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Fw: Re: Decision in Utah Lake Case
- To: birdnet@utahbirds.org, ucbnet@utahbirds.org
- Subject: Fw: Re: Decision in Utah Lake Case
- From: "Reed L. Stone" <sage2222 at juno dot com>
- Date: Sat, 6 Dec 2003 07:10:45 -0700
- Reply-to: "Reed L. Stone" <sage2222 at juno dot com>
- Sender: owner-birdnet@utahbirds.org
More on Utah Lake boundary case.
Reed
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Date: Fri, 5 Dec 2003 09:10:25 -0700
Subject: Re: Decision in Utah Lake Case
Message-ID: <3FD04B81.21136.938457D@localhost>
References: <018801c38140$f4873ea0$e0dcdb42@computer>
'Master' to settle lake claims
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Arbiter to determine the official elevation for shore
By Sharon Haddock
Deseret Morning News
PROVO ? A federal judge will appoint a "special
master" to determine the official elevation for Utah
Lake and thereby settle an eight-year battle over
boundary claims on lake shore lands.
The order by U.S. District Judge Dale A. Kimball
has both sides in the dispute claiming victory ? if
only temporarily.
Deputy Attorney General J. Mark Ward said
Kimball's Wednesday ruling essentially rejects
claims by landowners for all lake shore land that
lies above a 4,481 feet elevation stipulation that
was set in July 2002. It will also allow the state a
new opportunity to discuss all of the evidence in
the case, Ward said.
The stipulation was intended as a temporary
agreement until the court could hear additional
testimony in the case. Kimball held a hearing
regarding the stipulation on Oct. 8 and had taken
the matter under advisement until his November
ruling.
Ward said that in the ruling, Kimball "chided" those
landowners who have fenced or diked property
claims that currently extend into areas now
underwater.
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="}
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="}
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="}
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="}
"I hail the ruling for halting a potential ecological
disaster from happening on the lake," Ward said,
"and for letting the state have its long-awaited
day in court to prove the truth about the lake
boundary."
Rulon Gammon, mayor of Vineyard and a property
owner involved in the ongoing legal tussle, said he
believes the judge listened to the landowners. He
and M. Dayle Jeffs, one of the attorneys for the
landowners, argue the state has already had its
day in court on several occasions.
"The state won? I don't see that. I don't see that at
all," Gammon said. "I think the judge saw the
4,481 feet stipulation as a problem, but really I
think he's upheld the landowners' position."
Ward said if the landowners prevail, the public
could be barred from access to all of Provo Bay and
more than 20,000 acres of lake property.
Environmental groups such as the Audubon Society
and Utah Important Bird Area Association say those
properties have historically belonged to the public.
Property owners accuse the state of attempting a
land grab.
Gammon said he was at the hearing and did not
hear Kimball chide anyone.
"He (the judge) suggested that the one man stop
draining," Gammon said. "There was nothing said
about fencing."
In the written ruling, landowners are advised not to
use the 4,481 feet stipulation as the boundary line
when farming, fencing, draining, diking or
dredging.
Gammon said he'd love to see the issue settled so
he and others can move ahead with plans for their
land.
As long as the boundary lines are disputed in court,
no one can sell or develop their property, he said.
Jeffs said the landowners are up against a foe with
unlimited financial and legal resources. He said
landowners are unfairly cast as the bad guys in the
scenario when they are simply trying to protect
their individual rights.
Kimball has set a Jan. 7 deadline for those involved
in the suit to submit names for consideration to be
the special master. He said the special master,
whose cost will be borne by the state "due to the
inefficient manner in which the State has pursued
this case," will be selected by the end of January.
The special master will hear evidence on a parcel-
by-parcel basis for the 50 landowners who remain
party to the suit. The suit originally involved 237
property owners.
Determining just where the lake level sat at the
time of statehood has been difficult because a
survey had not been conducted prior to that time.
Compounding the problem has been the
deterioration of natural water marks due to
fluctuations caused by man-made diversion
structures that aid agricultural, municipal and
industrial uses of lake water. Some believe the
current meander line that fluctuates between 4,489
and 4,492 feet is actually the lake's high water
mark. Many believe the true lake level mirrors the
elevation at which water shareholders and
landowners agree to release water from the lake.
Others say they have photographs and survey
markers that show the high water mark is at least
as low as 4,481 feet or lower.
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