Free: Contests & Raffles.
Northway I see what you are saying, maybe that is a good angle to work on. I guess it depends if the land grant gave them ownership of the property. There was land granted to homesteaders that became private land and much is still private today. If the railroads were granted full ownership then they have property rights. If they have full property rights, instead of trying to trample their property rights and setting a very bad precedent, why not look at other options to keep the land opened up to hunting?Weyerhauser is doing business for a profit. Why not get WDFW / legislators to work out a deal to purchase a conservation/recreational easement to all Weyerhauser lands. Conservation Northwest is buying conservation easements in Eastern Washington from ranchers. The way I understand it ranchers agree to never break up the property for development and get a nice amount for it. They can still ranch, hunt, and pass it on to their kids, but it must stay in one parcel and not be sub-divided or developed. On Weyerhauser lands this would be a win/win for all users, WH still gets to log, and the public still has access.
Quote from: bearpaw on May 01, 2013, 08:08:41 PMNorthway I see what you are saying, maybe that is a good angle to work on. I guess it depends if the land grant gave them ownership of the property. There was land granted to homesteaders that became private land and much is still private today. If the railroads were granted full ownership then they have property rights. If they have full property rights, instead of trying to trample their property rights and setting a very bad precedent, why not look at other options to keep the land opened up to hunting?Weyerhauser is doing business for a profit. Why not get WDFW / legislators to work out a deal to purchase a conservation/recreational easement to all Weyerhauser lands. Conservation Northwest is buying conservation easements in Eastern Washington from ranchers. The way I understand it ranchers agree to never break up the property for development and get a nice amount for it. They can still ranch, hunt, and pass it on to their kids, but it must stay in one parcel and not be sub-divided or developed. On Weyerhauser lands this would be a win/win for all users, WH still gets to log, and the public still has access.Yeah, buying conservation easements will probably be the most effective method. CNW doesn't have deep enough pockets to get into the arena of protecting entire tree farms. Those kind of deals usually involve multiple parties and some sort of participation by government.
Don't me squat? I'm sorry, but I don't speak Ebonics and can't figure out a lot of what you're saying.As far as proving to you that we pay for their deduction, I can't.
Quote from: pianoman9701 on May 02, 2013, 11:04:26 AMDon't me squat? I'm sorry, but I don't speak Ebonics and can't figure out a lot of what you're saying.As far as proving to you that we pay for their deduction, I can't. Ebonics or not, you answered it.Thanks!
Quote from: 6x6in6 on May 02, 2013, 01:55:11 PMQuote from: pianoman9701 on May 02, 2013, 11:04:26 AMDon't me squat? I'm sorry, but I don't speak Ebonics and can't figure out a lot of what you're saying.As far as proving to you that we pay for their deduction, I can't. Ebonics or not, you answered it.Thanks! I get it now. You're a logger, aren't you?
Quote from: pianoman9701 on May 02, 2013, 02:02:59 PMQuote from: 6x6in6 on May 02, 2013, 01:55:11 PMQuote from: pianoman9701 on May 02, 2013, 11:04:26 AMDon't me squat? I'm sorry, but I don't speak Ebonics and can't figure out a lot of what you're saying.As far as proving to you that we pay for their deduction, I can't. Ebonics or not, you answered it.Thanks! I get it now. You're a logger, aren't you?Worse, I work for a developer who is a rather large landholder and who loves to do property tax appeals.
Quote from: Northway on May 02, 2013, 11:14:49 AMQuote from: bearpaw on May 01, 2013, 08:08:41 PMNorthway I see what you are saying, maybe that is a good angle to work on. I guess it depends if the land grant gave them ownership of the property. There was land granted to homesteaders that became private land and much is still private today. If the railroads were granted full ownership then they have property rights. If they have full property rights, instead of trying to trample their property rights and setting a very bad precedent, why not look at other options to keep the land opened up to hunting?Weyerhauser is doing business for a profit. Why not get WDFW / legislators to work out a deal to purchase a conservation/recreational easement to all Weyerhauser lands. Conservation Northwest is buying conservation easements in Eastern Washington from ranchers. The way I understand it ranchers agree to never break up the property for development and get a nice amount for it. They can still ranch, hunt, and pass it on to their kids, but it must stay in one parcel and not be sub-divided or developed. On Weyerhauser lands this would be a win/win for all users, WH still gets to log, and the public still has access.Yeah, buying conservation easements will probably be the most effective method. CNW doesn't have deep enough pockets to get into the arena of protecting entire tree farms. Those kind of deals usually involve multiple parties and some sort of participation by government.I am thinking we need to convince WDFW to lobby the legislature on this. An unusual partnership could be created because all residents of the state would benefit from a conservation easement with Weyerhauser. There are many ways this could be done if people are willing to be resourceful in their thinking.
