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'Right to roam' movement fights to give the commons back to the public

SoftTalker
234 replies
1d4h

I think the main reason people get nervous about "the public" roaming their land is the liability and the personal injury lawsuit industry in the USA. If I let someone cross my land and he trips on a tree root and breaks his leg, now I'm possibly facing a lawsuit.

Also, what are they allowed to do? Simply crossing the land is one thing. Around here many private landowners are dealing with homeless encampments that are not only a liability but a sanitary issue, as they tend to be full of litter, needles, food waste, and human waste and end up attracting vermin.

NeoTar
94 replies
1d3h

Also, what are they allowed to do?

If the law in England were to be similar to the one in Scotland (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_Outdoor_Access_Code), then "access rights can be exercised for recreational purposes, some educational activities and certain commercial purposes, and for crossing over land and water."

"Access rights do not extend to motorised activities... Access rights do not include the right to hunt, shoot or fish... Gathering items such as mushrooms or berries for commercial gain is not covered by access rights; but the customary picking of wild fungi and berries for personal consumption is not prohibited under the code."

"Wild camping, defined as lightweight camping by small numbers of people staying no more than two or three nights in any one place, is permitted under the code. ... The code requires that campers leave no trace, and must take away all litter, remove all traces of the tent pitch and of any open fire, and not cause any pollution"

So, homeless encampments are not permitted since these would not fall under this code.

Nextgrid
51 replies
1d2h

are not permitted since these would not fall under this code

The thing is, the law/code only matters if it is enforced. I have little faith this will be enforced enough to be a deterrent when much more important things like shoplifting, bike or phone theft have effectively been decriminalized by lack of enforcement.

Edit: to be clear I am just playing devil's advocate here. I am in favor of "right to roam" laws, just pointing out that restrictions in the law by themselves don't mean anything unless they're followed up by adequate enforcement to deter the prohibited behavior and systemic changes to make said behavior unnecessary in the first place (in case of homelessness for example).

readyman
44 replies
1d2h

Scotland doesn't have the extreme levels of inequality that result in extreme levels of shoplifting, and therefore the shoplifting comparison doesn't hold up.

UberFly
29 replies
1d1h

Inequality isn't the correct term. It's poverty, drug abuse and mental illness. Poverty still isn't a green light to commit crimes though. There are plenty of places to seek help legally. Crime is as much a cultural problem as anything else.

antisthenes
13 replies
1d1h

Inequality isn't the correct term. It's poverty, drug abuse and mental illness.

Just curious where you think those last 3 things stem from.

Drug abuse and mental illness are much more prevalent in those worst off economically. Poverty (in developed countries) is almost always a result of inequality due to bad policies (lack of social safety nets).

Crime is as much a cultural problem as anything else.

Right, part of crime is cultural, and part is economic. But culture is also determined by lack of access to economic opportunities.

gottorf
12 replies
1d

Drug abuse and mental illness are much more prevalent in those worst off economically. Poverty (in developed countries) is almost always a result of inequality

If the first half of your statement is true, then why do the billions of people subsisting on a few dollars a day around the world do not have society-wide problems with drug abuse and mental illness? Or are you implying that this causation only happens in developed countries?

What can you do to refute the idea that instead of drug abuse and mental illness being caused poverty, the same factors that predispose one to drug abuse and mental illness also predispose one to poverty?

culture is also determined by lack of access to economic opportunities

Similarly, it's rather the other way around; lack of access to economic opportunities is caused by a culture that values human capital less. Of course, the two compound over time; but history is empirically full of examples of minority cultural groups that were discriminated against (whether legally, socially, or otherwise) but nevertheless succeeded economically due to the culture placing a high value on human capital[0].

[0]: Sowell, T. Discrimination and Disparities.

thaumasiotes
10 replies
1d

then why do the billions of people subsisting on a few dollars a day around the world do not have society-wide problems with drug abuse and mental illness? Or are you implying that this causation only happens in developed countries?

As stupid as the idea that inequality in itself causes these problems is, it doesn't have trouble explaining why this would only happen in developed countries.

Historic levels of inequality, including urban "anyone can easily see that their downstairs neighbor is a hundred times richer than they are" inequality, were much greater than modern ones and involved a lot less social pathology; maybe look in that direction.

What can you do to refute the idea that instead of drug abuse and mental illness being caused poverty, the same factors that predispose one to drug abuse and mental illness also predispose one to poverty?

Looking for a root cause seems unnecessary for this question; mental illness can easily just cause poverty directly.

marcosdumay
5 replies
1d

Historic levels of inequality, including urban "anyone can easily see that their downstairs neighbor is a hundred times richer than they are" inequality, were much greater than modern ones and involved a lot less social pathology; maybe look in that direction.

That one is absolutely not true.

gottorf
3 replies
23h48m

Which part's not true, that inequality was lesser in the past, or that social pathology is more today?

marcosdumay
2 replies
5h29m

Inequality was lesser in the past. Way less.

"Social pathology" is way too undefined a term for me to argue with.

thaumasiotes
0 replies
4h59m

You'll want to be careful about what you measure.

For example, we generally take Forbes as an authority on who's rich, but really rich people tend to be excluded from consideration, because Forbes can only measure certain kinds of wealth, and even when people's wealth mostly exists in that form, it can be hard to see.

Don't confuse a convenience metric with actual inequality.

gottorf
0 replies
4h43m

Inequality was lesser in the past. Way less.

I'm struggling to understand this one. Are you talking about the times of the cavemen, when I suppose everyone was equally materially poor? And yet you had other kinds of inequality back then, such as a bigger and stronger caveman being able to kill you and take your stuff, since there wasn't such a thing as a society or rule of law to protect you.

Or are you referring to the vast majority of people who for the vast majority of recorded history who lived in systems that elevated certain bloodlines above others, legally and culturally, and sometimes even to the status of gods? Certainly you cannot claim that, say, Queen Victoria and the common Englishman were more equal than King Charles is to his average subject, in every possible way.

thaumasiotes
0 replies
1d

Why do you think we no longer have servants?

__loam
2 replies
23h57m

Poverty can also cause mental illness.

thaumasiotes
1 replies
23h52m

This is pretty unlikely from a Darwinian perspective.

s1artibartfast
0 replies
23h54m

I think the direction of causality does bring into question what the expectations are for an egalitarian society is.

Is a society just if people with drug abuse, mental illness, and general dysfunction have equality of outcomes?

Of course, this simplistic debate belies the fact that all of these attributes have multifactorial causes, and most are in cyclical feedback with each other.

Dysfunction begets poverty begets dysfunction. No single intervention is socially curative outside of storybook logic.

Getting on my podium, I think that these factors are worse in developed societies than poor one (which often have greater inequality) for numerous reasons:

First would be the visibility of inequality. Next would be culture of material consumption. Next would be breakdown of social community (and the efficacy of social norms).

I think this explains why this types of behaviors are seen more in places like the US, which has a longstanding culture of materialism and individualism. I think it also explains why the behavior is more pronounced for outgroups and fractured broken communities.

This further explains why some groups within the US with strong social community have relatively low crime rates despite very poor economic conditions

readyman
0 replies
23h50m

If the first half of your statement is true, then why do the billions of people subsisting on a few dollars a day around the world do not have society-wide problems with drug abuse and mental illness?

They don't live in societies with extreme inequality and precarity. Under capitalism, inequality is the problem, not merely poverty.

Schnitz
9 replies
1d1h

The problem is the large amount of people with nothing to loose and no realistic path to a better future. If your day to day reality is as bad as jail, you might as well shoplift or camp illegally or whatever. What are they going to do? House and feed you?

chaostheory
8 replies
1d

There are plenty of government programs and nonprofits that help the needy. They work for 80% of the homeless.

The issue with the chronically homeless who make up the other 20% is that they refuse the help because they don't want to follow rules such as curfews and no drugs & alcohol. The main reason for this is that most of them suffer from mental illness. This is a medical issue.

readyman
7 replies
23h40m

You're forgetting the tremendous number of homeless who simply die.

Also, the US is incapable of even reproducing itself, which falls far short of my definition of "works."

ohmyiv
2 replies
20h41m

You're forgetting the tremendous number of homeless who simply die.

A lot of that is exactly for the reason the previous comment points out: mental health issues that unhoused people refuse to get treated. As someone who now works in that field, that person is correct. There is no way for case managers to "make" them get help. If the person is having a non-violent incident, then no one can really assist unless the person wants help. Even in some violent cases, police and PETs (Psychiatric Emergency Teams) can't help.

I work with the unhoused in LA, a city with one of the highest unhoused population counts. There is very little we can do if the people don't want help, which is a bigger majority than you assume. We also have a housing shortage for people that can afford rent, let alone landlords willing to help the unhoused. You make it sound easy, but it seems to me, you actually have no real experience in the field, which may be fine. But don't say a system isn't working when the services system can't help those that really need it.

Sure, maybe the US government can do more. They provide a lot of our funding and we also get a lot of assistance from private donors. But at this point it's yelling into the wind. Without fully supportive communities and government assistance, we're really moving nowhere. And it isn't just some shortcomings of the government. It's also private property NIMBY types that don't want services in their area. Example: our main office is in the Venice/Santa Monica area. We have rules and regulations brought upon by local NIMBYs on what time we can be there, who can be there, what services we can provide, and more. So while we help the unhoused in that area, we have offices elsewhere that some clients can't make it to, which reduces the assistance they are able to receive.

