lands landscape during this third era. This Article considers the kinds of disputes that have arisen among preservationists and recreationists and addresses how courts have attempted to sort out and resolve these conflicts. The Article concludes that a dominant-use model is emerging, which rejects the notion that multiple preservation and recreation uses might be compatible within the same general area. In this model, preservation coupled with low impact, nonmotorized forms of recreation becomes the primary use of natural resources.
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