The rock-hurling spat that could upend Colorado's river access rules [View all]
https://coloradosun.com/2022/12/16/colorado-supreme-court-river-access-lawsuit/
The rock-hurling spat that could upend Colorados river access rules
The Colorado Supreme Court will wade into a technical aspect in angler Roger Hills lawsuit arguing Colorado rivers are public property if they were used for commercial activity like floating timber at statehood.
Jason Blevins
3:50 AM MST on Dec 16, 2022
Its been more than a decade since a riverside property owner hurled rocks at angler Roger Hill as he waded and stalked trout in the Arkansas River above the Royal Gorge.
The ripples from that splashy spat could upset Colorados murky river access rules.
The Colorado Supreme Court this week decided it would take up the case of Hill, an 80-year-old angler who is suing the landowner who threatened him, arguing that landowners cant own riverbeds and the public has a right to wade through waterways.
The Colorado Supreme Court this week decided it would hear Hills argument that he has a right to sue the landowner, a technical aspect of the lawsuit he filed in 2018. Hills ability to sue for access and possibly create a legal precedent that codifies Colorados tenuous rules for floating and wading through private property is a point of contention for Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, who has waded himself into Hills case, arguing that shifts in river access policy should be handled by lawmakers in a public process, not the courts.
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