So while it's easy to say "it isn't working", how hard has everyone else really tried? I don't see many people quitting their dev jobs to make 1/2, sometimes 1/4 of the wage to do a more strenuous job. The only reason I did is because the agency I now work for also helped me when I was on the streets and they're willing to pay me more because of my lived experience. I still do web dev and IT stuff on the side to make up some of the wages I lost transitioning, but it was somewhat difficult to adjust to.

So, what are your experiences helping the unhoused?

How have you been able to help those around you?

How were you able to help those that refused?

Do you have a contact list of agencies that may help theunhoused? If so, can we collaborate so hopefully more people can get assistance? Well, maybe not, since you're probably in a different part of the world than me, but here's a starting point for the LA area: https://www.lahsa.org/get-help. Also on that site is a careers page that has a full listing of agencies in the different SPAs in LA county.

But if you know of national agencies that can assist the unhoused population, please, let me know. We are in dire need of real assistance, not empty words.

Edit: spelling

tbihl
1 replies
19h10m

We would, as a culture, have to make and act on the value judgment that dying in the streets, paired with all the other social ills that accompany having long-term homelessness, is sufficiently bad to justify involuntarily committing the mentally ill to secure facilities. Do you see that happening?

ohmyiv
0 replies
17h54m

That doesn't have to happen when locals can help their local community. Do you see yourself trying to bring community together to help? Have you tried discussing homelessness with public fugures? Celebrities? Anyone besides complaining that nothing works?

Grassroots movements start at a local area and grow, particularly where government doesnt help. What have you done besides make an excuse for taking action? Do you really think that being a random person complaining on the internet is actually helping the people you say need help?

I noticed you didn't answer any of my questions. Just filled space with empty words.

Again, I ask, what have you done to help unhoused people? Besides finding excuses why it won't happen, then complaining nothing gets done.

What you don't seem to understand is sitting around comfy and cozy in your residence complaining about stuff doesn't actually solve anything.

What needs to happen is individuals, such as yourself, actually need to try and help the unhoused instead of crying that the government doesn't do enough or that people as a whole will never make it happen.

How much of your life has actually been spent assist8ng others instead of being cynical and doubting? How many excuses have you made up in order to not help? I get that complaining on the internet is "cool" nowadays, but with society growing larger, we need more people to help instead of crying and whining about every step of the process (see my previous comment about NIMBYs). But everyone just wants to complain and be seen as someone who cares instead of actually doing it.

So again, what have you done to help? Because being upset nothing/not enough is being done and finding excuses to not do anything is quite frankly, useless.

chaostheory
2 replies
21h15m

I'm not forgetting them. They fall into the category of 20% of the homeless who are mentally ill, and who need to be supervised in a safe medical facility. However, we cannot do that without their consent, and they will not give their consent in the majority of cases for the same reasons that they refuse help from government programs and non-profits. I'm also not sure that these people, suffering from mental illnesses like schizophrenia, are cognizant enough for giving consent.

tbihl
1 replies
19h12m

However, we cannot do that without their consent

they will not give their consent in the majority of cases for the same reasons that they refuse help from government programs and non-profits.

...because of the underlying mental illness.

Do you really believe that you can get consent from this group of people who you say should be in medical facilities, when they have self-sorted into that group mostly by being too unwilling or unable to conform to any rules or structures?

chaostheory
0 replies
19h6m

No, which is exactly why I pointed it out as a problem.

tbihl
0 replies
19h16m

Also, the US is incapable of even reproducing itself, which falls far short of my definition of "works."

Not to say this is a non-issue (it's hugely important), but it seems a bit odd in a context where Saudi Arabia, Israel, and Sub-Saharan Africa (plus a few central Asian and South American nations) hadn't really been invoked

__loam
1 replies
1d

This is a stupid take, frankly. Lots of crime in major American cities would go away if much more affordable housing was available. High cost of living causes poverty and stress, which can lead to drug use and mental illness. It's very obvious that these things are related.

SoftTalker
0 replies
16h3m

We tried building solid but low-frills housing developments in major American cities that impoverished people could live in for basically no cost. They became crime-infested hellholes.

OJFord
1 replies
1d1h

Inequality isn't the correct term. It's poverty, drug abuse and mental illness.

...relative to others with less of that; hence an inequality.

Gormo
0 replies
21h34m

It's absolute poverty, drug abuse, and mental illness that constrain people's circumstances and influence their decisions. How similar or dissimilar a person's circumstances are to those of strangers they have no relationship with are not relevant.

readyman
0 replies
1d1h

Inequality isn't the correct term. It's poverty, drug abuse and mental illness.

Inequality is absolutely the correct term. The rich wield their means to exploit the poor. Without the rich, the poor are not exploited and poverty, drug abuse, and mental illness all decline. Every. Single. Time.

Nextgrid
13 replies
1d1h

I'm not even sure inequality/poverty is the main driver. If there is no penalty for shoplifting then it just makes sense to shoplift no matter your financial situation.

It's just that for a long while, enforcement or the illusion of there being enforcement mostly kept everyone in order, but nowadays the illusions are breaking down. More and more people are pushing the boundaries and realizing that no actual enforcement is happening, so why should they stop?

We see the same in white-collar crime where companies constantly push the boundaries in blatant bad faith and this keeps happening because the illusions that kept everyone in order have broken down and actual enforcement isn't sufficient to deter the bad behavior.

Keep in mind that shoplifting isn't merely a survival issue, there are "professionals" who steal for resale.

nathan_compton
7 replies
1d1h

"If there is no penalty for shoplifting then it just makes sense to shoplift no matter your financial situation." True sociopath logic, my man.

Most people do not base their actions on some kind of spreadsheet where they are optimizing for economic success. Many people, I hazard to guess most, base their behavior on some sort of pile of moral ideas and/or general bonhomie. Most people are pretty chill and don't want to screw around with other people's livelihoods regardless of legal consequences.

Nextgrid
6 replies
1d1h

Many people, I hazard to guess most, base their behavior on some sort of pile of moral ideas and/or general bonhomie

How do you then explain every company out there being hostile to their customers and constantly pushing the boundaries of what's acceptable, or even things like wage theft which is surprisingly common? Or is there a double-standard here, where individuals are supposed to act in good faith but companies are not just allowed to be assholes, but rewarded for doing so by the market and lack of adequate law enforcement actions?

It's true that morality and good-faith behavior has mostly kept things working well, but it's clear that morals and good faith alone isn't good enough since there are entities that abuse the system so laws and enforcement should be there. If it's not, then I'm not going to be particularly angry about the little guys acting antisocially when the entire economic system is encouraging & rewarding it.

Look at it from an IT security perspective: it's great that most users are acting in good faith and are not trying to exploit your system, but you still need to plan for the worst and make sure your system can survive hostile encounters. The same should apply to our legal system.

Dylan16807
2 replies
1d1h

How do you then explain

Companies are sociopathic and we haven't figured out a good way to deal with this.

you still need to plan for the worst and make sure your system can survive hostile encounters

Sure, but that's pretty different from saying it "just makes sense" to be a hostile actor.

Nextgrid
1 replies
1d1h

sociopathic and we haven't figured out a good way to deal with this

Great, so let's start dealing with this rather than continuing the double-standard where the big guys are allowed & encouraged to behave antisocially while the little guys are shamed for it.

Until this is addressed, I'm not particularly surprised to see the little guys start acting anti-socially too; it makes perfect sense in the system of incentives we currently live in. Some people are lucky enough to survive while acting morally, but I don't think it's fair to be angry at those who don't instead of addressing the systemic problem that encourages antisocial behavior, both individual & corporate.

Dylan16807
0 replies
23h53m

There have always been sociopaths, and it hasn't caused everyone to act like sociopaths. So that right there breaks the "perfect sense" claim.

nathan_compton
1 replies
1d1h

The design of companies (especially limited liability companies, but many other aspects as well) diffuses the moral/aesthetic implications of decision making while concentrating the fiduciary implications, thus leading to behavioral patterns which are pretty inhuman.

I'm not arguing that there are not some bad actors - this is clearly and obviously true. I think the legal system should act in whatever way optimizes its goals (presumably, the flourishing of living things or something) and I tend to think the punitive impulse typically doesn't do that. It's main appeal is that it feels good to imagine someone getting punished.

Nextgrid
0 replies
1d1h

I tend to think the punitive impulse typically doesn't do that

Well when it comes to companies the punishment and deterrent should be monetary damages that will effectively make the undesirable behavior unprofitable and thus discourage it in the future.

But we're not doing that, setting the standard that antisocial behavior is acceptable (and rewarded by the market by being more profitable than acting honestly), thus it is no surprise that the little guys have a go at it (and guess what, since we're not punishing that either, there is no downside to doing it repeatedly).

TeMPOraL
0 replies
1d

Look at it from an IT security perspective: it's great that most users are acting in good faith and are not trying to exploit your system, but you still need to plan for the worst and make sure your system can survive hostile encounters.

I think this is exactly the opposite of the right perspective for law and ethics. Society runs on trust, the more trust the better. ITSec runs best on zero trust. Applying the latter to the former lead to absurdities like "code is law" "smart" contracts.

vlovich123
4 replies
1d1h

If there is no penalty for shoplifting then it just makes sense to shoplift no matter your financial situation.

And yet enforcement isn’t as strong of a predictor of shoplifting as poverty/inequality.

It’s like the joke - I murder as much as I want and it’s not the fear of enforcement that keeps the number at 0. It may be why you aren’t shoplifting but please don’t extrapolate to the rest of us.

We see the same in white-collar crime where companies constantly push the boundaries in blatant bad faith and this keeps happening because the illusions that kept everyone in order have broken down and actual enforcement isn't sufficient to deter the bad behavior.