I think the problem at large is that the current culture is anti-human. It is pro-self sustaining ecosystem. By self sustaning I mean no access.The second problem is entitlement. Hunters feel entitled to the land that publicly owned game is on be it private, State, Federal, Native, or Chinese. The landowner sees the game as theirs, and the Government panders to the anti-human crowd while suckering money from the Hunting public and the landowners, all the while pitting them all against each other. The only final solution is to go vegan.
Quote from: Wenatcheejay on May 02, 2013, 02:36:52 PMI think the problem at large is that the current culture is anti-human. It is pro-self sustaining ecosystem. By self sustaning I mean no access.The second problem is entitlement. Hunters feel entitled to the land that publicly owned game is on be it private, State, Federal, Native, or Chinese. The landowner sees the game as theirs, and the Government panders to the anti-human crowd while suckering money from the Hunting public and the landowners, all the while pitting them all against each other. The only final solution is to go vegan.I disagree completely. I don't feel entitled to any private land which isn't mine. Private landowners should be able to do what they want regardless of my hunting desires, the greenies, or a freakin gopher who happens to be living on it. What I am entitled to is fair laws and their application. When I take a deduction for something on my tax returns, I'd better damned well have earned it. The same goes for others, be they businesses or individuals. If Weyerhaeuser wants the recreational tax exemption, they need to offer recreational use - it's very plain and simple.
Quote from: pianoman9701 on May 02, 2013, 02:48:03 PMQuote from: Wenatcheejay on May 02, 2013, 02:36:52 PMI think the problem at large is that the current culture is anti-human. It is pro-self sustaining ecosystem. By self sustaning I mean no access.The second problem is entitlement. Hunters feel entitled to the land that publicly owned game is on be it private, State, Federal, Native, or Chinese. The landowner sees the game as theirs, and the Government panders to the anti-human crowd while suckering money from the Hunting public and the landowners, all the while pitting them all against each other. The only final solution is to go vegan.I disagree completely. I don't feel entitled to any private land which isn't mine. Private landowners should be able to do what they want regardless of my hunting desires, the greenies, or a freakin gopher who happens to be living on it. What I am entitled to is fair laws and their application. When I take a deduction for something on my tax returns, I'd better damned well have earned it. The same goes for others, be they businesses or individuals. If Weyerhaeuser wants the recreational tax exemption, they need to offer recreational use - it's very plain and simple. But, you have morals & ethics. The world is selfish, and vegans should be hunted.
Quote from: pianoman9701 on May 02, 2013, 02:48:03 PMQuote from: Wenatcheejay on May 02, 2013, 02:36:52 PMI think the problem at large is that the current culture is anti-human. It is pro-self sustaining ecosystem. By self sustaning I mean no access.The second problem is entitlement. Hunters feel entitled to the land that publicly owned game is on be it private, State, Federal, Native, or Chinese. The landowner sees the game as theirs, and the Government panders to the anti-human crowd while suckering money from the Hunting public and the landowners, all the while pitting them all against each other. The only final solution is to go vegan.I disagree completely. I don't feel entitled to any private land which isn't mine. Private landowners should be able to do what they want regardless of my hunting desires, the greenies, or a freakin gopher who happens to be living on it. What I am entitled to is fair laws and their application. When I take a deduction for something on my tax returns, I'd better damned well have earned it. The same goes for others, be they businesses or individuals. If Weyerhaeuser wants the recreational tax exemption, they need to offer recreational use - it's very plain and simple.Recreational tax exemption, exactly what are you talking about?