White collar and petty theft are very different. The simplest proof is that white collar crime as a concept didn’t even exist until the 20th century whereas petty theft has existed forever.

Nextgrid
3 replies
1d1h

enforcement isn’t as strong of a predictor of shoplifting as poverty/inequality.

I agree because there's still some morality left. But morality itself can change, and if deviance is normalized by lack of enforcement we might very well end up in a situation where nobody thinks twice about shoplifting, just like when it comes to white-collar crime which is already normalized and keeps being rewarded by the market again and again, so it's not really surprising that more and more "blue-collar" crime is happening.

White collar and petty theft are very different

Why? Are you saying stealing a 3£ chocolate bar is bad, but doing the same in software via a hidden fee or some arcane clause in the ToS that nobody read (and thus did not agree to) is acceptable? In both cases someone is out 3£.

vlovich123
2 replies
1d1h

I agree because there's still some morality left. But morality itself can change, and if deviance is normalized by lack of enforcement we might very well end up in a situation where nobody thinks twice about shoplifting

That’s a strong claim, but is there any scientific basis for claiming that enforcement creates morality? Anecdotally I see morality police in super religious communities and all it seems to enforce is the appearance of morality but actually people are chafing against it and subverting it all the time - if anything the repression seems to create higher incidence of violent and sexual crimes. As for police, I haven’t checked recently but the number of police officers and the amount of crime that occurs seems to be fairly uncorrelated which is not supporting the hypothesis that more enforcement = better morality and less crime.

One place I saw this play is out is in the Bahamas where you and super rich white people putting up huge fences claiming that the locals had a culture of theft - if it’s accessible steal it - when the simpler, but more uncomfortable truth, seemed to be that poverty and inequality creates resentment and the amount of inequality was quite extreme.

Why? Are you saying stealing a 3£ chocolate bar is bad, but doing the same in software via a hidden fee or some arcane clause in the ToS that nobody read (and thus did not agree to) is acceptable? In both cases someone is out 3£.

I agree both are unacceptable but legally one form is an acceptable way to do business. White collar crime is something totally different by the way - it’s about individual actions like embezzlement or corruption. Corporate behavior is a whole other category. A major difference of corporate misbehavior is that companies generally exhibit a very sociopathic behavior so they engage in that pure calculus you talk about and moral hazards are extremely real (largely because the market is allowed to reward sociopaths). People at the individual level however don’t operate that way though - aside from where the brain is broken and there’s a compulsive act formed for theft or crime (often due to formative experiences during childhood), most people just don’t want to hurt each other but that desire is weak vs self preservation and preservation of your family. And what starts out as preservation can spiral downward into trying to give yourself the life you think you want (that nice jacket or nice tv).

Nextgrid
1 replies
1d

is there any scientific basis for claiming that enforcement creates morality

Not sure (and doubt it) but my argument is that if enforcement was adequate then you wouldn't need morality - morality would be a "bonus" but even if it were to go away, adequate enforcement would still deter the undesirable behavior by making it unprofitable.

which is not supporting the hypothesis that more enforcement = better morality and less crime.

"Law enforcement" in general is too broad to be able to draw this conclusion. Which crimes actually trigger enforcement (and what is the penalty)? If police is too busy busting kids smoking pot (or other victimless crimes that are easy to prosecute) to attend shoplifting incidents/property crime then shoplifting will remain regardless of how much "enforcement" there is (and of course the second-order effects from punishing pot smokers will set them up for a life of crime where they'll then "upgrade" to other crime with actual victims).

both are unacceptable but legally one form is an acceptable way to do business

But law != morality. From a moral point of view I'm not sure there's a difference - in both cases someone is unjustly enriching themselves at the expense of the victim. When talking about morals and how they prevent people from acting antisocially, those morals may evolve over time if the bad behavior has been normalized by financial reward & lack of consequences.

People at the individual level however don’t operate that way though

That is true but the economic incentives that are there (and lack of deterrence) means that people may start operating that way and I'd argue more and more people do, whether by choice or by lack of other options.

vlovich123
0 replies
1d

And I’m saying that enforcement and morality are swamped by poverty and inequality.

I’d recommend trying to find any grounding in evidence of your claims because the poverty and inequality links to crime are pretty well established in the data.

madeofpalk
1 replies
1d2h

In the countries that have this, such as Scotland or Sweden or Switzerland, how much of this is actually a problem?

soco
0 replies
1d1h

Switzerland here: depends what kind of property. A large garden? The owner will likely call the cops on you for trespassing as soon as you show up (and they will come). A meadow some place up in the mountains? The rule is you camp after sunset and decamp at sunrise, but as with every remote place, if nobody sees you... Picking berries the same: it's stealing (Mundraub, yes in CH is still illegal) so in the smaller garden you'll be seen and probably reported but otherwise you'll be luckier.

posterman
0 replies
1d2h

Tell me you don't know what decriminalization means without telling me you don't know what decriminalization means.

mrmanner
0 replies
20h1m

The thing is, the law/code only matters if it is enforced. I have little faith this will be enforced enough to be a deterrent

But the same would be true whether roaming is legal or not?

__loam
0 replies
1d

It seems to have been working in the UK for centuries.

UberFly
0 replies
1d2h

The law would definitely be abused like renter's laws are abused now.

Pet_Ant
33 replies
1d3h

"Access rights do not extend to motorised activities...

This seems problematic as there are remote properties that are only accessible through long trails. Stuff like ice fishing spots where you might need to snowmobile a few kilometers. Same with ATVs for deep woods camping.

Personally, I have a registered trail through land I own and have no problem with it. I hope people get it to enjoy since I don't get enough chances to. I can't even get to it myself without passing through a dozen different lots.

micromacrofoot
23 replies
1d3h

This might be an unpopular opinion. But if you need motorized conveyance to camp remotely... then you should probably not camp remotely. It's ok if some wild areas are less accessible.

rrix2
18 replies
1d3h

Yep, if people want to do that there are hundreds of miles of forest service roads they can use to drive in to our national forests.

Workaccount2
17 replies
1d2h

*cries in east coast*

Seriously, we have nothing over here. All the land was bought up, often before there even was a united states. And the forests we do have tend to be very heavily regulated. You want to do anything it's all pay for permit and be clustered with a bunch of other permit buyers.

I am not aware of single forest in the Northeast where you can just drive in, camp, and leave without breaking the law.

throw7
6 replies
1d

In NY, the state parks will be heavily regulated having designated pay for/reserved camp spots along with amenities. However, the forest preserves (Adirondacks/Catskills) and state forests do allow backcountry/primitive camping.

Just look for a nearby state forest and look up the dec regulations for that site. More than likely you can can primitive camp there.

Workaccount2
5 replies
1d

You can primitive/dispersed camp at most forests in the NE. However they all require being far from a road. The best you can do is park and hike in.

ghaff
4 replies
23h55m

1/4 mile is not far from a road. Of course, terrain may otherwise make it difficult to camp if the trail heads right up.

Workaccount2
2 replies
23h14m

I've done it, it's just a huge PIA compared to out west where you just get on forest roads where there are clearings you pull into an camp all over the place.

The east coast just has this strong hostility towards camping for some reason.

ghaff
1 replies
22h58m

There are a lot more people looking to camp in generally smaller areas especially on weekends. And the east doesn’t have the large networks of forest roads and almost roads and not really roads that you have in many western national forests and BLM land.

The West obviously has plenty of camping restrictions in popular areas like national parks and wilderness areas where you may have year in advance lotteries.

I’m not sure why the east would be uniquely hostile given the same agencies administer federal land across the whole country.

But, in general, yes if you want to get away from people and have more flexibility in where you can camp, you’re probably best off traveling to the western states.

Workaccount2
0 replies
20h44m

There is comparatively very little federal land on the east coast. And even where there is land, it's not as friendly as the west.

Using white mountain NF as an example, their camping policy is much more restrictive than western national forests (i.e camp away from roads and trails).

There is virtually no BLM land and national parks are kinda strict all over. So you are left with state land and they tend to like structured campgrounds that you pay buy permits for.

HeyLaughingBoy
0 replies
20h39m

Seriously. My kid walks 1/2-mile from the school bus to home down a dirt road without complaint.

doctoboggan
3 replies
1d2h

I've done exactly what you describe (drive in, camp, leave without breaking the law) in the White Mountains in NH[0].

In general, dispersed camping[1] is legal in almost all national forest and BLM land. I think many people don't realize this but you can camp for free almost anywhere in a national forest (keeping certain distances from trails, roads and bodies of water)

[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Mountains_(New_England) [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dispersed_camping

prometheus76
1 replies
1d1h

Isn't there a 14-day limit in National Parks?

ghaff
0 replies
1d1h

In general there are far more restrictions in National Parks than in national forests than on BLM land.

There are some restrictions but really very few in the latter two categories.

Workaccount2
0 replies
1d

If you hike in you can camp on the east coast, generally you must be at least 1/4 mile from where you park. On the west coats you can just pull in with your car and set up camp right there.

volkl48
0 replies
1d2h

There's lots of state + national forest land in the Northeast where that's legal. I've done it many times in PA/NY/VT/NH/ME. There are probably some options in the other more developed states too, but I don't usually visit them as much for outdoor recreation.

Outside of the most popular locations for tourists that's pretty much the default.

-------

If you've had trouble finding this, have you been limiting your search to parks? Parks are usually more heavily restricted in terms of camping.

rowdyelectron
0 replies
1d2h

Greene mountains in VT is one example. You can even shoot there without being bothered. Lmk if you need a list of places in MA NH and VT.

mazugrin2
0 replies
1d2h

Check out the White Mountain National Forest in New Hampshire or the Green Mountain National Forest in Vermont. I've heard it's also legal in CT State Forests but haven't actually seen this written down anywhere.

ghaff
0 replies
1d2h

White Mountain National Forest for one. There are restriction regarding how close to a trail or hut you can camp and the topography can be challenging but you certainly can.

But yes there are orders of magnitude more national forest land out west. Probably more than the size of the entire or maybe UK.

dhagberg
0 replies
1d1h

Historically, Maine had excellent recreation policies in cooperation with the private paper companies that owned the majority of land in the northern part of the state: areas not actively being logged were available for recreation access, as were vehicles on logging roads (though you best yield to the logging trucks that drive down the middle of the roads, even if it means you need to dive into the ditch). State recreation fees for snowmobiles, fishing, etc. would cover things like insuring the private landowners against liability.

However, starting in the mid/late 90's, much of the paper company land was divested and sold to private equity land holders (yay modern finance!) and those previous open access policies have been very much curtailed. It's a big loss to the community, but it sure must be making some money for shareholders somewhere...

burningChrome
3 replies
1d1h

Which can also make camping and hiking in those areas far more dangerous. If a rescue team have hike in 20 miles to get you without any motorized vehicles and can't get a chopper into those remote areas? They shouldn't be remote, they should just be left completely inaccessible.

The problem then is people these days, IMHO are far more reckless and stupid and will try and prove Mother Nature wrong by attempting to go into these areas to get internet cred from Tik Tok and other platforms. Perfect example is the people who go to Longs Peak and attempt the Keyhole Route thinking its a well traveled hike and easy.

tekla
0 replies
1d

If you don't want to do it, don't do it.

simplyluke
0 replies
23h22m

It's okay for some areas and activities to be more dangerous. "Completely inaccessible" is banning access for safetyism.

Decades of deaths in activities like backcountry skiing staying relatively flat while the numbers of people doing those activities exploding would go directly against your assertion that people are more reckless and stupid in the social media age than they were in the past.

If things like the Keyhole route are outside of your risk tolerance, that's a perfectly valid and rational decision. I'd encourage you not to do them. That doesn't mean no one else should be allowed to take risks you don't.

ghaff
0 replies
1d1h

If people are reckless and stupid that seems a self-correcting problem.

There are a ton of places in the Western US that are more than 20 miles from a road with very few restrictions on camping.

BanazirGalbasi
4 replies
1d2h

Maybe explicitly registered trails (like the one on your land) could grant more access than the default Scottish ones mentioned above. That way the people who are okay with motorized vehicle access can allow it while not affecting the majority who probably don't want vehicles running through their land.

A decade ago several teenagers wore a track through the back of my parents' yard with snowmobiles during winter. I'm not familiar enough with snowmobiles to know how much snow should be on the ground, but they kept going after it was reduced to muddy slush that had been churned up by the treads in the back.

ghaff
3 replies
1d2h

My neighbor doesn’t really care about people walking on her property down by the river. But periodically some ATVer rips down the no trespassing signs and makes a complete mess of the trail during muddy conditions.

skrebbel
2 replies
1d1h

And this is why a law like this wouldn’t work in low-trust societies like the US.

ghaff
1 replies
1d

People need to give terms like low trust , especially as applied to large and diverse countries, a rest rather than spouting them because they think it makes them sound smart. In this case it’s what used to be a very rural town—founded 1653–which over the last few decades has become much more exurban and people who have lived there for a long time find the increased housing density, which in spite of still being pretty low, means people can’t just hunt and ride ATVs everywhere like they could 40 years ago.

skrebbel
0 replies
12h48m

Fair enough!

jononor
0 replies
1d

A few kilometers of snow is easily crossed by skis or snowshoes. Every cabin in Norway used to be accessed like that (changing now the last 2 years, where people now mostly expect to drive to the door). But still skiing a few kilometers is a basic life skill to me, especially if one is going to be going into the woods in the wintertime... At least from 10-12 years of age.

groby_b
0 replies
1d2h

If you want to camp in the deep woods, and there is no trail, hike. Seriously.

I appreciate land owners who do make trails available. Seriously. I like offroading, I'm grateful for people who give that opportunity. But I don't think we're entitled to reach everything in a motorized way. And I certainly understand if land owners don't want a permanent stream of ATVs across their land.

This is ultimately a balance of rights, and I think "no motor vehicles unless the land owners allows it" is a fairly decent balance.

carlosjobim
0 replies
1d1h

Stuff like ice fishing spots where you might need to snowmobile a few kilometers.

You generally have the right to travel any river or lake. I haven't heard of any country or place that limits this.

baobun
0 replies
1d2h

I guess just like Scottish law is adapted to Scottish environment, similar adjustments can be made were applicable. No one suggested porting Scottish code verbatim to Alaska.

Also, it's not like long hikes with camping along the way are unheard of.

hanniabu
5 replies
1d2h

How do you prevent people from getting to close to your house and invading your privacy? Someone can come on your property with the intention to rob you, stalk you, etc and if they get caught they can just they were passing through. And unless you have cameras it would make it pretty difficult to prove otherwise. When you're out in the woods all alone that makes you pretty vulnerable and this isn't a situation I would want to be in.

BobaFloutist
2 replies
1d2h

It sounds like you're not a good candidate for an owner of a large parcel of wilderness.

And that's ok! Not everyone has to own acres of undeveloped land!

I think it's appropriate that some kinds of ownership are as much a responsibility as a privilege, similar to how not everyone is prepared to be responsible for river or stream running through their property.

For a somewhat tortured metaphor, there are seats on planes that give extra leg room, as long as you're willing and able to help others in the case of an emergency. You get the benefit of the extra leg room, but you get the responsibility of helping others in an emergency. And that seems like a fair balance!

throwaway22032
1 replies
19h16m

They are not a candidate but in fact an actual owner. It is theirs and not yours.

BobaFloutist
0 replies
15h43m

That's ok, I'm a voting member of the general public, and if we decide it's to the benefit of us all for the public to have access to their land, we will!

doctor_phil
0 replies
1d2h

Preventing accidental privacy intrusion is easy. If you have a fence around your property (or even something as simple as a mowed lawn) then it is quite obvious where your plot starts and where the forest ends.

Someone malicious doesn't care about laws anyway. If they get caught today, couldn't they could just deny that they were there? I don't understand what would change in that case.

NeoTar
0 replies
1d2h

"Access rights do not extend to the land surrounding a house or other dwelling (e.g. a static caravan) to the extent needed to provide residents with a reasonable measures of privacy. This is usually defined as the garden around or adjacent to the house that is intensively managed for the enjoyment of residents. " - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_Outdoor_Access_Code

The article goes on to give examples where this has been legally determined to be a significant area - over 5 hectares (12 acres) around a property ... for people like me who don't fully understand areas in this context, that would be a square of 220m (720 feet) to a side.

You are allowed to fence this area off, or take other security measures.

And ultimately - its not hugely different to the current situation. If I intend to commit a crime against you, is adding a trespass going to dissuade me?

dahfizz
0 replies
1d3h

I mean, are homeless encampments ever permitted? Yet they show up and are very hard to get rid of. Its not a can of worms I would want opened if I owned property on the west coast, that is for sure.

ledauphin
37 replies
1d4h

I'm interested to read more about the "personal property liability" thing in the US. I have never heard anyone explain why your example would expose you to liability. There are other things I can imagine, like unfenced swimming pools or open sinkholes that you knew about, but tree roots and general features of the land? Maybe there's a long history of case law about this.

crazygringo
32 replies
1d3h

Basically just think of it as a continuum from things you're obviously responsible for (a child drowns in your pool because you didn't put up a fence), to things you're obviously not (somebody fell and broke a bone because they tripped over a tree root in your acres of backyard forest).

That there's a big gray area in the middle, and that somebody can sue you if they're injured in that gray area, and even if they lose it's still expense and stress and a time suck for you.

lambdaxyzw
16 replies
1d3h

obviously responsible for (a child drowns in your pool because you didn't put up a fence)

Does this also count if you didn't invite the child and the terrain was clearly marked as your property? If yes, this is pretty surprising and non-obvious to me. Do i misunderstand something?

For me, the obvious example is bobby trapping your property and hurting a fireman who came to put out a fire.

crazygringo
13 replies
1d3h

Yes, it absolutely does count.

You might indeed consider it non-obvious and surprising -- I certainly did when I first learned of it growing up here. Another classic example is that a thief can sue you if they fall through rotting floorboards on your porch and break their legs.

But we've collectively decided, as a society, that property owners are not just prohibited from booby trapping their properties, but are required to actively maintain them in a safe condition according to reasonable standards.

If there's something a reasonable person would know was a safety risk on their property, they'll be held liable if they didn't fix it and somebody injured themselves because of it.

The thinking is basically -- kids will run around onto other people's property, people get lost, etc. We know kids go where they're not supposed to. Nobody should be risking injury or death just because of that, if and when reasonable safety precautions by the property owner could have prevented that.

In other words, we live in a society, and we have a certain minimal level of active duty of care towards others. Owning a piece of property comes with rights but also responsibilities.

stragies
7 replies
1d2h

Don't at least the parents of the kid that drowned in your pool while trespassing on your land get at least a charge of "criminal negligence" against them? IANAL, but aren't kid's <14 supposed to be supervised at all times by an adult? And 14+ years old that drowns in a pool for inability to swim is also something that should be blamable on the parents, not the pool owner.

Edit with clarifications after comments: I meant, parent's should be supervising their young kids, or take the risk/blame, if something happens to the kids while they aren't.

(I roamed 'unsupervised' in fields and forest at young age with friends, and enjoyed it. But I was also taught to look where I step, and how to swim)

s1artibartfast
1 replies
1d1h

No, the negligent parents get rewarded with your house and assets.

Kids should not be supervised at all times, but parents should also assume the risk for what happens when they aren't supervising their kids.

Managing risk-reward is a natural part of life and being an adult.

Attempts to completely eliminate risk leads to miserable lives and societies.

gottorf
0 replies
23h56m

Attempts to completely eliminate risk leads to miserable lives and societies.

Covid response in certain jurisdictions was a great example of this. "If it saves even one more life, it's worth it!"

vundercind
0 replies
1d2h

aren't kid's <14 supposed to be supervised at all times by an adult

Hell no. A world where a nine or ten year old can’t go roam the neighborhood on bikes with some friends unless adults accompany them would be a dystopia. I know there are occasionally news stories about very-stupid harassment of parents for parenting correctly, but thank god it’s still not the norm.

tylermw
0 replies
1d2h

but aren't kid's <14 supposed to be supervised at all times by an adult

No. The age which supervision is required varies by jurisdiction.

And 14+ years old that drowns in a pool for inability to swim is also something that should be blamable on the parents, not the pool owner.

There's no law stating you need to teach your kids to swim.

sidewndr46
0 replies
5h46m

In the US a criminal charge against someone is not relevant for a civil liability lawsuit.

Civil suits are between citizens. Criminal suits generally have the plaintiff as the state government, albeit with rare exceptions such as RICO.

gampleman
0 replies
1d2h

IANAL, but aren't kid's <14 supposed to be supervised at all times by an adult?

Not in most jurisdictions (thanks God). That's a terrible idea for raising kids.

chrisBob
0 replies
1d2h

Being a parent is hard. I would say that half of the US thinks parents are the problem with kids these days and that a good kid should "spend time outside in the neighborhood like we used to", and then the other half will call the police if your child is out of sight because "aren't kid's <14 supposed to be supervised at all times by an adult?"

mindslight
4 replies
1d2h

But apparently there's no duty of care towards oneself to not trespass into unknown conditions, to watch where you're going, or to supervise one's kids?

Following it to its logical conclusion, I guess I'm supposed to put up a construction fence every time I dig a hole? Or stack a pile of wood? But an orange plastic fence can be jumped over or cut, so I guess I need a high chain link fence? But then how do I make the fence posts safe so someone doesn't hurt themselves by running into those? And what about the hazard of digging the holes for the fence posts? Etc etc etc.

This whole topic is essentially a backwards precedent that reeks of the common US anti-pattern of unfunded policy mandates merely pitting individuals against one another and considering the matter solved. If we want fewer people to drown, then make unfenced swimming pools (or perhaps even ponds) straight up illegal, with stiff penalties (I believe they're just generally town ordinance violations with a few hundred dollar fine right now). If we want to take care of people who get injured in such ways, then create a general fund for that. Tying the two together is like some moralizing version of "thoughts and prayers" that really just sets up a perverse reverse lottery where everything is fine until you get unlucky. (see also: all the harm that law enforcement causes and then just walks away from)

(Also FWIW I don't think there's anything "collectively decided" about the current legal landscape. From what I understand these liabilities basically arise from courts having created these theories of liabilities, and the unknown unknown risk comes from not knowing what theories the courts might create next (ex post facto!). If these liabilities had been created by statutory law through the nominal democratic process they could at least be enumerated and thus definitely addressed. But alas)

crazygringo
3 replies
1d1h

But apparently there's no duty of care towards oneself to not trespass into unknown conditions, to watch where you're going, or to supervise one's kids?

No, there absolutely is.

The key word is "reasonable", which I used intentionally and multiple times in my comment.

Every time you dig a deep hole that might be hard to see, yes you're supposed to put up some kind of cones or warning tape or something. You're rightly not allowed to turn your yard into a booby trap, even if it's part of a construction process. (Of course you don't need to put something up while you're working and supervising -- but you sure do overnight while you're away from it.)

We're supposed to watch where we're going, but we also expect to be able to walk across a yard without breaking our ankle because of a hard-to-see hole.

Just like there's a big difference between a hole filled with water where a child could drown (that requires an actual physical barrier), versus a hole where they might fall in but break an ankle at best (cones are fine).

And I don't know why you think a pile of wood is unsafe, that's fine. Why would you need a fence? Unless it's stacked so high you can easily push it over to topple it, but you shouldn't be doing that in the first place.

You're trying to push examples to unreasonable extremes, when the whole point is the concept of reasonable safety.

(FWIW, I happen to agree with you in thinking that tort law is not always the best way to implement this, that there should often be legal enforcement regardless of whether someone suffers an injury, and that injuries should often be compensated out of a general fund. It's tricky though because this would require a level of constant, regular government safety inspections of private property that not everyone is OK with. However, I think the general standard of reasonable safety is nevertheless absolutely correct.)

mindslight
2 replies
1d1h

"Reasonable" is a courts / legal industry weasel word that allows them to kick the can down the road not defining explicit requirements, which is what creates so much of the unknowable liability. This might be fine if we were talking matters of a few thousand dollars, but when we're talking about hundreds of thousands or more, creating a game of life-altering hot potato. And ambiguity would be understandable if we were talking about equitably judging personal action vs another personal action, but what we're talking about here is personal action vs an existing situation that was entered voluntarily.

I do not see that it is "reasonable" to be responsible for any random uninformed person lackadaisically traversing my property as if it's some maintained event space they were invited into with a corresponding warranty of fitness. Yet the courts disagree, and so we're off to the races about what's "reasonable".

Do I need cones for a drainage ditch/brook that has been around for decades? Do I need cones for the 6-8" ruts due to driving through a part of my yard when it was waterlogged? Do I need cones or a fence for a tree that has half fallen down, resting on a neighboring tree, that I've yet to take down the rest of the way? Do I need cones for stumps of cut down trees? Do I need cones for items kept on the ground? Do I need warning signs about possible bees' nests in parts of structures? Do I need warning signs about the high number of ticks due to my letting the grass get halfway to a meadow? Beware of bear because it can hide in my overgrown bushes? These aren't unreasonable extremes, but actual concrete examples.

The world is an inherently unsafe place. We create structure that makes tiny slices of it "safe". Creating a general requirement that the nominal owner of a chunk of land is ambiguously responsible for making it completely safe, even for those who were uninvited, just devolves into putting up one big fence and "no trespassing" signs while hoping for the best. This is precisely what this thread is lamenting.

Also compensating out of a general fund would in no way require government inspections of private property. We're talking about extremely rare situations here, meaning this could be covered as-is in a statistical manner. In fact it already mostly is by private insurance, except when/until it isn't, with that reverse-lottery dynamic rearing its ugly head again.

(The wood pile example is because climbing on them is unsafe, yet looks fun. It's essentially the same type of attractive nuisance as a swimming pool)

crazygringo
1 replies
17h21m

Creating a general requirement that the nominal owner of a chunk of land is ambiguously responsible for making it completely safe

I think that's at the root of your misunderstanding.

Nobody is claiming anything can be made completely safe.

But there is a such thing as reasonably safe. To take general precautions where it is possible and economically reasonable, over potential harms you are aware of, or any generally responsible person should be aware of.

And in terms of all the examples you gave, you can probably figure out what that means. And if you can't, you can ask general contractors or HOA reps etc. (if applicable) who have lots of experience.

It's not rocket science.

mindslight
0 replies
15h48m

Sorry, I do not accept this "it's so simple I'm not going to answer". If it's so straightforward to answer in general, then it should be easy for you to answer. Because what I see is a field of unknown unknowns. It would be bad enough if the bar was me knowing that a harm could happen. But rather even if I don't know, a court can just fall back to social bullying with the catch-all justification of "any generally responsible person" should have known. So despite technically not needing to make things "completely" safe, it is effectively completely because the possible conditions for which you can be held responsible for allowing is unknowable without going to court.

I don't know why you'd mention HOAs, as they're generally their own little micromanaged Hells - I'm not looking for an answer that even grass over two inches tall is unsafe because Karen might have a panic attack. And general contractors generally create LLCs and buy insurance rather than preventing all liability ahead of time. At best they react to problems that repeatedly occur in their industry. They're happy to take money to provide an illusion of complete ownership though.

I do mean all of those examples literally. Personally, I can foresee harm in all of those, and they all seem quite "economically reasonable" to mitigate. So do you just mean "yes" for all those examples? (and if so, why didn't you just say so?)

I'm obviously not happy with any of my listed sources of possible harm existing at this here fix-er-upper, hence them being in my head. Which is why I'm working on them before say having guests that I let run wild in the backyard. But it's a bit rich that such extreme responsibility is still legally inadequate because randos can just trespass uninvited (thus unsupervised and unbriefed) and then demand I pay for the results of their poor choice.

And note here I'm not trying to be callous. I have said that there are legitimate reasons for swimming pools to have fences. We're quite agreed that the well-known pattern of kid jumping into swimming pool alone and drowning is a horrible thing that should be specifically addressed. If we were only talking about specific enumerable regulations like swimming pools needing to be fenced, one could run down that list and know they've all been taken care of. What I'm taking issue with is the unknown blanket liability simply by virtue of owning property, especially when you have not held that property out as a place for others to be.

cratermoon
1 replies
1d3h

In most of the US, the attractive nuisance doctrine applies, unfortunately. And nearly anything can be considered an attractive nuisance, or at least there's probably a lawyer out there willing to take the case and cost the landowner money.

bbarnett
0 replies
1d3h

Quite so. I get doubly annoyed when people have heated pools by lakes, the lake is clearly not fenced, but that fence had better be on your pool.

And many pools have a shallow end, and many homeowners have long docks, which are in deep water.

Yet docks aren't required to be fenced here.

bigstrat2003
7 replies
1d3h

I would say that a child falling in your pool is something you're obviously not responsible for. The fact that case law in the US says otherwise is a shameful commentary on how broken the US legal system is.

madeofpalk
5 replies
1d2h

Australia solved this differently - it's illegal to have an unfenced pool precisely because young children wander and fall into pools and drown. We understand that kids shouldn't die. If your fence is neglected or the kid was otherwise somehow able to get in, you're liable. Have a fence up to code, and you're not liable.

arethuza
4 replies
1d2h

Did a lot of kids die in pools before that law was introduced?

NB I'm in Scotland so outside pools aren't a big risk but I also grew up in a small fishing village on a very wild and rocky coast with high cliffs and the idea of anyone trying to "protect" kids in that kind of environment seems very odd to me.

crazygringo
2 replies
1d1h

Of course. These laws don't just come out of nowhere. Kids drowning in pools is a real thing.

gottorf
1 replies
23h58m

Of course, it's also a real thing that the home builders' and contractors' association lobbies to make every pool be legally required to be enclosed by a fence, which naturally needs to be built by a licensed professional.

crazygringo
0 replies
17h27m

What? No it's not. That's simply not true. That wasn't how any of those laws developed historically.

And that would just be a nonsensical thing for the construction industry to lobby on. There are things that are actually highly profitable for them to lobby for. That's not one of them.

I'm confused why you can't just accept the obvious that it's an effort to save lives. Like seatbelts.

madeofpalk
0 replies
1d2h

There's considerably less unsupervised kids running around rocky coasts with high cliffs than around neighbourhoods and backyards.

Note that Australia also has plenty of coasts and does not mandate a fence around them all.

nness
0 replies
1d3h

If you are required by law to put a fence around your pool and include a child-safe door, and you fail to do so, and a child drowns — why shouldn't you be liable?

(Although I think many from the US may interpret a "fence around a pool" to be an overreach of government regulation. But in Australia, "barrier laws" exist in every state/territory to avoid accidental drownings.)

RRWagner
6 replies
1d3h

"can sue you" is a very very important detail here. As I understand it, in the UK, the losing party in a suit pays legal expenses on both sides, which discourages "let's just shake them down" lawsuits. in the U.S. it's way too easy to get a contingency lawyer who knows anyone can sue someone else for anything and they'll have to settle for $$ just because it's cheaper than going to court to "win" against a weak complaint. I did some financial modeling on this years ago that gave a good prediction of when cases will settle in the U.S. tl;dr when the money given to the defense lawyer approaches the probable expectation of the loss you're trying to avoid.

bluGill
5 replies
1d3h

The downside of loser pays is coorts will sometimes find against you in an obvious case and so only the rich can dare risk court.

arethuza
2 replies
1d2h

The other major downside of loser pays is that it makes litigation very difficult to stop once it starts - and lawyers, funnily enough, will always say that you have an excellent case encouraging people to start litigation....

anticensor
0 replies
12h58m

In most implementations of loser pays, both parties pay upfront and then the winner gets refunded the fees.

SoftTalker
0 replies
1d2h

A good lawyer will not take a case that you are very likely to lose, and he will advise you that you have no case. I believe a judge can also admonish or censure a lawyer who brings a frivilous claim into court? Not sure how often that happens.

bigstrat2003
1 replies
1d1h

In the "you pay your own cost" system of the US, only the rich can afford to bring a case as well. And we have the added downside that only the rich can afford to defend themselves. I would much rather have the loser pays system, even though it isn't perfect.

bluGill
0 replies
1d1h

In the us a lawyer will go to court on a you pay only if you win.

devmor
1 replies
1d3h

I am not a legal scholar, but anecdotally a common theme in US law is that if you don't make obvious attempts to stop someone from doing something with your property (be it land, objects or intellectual property) then you are tacitly approving it.

The most well known example is probably Trademark Erosion.

Given this theme, it's not hard to see how a judge could rule that if you allow a lot of people to traverse your land, you are inherently maintaining a passageway and are thus responsible for ensuring its safety.

bbarnett
0 replies
1d3h

In Toronto Canada, the Eaton's center, which people walk through to get to other streets, closes once per year for this very reason.

dboreham
0 replies
1d3h

FUD

LorenPechtel
0 replies
23h49m

Open holes that you know about are one of the issues with the Colorado peaks. There are old mineshafts up there. The owners put up signs, they get torn down.

There's an interesting (slot canyon) local hike that's a good example. The whole situation is a mess, it's an old non-operating mine grandfathered inside what's now a national recreation area. Seems some years ago somebody's car was damaged (not exactly astounding, you need a 4x4 HCV and know how to drive it to get there.) Since it happened on private property their insurance tried to go after the landowner. For years it was posted as no trespassing although some groups still did sneak in. Then there was a period of a few years where it wasn't posted and we (local hiking community) believed it was accessible (nope--flash flood took out the signs and gate.) I went with one such group. There were a couple of mineshafts in the side of the canyon, imperfectly blocked by chain link fencing. Once glance inside was plenty to make me NOPE! it but some of the group squirmed in anyway.

After seeing that I completely understand why the owner denies access.

While I in general support a right to roam it needs to come with extremely strong liability protections. There are too many idiots out there who do not respect that nobody's combing the land for hazards, nor is it even possible as they may change. (There was a case a while back, trespassing IIRC biker got hurt because a flash flood had taken out the paved road he was on. Owner liable.)

gspencley
34 replies
1d2h

I approach this from a matter of principle. I don't recognize anyone's "right" to enjoy someone else's privately owned property or, stated more honestly, to infringe upon the property rights of others.

My wife and I currently live in a medium sized city but we are not the type to enjoy city life at all and thus dream of buying a sizeable chunk of land for the both of us to enjoy and retire to. The biggest factor motivating us to want to make that "investment" is our ability to enjoy peace, quiet and solitude on our own property, knowing that there is not another human being within several acres of us.

Our lives and property do not exist for the enjoyment of others. We are not your tools. Find somewhere else to loiter, wander, roam or whatever. Our property is private for a reason. We have no desire to encounter anyone else on it regardless of what they are up to.

fifilura
8 replies
1d2h

As a matter of principle, what gives you the right to own a part of the Earth? Who did you buy it from and who did they buy it from?

prepend
6 replies
1d2h

Society is just a set of mutually agreed to rules. There’s no natural law for language, currency, culture, etc.

So saying property rights are bogus, but body autonomy rights are ok seems like an arbitrary line to draw that makes society worse.

We need some civil method of organizing and managing scarce resources, I think.

digging
3 replies
1d1h

So saying property rights are bogus, but body autonomy rights are ok seems like an arbitrary line to draw that makes society worse.

That seems obviously wrong to me. I can imagine a world without private land ownership that still grants people rights to privacy and autonomy in their home, even grants the privilege of open space around some of their homes (but since this is my imaginary world, ugly monocultured lawns aren't allowed).

The benefits of such a world are that wealth is less arbitrarily concentrated, that municipalities can own the land they govern, that cities and states have the ability to adapt to changing populations without running into private land barriers at every turn. Like in all things, it would be a balance, just as today we have a balance (albeit an extremely lopsided one) between individual rights and governments rights. Eminent domain exists, so the right of an individual person to permanently own a slice of the Earth and keep or grow or ruin it for future generations is already not absolute.

gottorf
2 replies
1d

I can imagine a world without private land ownership that still grants people rights to privacy and autonomy in their home

I dare say that you don't have to imagine, and there are past and current examples of societies that are closer to your vision than what modern developed nations allow for in terms of private land ownership. I think the median person is better off in systems that allow for private land ownership than not.

Look at China: they don't have to deal with private property rights, so they're able to build tons of infrastructure to benefit the people (good!). But the same powers that let government do that are also used to horribly oppress minority groups like the Uyghurs (bad!).

Of course, things owned by the people can be run for the benefit of the people if the people are composed of angels in perpetuity; but that, I'm afraid, will have to remain in the realm of imagination. ;-)

digging
1 replies
22h6m

But the same powers that let government do that are also used to horribly oppress minority groups like the Uyghurs (bad!).

And this kind of thing doesn't happen outside of Chinese pseudo-Communism? That would be an unreasonable assertion.

Look at Vienna instead, where the municipal government owns a large share of quality housing. I've heard it works relatively well; for example, living in low-income housing doesn't mean that you get kicked out if your income rises. You get to stay in your community indefinitely even as you advance in your career. This is an example of how it's possible for good things to exist without some rando middleman getting rich off of it. (I mean, maybe some rando is getting rich here, I'm sure there's still a nonzero level of corruption; but it's not a system designed to enrich private individuals.)

Things owned by anyone will be run to the detriment of the people without wise and careful systems built. Build good systems and iterate on them and you can have good systems. Build nothing, and you can have bad systems run by private individuals. The idea that private owners of land/capital are somehow immune to the corruption that makes government so scary is complete nonsense. It's just that nothing works without putting in work.

gottorf
0 replies
4h49m

The idea that private owners of land/capital are somehow immune to the corruption that makes government so scary is complete nonsense.

Neither private nor public owners are immune to corruption, but private owners don't operate with the legal monopoly on violence that the government does, so the consequences are a lot worse in the latter case.

I believe what Vienna gets right that complements subsidized public housing is that it doesn't have US-style dysfunctional zoning and regulatory processes ("environmental" review, etc.) for construction, so the free market is actually able to produce enough supply to meet demand.

In addition, there aren't bizarre "tenant-friendly" laws such as those that prevent eviction even in the case of nonpayment of rent; it is my understanding that this applies to public housing, as well. And I would bet that the public housing of Vienna is not subject to the same level of social degradation as those in the US, making them altogether more pleasant places to live in.

sakjur
0 replies
1d2h

Property rights doesn’t have to be bogus for the right to roam to exist.

Can you develop random land under the right to roam? No, that remain the exclusive right of the owner. Same goes for logging, farming, and depending on legislature a whole heap of other benefits to owning land.

That doesn’t mean your country has to acknowledge a right to roam, it’s ultimately up to all legislatures to decide where to draw its lines.

None of those lines are self-evident, though it doesn’t matter which rights the land owner cares to acknowledge, as that is the prerogative of the legislator.

fifilura
0 replies
1d

I am not saying property rights are bogus, but they are also not a god-given principle. This is why I reacted.

There are lots of ways to draw the line. Allowing people to walk in a forest you "own" is one of them.

Nagyman
0 replies
1d1h

Hear, hear. Go back far enough and it's stolen land, insofar as any land can be owned. Entitled folks ranting about "their" property is kinda gross. You were granted that right by society, through ancestral collective agreements and cooperation wrt currency, labour, etc - not some divine right, privilege, or "hard work". Many times, killing or threatening people was how it was acquired not too long ago - and it's not too late for that to happen again (see Ukraine).

There are other ways to organize land-property rights. i.e. leased for some lifetime period, to be returned to the commons thereafter. There is only so much on this planet, and the richest individuals/corporations will gobble it up before too long; then what?

9dev
7 replies
1d2h

This is so hard to understand as a European. Why does it need to be your very own land to be enjoyable? I regularly go hiking in the alps. Sometimes I walk for hours without meeting a single other soul, but if I do, it's always a friendly greeting as we pass another. Why can't we share these places?

gspencley
5 replies
1d2h

You're not asking anyone to share, though. You're asking for the government to grant you a legally enforceable entitlement to use property that someone else worked to acquire and maintain.

So your question becomes "why should property rights exist in the first place?"

The answer is that our existence, by nature of being a human being, has material requirements. Humans have non-material requirements as well (friendships, hobbies, art etc.), but you can't dismiss the material requirements of the human experience. The same reason that it needs to be your food, your bed, your clothing is the reason that land ownership needs to be a protected right as well. If you weaken respect and protection for land ownership then, rationally, you weaken the recognition of all property rights from food to clothing to musical instruments to your tech devices. Each material "property" may serve different purposes for the owner, but that doesn't negate the necessity of owning property. And a claim to property is the ability to control its use.

vitalredundancy
0 replies
1d1h

If you weaken respect and protection for land ownership then, rationally, you weaken the recognition of all property rights from food to clothing to musical instruments to your tech devices.

there's a fallacy of scale here, in the same way a handgun isn't the same as a nuclear weapon, and so should probably have different provisions applied to it. land is vastly more useful, and usable, than someone's shirt or ipad. multiple people can enjoy a stream, or a forest, or even a singular tree on a piece of land at the same time, and in a multitude of ways. that's not true of an ipad or shirt. this diversity and simultaneity of use puts land in a different class. severing tight coupling of personal property(like shirts and ipads) with private property(land, generally structures on land, though the latter is admittedly more contestable), is pretty useful and seems totally rational to me. it seems less rational to think weakening one would weaken the other. If anything, the distinction between personal and private property opens up new ways of thinking about property that can lead to agreeable outcomes. more generally, see also the benefits of the commons - https://www.nature.com/articles/340091a0

that said i'm with you in certain respects, i generally like solitude personally, but though i dream of having ten or so acres myself, i don't want to deprive anyone else of thoughtfully, carefully, and temporarily enjoying it either.

mrmanner
0 replies
1d1h

To use an analogy: In the US there are fair use exemptions to intellectual property rights. That doesn't mean there's no such thing as intellectual property, or that it's meaningless.

The right to roam in some other countries is a fair use exemption to land ownership rights. That doesn't mean there's no such thing as land ownership, or that it's meaningless.

dghlsakjg
0 replies
1d1h

Private property has never really been exclusive. This isn't a new line that is being crossed.

"Owning" land gives you some rights over it, but not exclusive ones. It doesn't even give you exclusive right to access the land. People can temporarily access the land for a variety of legal and valid reasons like utility work, police investigations, sales, surveys, etc. They can even permanently access the land through easements.

Right to Roam isn't saying that you don't have property rights, it is just providing another limited exception to an already long list. It is saying that people have the right to enter your unimproved land for the purpose of crossing it in a way that does not interfere with the property owner's other rights. In some places it also includes the right to temporarily sleep on the land.

There is no 'material requirement' to being a human that requires that if you own a large piece of unimproved land, people cannot peacefully walk across the parts you aren't using.

adammarples
0 replies
20h43m

You can reject one property right without rejecting all property rights out of hand (obviously. A simple counterexample: why shouldn't someone own all of the air? Are you against ALL property rights? etc..) Similarly you can reject one specific nuance of one right without rejecting others. The right of ownership (dominion) under roman law could further be broken down into the right to use (usus), to profit from (fructus), to destroy (abusus), to occupy, which can also be broken down into freehold, leasehold, commonhold, etc. It's not a silly question at all to ask whether your rights to dominion shouldn't prevent traversal by walkers etc, and your thinking on the matter seems to be quite simplistic and black and white.

9dev
0 replies
3h7m

I did not. I asked why you apparently cannot enjoy the countryside without owning the part of it you're standing on. I wonder what someone piecefully hiking through your land is taking away from you, how they diminish whatever you get out of owning it.

Property rights aren't boolean, but a gradient: You can definitely grant someone the right to pass through a given area without allowing them to permanently settle the place, or go hunting.

Having said this, I actually don't think the approach you take to ownership is a good one: Humans are social creatures. We benefit from sharing, and yes, that includes food, clothing, and musical instruments. Just acknowledging that we don't live in a feudal society anymore and can share some things doesn't immediately imply revoking all property rights or living in some kind of communist nightmare.

Going back to your original post: You mentioned your biggest dream would be owning some property in the country that you have to yourselves exclusively. If you had easy access to nature that wasn't bound in private property, would you have as strong a desire to have your own in the first place?

mrmanner
0 replies
1d

It's actually quite funny that the freedom to roam in large parts of Europe predates the USA by several hundred years and is universally accepted by landowners, yet it's talked about as if it's some sort of unprincipled anomaly.

wbazant
6 replies
1d2h

A property claim is a bundle of rights, and people democratically decide what is in the bundles. What something being (your) property means is up to all your neighbours to decide. Fortunately someone with more exclusionary view can move to a place where lots of people think like them - a community of solitude is what you need!

forgetfreeman
4 replies
1d1h

Uh, no? My neighbors have literally no say whatsoever regarding what is or isn't a legally permissible use of or activity on my property, and no governing body exists to permit them any kind of referendum on the subject.

kcb
3 replies
1d

You write this as if your land is a sovereign nation... Regardless of where you are in the US you are under many layers of government(by the people/your neighbors) that absolutely regulate what you can do on your property.

Heck the people can even legally forcibly aquire your property if the will was there.

forgetfreeman
2 replies
15h54m

I feel like we're having some kind of vocabulary issue here? My neighbors (the individuals who own property bordering mine) are neither legislators nor lobbyists. As such they have no access to the legislative process, and thus no control over what is or isn't a legal use of my property. To be absolutely clear "The People" can't do a damned thing. Local/State/Federal government is another matter entirely to be sure, but it's not like my neighbor can walk into the county courthouse and reasonably expect to have legislation drafted that alters land ownership rights.

kcb
1 replies
15h9m

Unless your neighbors are convicts or something, they have access to the legislative process. If you're doing something on your property that annoys enough of your neighbors, those neighbors call in to a local representative, an ordinance gets passed, police show up if you keep doing it. This can and does happen. Maybe you live in a county that's really lax, but still there are local laws in place that got there pretty much exactly by some neighbors getting together and bugging their representative.

forgetfreeman
0 replies
2h34m

It's like you watched the "I'm just a bill" video and that was the end of your research into how government works... Your naivete is charming.

s1artibartfast
0 replies
1d1h

It is is inversely up to each individual decide if they will abide with their neighbors democratic decision.

There is always a push and push back to the individual/social dynamic.

ipsento606
2 replies
1d1h

I approach this from a matter of principle. I don't recognize anyone's "right" to enjoy someone else's privately owned property or, stated more honestly, to infringe upon the property rights of others.

I also approach it from a matter of principle - I don't recognize anyone's right to truly "own" land. They didn't create it. It existed before they were born and it will exist after they die. Allowing a market in land doesn't, beyond any fringe degree, encourage the creation of new land. Disallowing a market in land does not decrease the supply of land. So by what right can a person "own" a piece of land they didn't create?

On a base level, land is what a country is. Your citizenship of a country entitles you to exist upon the land of that country. Imagine if a child were born into a country where every scrap of land was privately owned, and every land owner refused that child the right to exist upon "their" land. What is the child supposed to do?

I recognize that there are social and economic advantages to allowing people some exclusive rights of access to some land. I recognize that there are advantages to allowing some people some limited rights of monopoly when they make improvements to land. But I do not recognize that a private entity can truly "own" land, completely and in perpetuity, as if they had created it from whole cloth.

klabb3
0 replies
1d

100% true. The cult of land ownership is one of the most absurd norms in almost the entire world modulo the few nomadic peoples still around. It’s not just unjust and unsustainable but simply not pragmatic, judging by all exceptions: air space, pollution, zoning, rivers, damming, emergency access etc etc.

From a human development perspective, what makes sense is to define usage rights. If you’re using the land for X I can use it for Y. This originates in the principles of refining nature: for instance if I build a boat out of a log, then it reasonably becomes my property because of the human labor that went into it. Where to draw the lines between when, where and how nature gets refined enough to get usage rights can’t easily be deduced from principles, and will vary across regions and cultures. For instance in sparse regions you can afford a larger buffer zone around dwellings. Even within a country (like the US) human lifestyle varies so much that it’s reasonable to have different rules in different places.

Perhaps people are married to the concept of owning land so much that the wording cannot be changed. But it’s already obvious that nobody owns the land, the rivers, the lakes, the air. It’s absurd that it’s illegal to walk in the wilderness because of an imaginary line in the sand.

I’m from a country with freedom to roam, so I have my bias. That said, to its credit the US has despite its strong private land ownership laws, an amazing and vast set of national-, state parks and BLM land. So from an access-to-nature POV, it’s an incredible country overall.

gottorf
0 replies
1d

I recognize that there are social and economic advantages to allowing people some exclusive rights of access to some land. I recognize that there are advantages to allowing some people some limited rights of monopoly when they make improvements to land. But I do not recognize that a private entity can truly "own" land, completely and in perpetuity, as if they had created it from whole cloth.

What's the difference? Of course nobody truly "owns" land in the cosmic sense, for the reasons you stated; and of course most societies nevertheless permit the legal fiction of "land ownership", also for the reasons you stated (that generally it results in more favorable outcomes for society as a whole). So you're back to square one.

A Georgist land-value tax is the fairest solution to this problem, I think. Let society as a whole enjoy the fruits of that which no landowner caused to happen (the value of the land without any improvements), and let the landowner enjoy the fruits of his own improvements upon the land.

harimau777
2 replies
1d2h

Many people view private property, and in particular land, as theft. The reasoning is that at one point private property was owned collectively by society so the only way that it could now have a single owner is if it was stolen at some point.

Note that in this case, private property is separate from personal property like someone's house, car, clothing, etc.

gspencley
1 replies
1d1h

What do you mean by "society"? I could demonstrate that it is a word that is so vague as to be meaningless, but I will humour you and assume that you mean "all individuals coexisting within an arbitrarily defined geographical boundary" and I will shorten that to "all of us" for brevity, because I think (hope) that abides by the spirit in which you meant it.

Theft, by definition, is the forceful transfer of property from the owner to a non-owner, therefore infringing upon the owner's rights.

If "society" is "all of us" and "all of us" owns "all property" then the idea that recognizing and protecting an individual's rights to claim property is a contradiction. When I say "right" I mean a moral principle defining and sanctioning an individual’s freedom of action in a social context. So if "society" is sanctioning the freedom to acquire and maintain property, the "society" cannot have been "stolen from" as a result of "society" itself recognizing that right.

hgomersall
0 replies
23h34m

There's no ambiguity here and it's clear what is meant. At some point in the past, someone powerful enclosed a chunk of land and enforced that enclosure with violence. Hundreds of years of systematic enclosure of the commons in the UK denied many people the vital resources they needed to live and Right to Roam is the attempt to reverse some of that elitist legacy.

nathan_compton
0 replies
1d1h

I'm curious where you think property rights come from.

hgomersall
0 replies
1d

How did you get that land? Presumably you acquired it from someone legitimately. But how did they get it? At some point, it was enclosed and almost certainly enclosed to exclude others without their consent. It is the notion of private property that is the problem here, not problems you get by denying people their birthright.

forgetfreeman
0 replies
1d1h

You are not alone. My wife and I managed to attain that dream in the last year. 20 heavily wooded acres, each of the "neighbors" lots range in size from 10 to 40 acres. Being able to go entire days without seeing a rando is every bit of what you think it might be like and I strongly encourage you to make the move as early in life as you possibly can. large acreage frequently takes significant investments in time and labor to get into a configuration that suits you, don't wait until you're so old that that work pushes the limits of your physical abilities. Best of luck to you!

dghlsakjg
0 replies
1d1h

I don't recognize anyone's "right" to enjoy someone else's privately owned property or, stated more honestly, to infringe upon the property rights of others.

There are those that do not recognize your "right" to exclude them from passing peacefully over land. Notably, in the real world, the FAA doesn't care one bit if you think you own your land. They will use the force of the federal government to let anyone fly a plane over your house (including at low altitude).

As a more extreme example, many indigenous people do not recognize your right to own land that was never sold.

Your principle doesn't really stand up well in the real world.

There are all sorts of exceptions to private property rights. People can legally come onto your land without your permission for all sorts of reasons (utility workers, aircraft overflying, government agents, police, private citizens who haven't been told not to, etc..) The 'right to roam' is just an extension of that, that says that if an undeveloped piece of land lies between where you are and where you need to go, you can pass over that land in a way that does not interfere with the landowner just like all the other exceptions to a landowners "exclusive" right to the land.

JKCalhoun
19 replies
1d3h

I think the main reason people get nervous about "the public" roaming their land is the liability and the personal injury lawsuit industry in the USA.

I would be surprised if that were really the case. I'm sure people would say that is the reason but I rather doubt that is the real reason.

People want their own kingdoms. (And private land ownership likely self-selects those people.)

Loughla
7 replies
1d3h

I live in the US, and I have a "large" amount of property that is clearly marked for no-trespassing. The reason for this is the prior landowner was forced to sell when a trespasser drowned in the pond on the property and the landowner was sued, successfully, by their family.

If there were clear laws regarding trespassers and liability, I would gladly take the no trespassing signs down. I don't care if someone wants to go swim or fish on the very nice pond we have, but I absolutely will not lose my house for someone I don't know.

cratermoon
4 replies
1d3h

In the US, at least for most states I'm aware of, the attractive nuisance doctrine applies. And almost anything can be considered an attractive nuisance. It just sucks for everyone because it means the public and property owners lose out.

s1artibartfast
2 replies
1d3h

That doesn't negate the parent point, and it's not just about attractive nuisance, although childproofing 100 acres is a ridiculous task. There's also been successful suits from people who get injured after breaking and entering locked buildings

fwip
1 replies
1d1h

All of the suits of this type that I'm aware of have been pretty well misrepresented by the media or person telling the story. Generally they fall into a couple of categories:

1) The person injured was a child (usually omitted from the story). 2) The owner of the building knowingly set a dangerous trap for intruders (e.g: a shotgun pointed at the front door). 3) Ended in settlement with no admission of wrongdoing by any party. 4) Totally made up.

E.g: the popular "A burglar fell through a skylight and broke his ankle" story was actually a teenager, who climbed on the roof of his school to try to point a floodlight at the basketball court, and fell through a skylight, becoming permanently disabled. They settled out of court.

s1artibartfast
0 replies
1d

for what it is worth, I think the breaking and entering case is distinct from attractive nuisance, which is much more common.

ohples
1 replies
1d

IINAL BUT, This depends on the state you live in, New Hampshire for example I believe your liability is much more limited.

HeyLaughingBoy
0 replies
20h31m

OK. Now tell me how that helps the people who don't live in New Hampshire.

Aurornis
3 replies
1d2h

I would be surprised if that were really the case. I'm sure people would say that is the reason but I rather doubt that is the real reason.

It's a real reason, even if it's not as likely to happen as people think it is.

The example of someone tripping on a root and suing for damages would get tossed out of court. However, getting to that point could require you to hire a lawyer, deal with a lot of hassle, spend money, and other things you'd rather avoid.

However, there are many examples of land owners being sued for various things that happen on their property. Ironically, one of the arguments for holding the landowner responsible in these cases is to demonstrate that they didn't actively stop people from entering the land and doing whatever got them hurt or killed. If it can be shown that the area was a popular or well-known destination for local kids, for example, you have a different set of legal responsibilities.

Likewise, if you know something is dangerous and you don't make an effort to keep people out, you could bring legal liability upon yourself.

It's a real thing. The near limitless legal interpretations makes it logical to lock down a property rather than risk it.

dghlsakjg
2 replies
1d1h

The obvious counterpoint is to create strong exclusions in the law, and to allow victims of frivolous suits to pursue costs of defending.

The "right to roam" generally applies to unimproved or undeveloped land, so an exemption for injuries caused by natural features and activities compatible with legal land use should go some way to alleviating concerns.

If you are 'right to roaming' across my land and I have a legal quarry pit that you fall into, I should be immune, and you should be paying my lawyer's bill.

mminer237
1 replies
1d1h

While I generally agree, that doesn't really solve the problem as you can't collect payment from an indigent litigant.

dghlsakjg
0 replies
1d

That's a completely separate legal issue.

What you will find, is that indigent claimants have a hard time finding a lawyer for frivolous cases when the law is written clearly.

Lawyers don't take contingency cases that they know they are going to lose, and people that can afford to shove a frivolous case through the system by paying a lawyer hourly have enough money to pay a second lawyer.

ryandrake
2 replies
1d2h

This is a good example of the difference between an excuse and a reason. The excuse people use to oppose roaming is "risk of lawsuits" but the actual reason is the "what's mine is mine and you can't use it" mentality.

vitaflo
1 replies
1d1h

If you own the land I don’t see any why it’s a bad thing to not want others trespassing on it. No diff than I don’t want people randomly deciding to sit in my car for whatever reason while I’m at work.

dghlsakjg
0 replies
1d1h

Keep in mind that 'right to roam' applies to unimproved and (some) agricultural land, and roamers can't disturb the right of enjoyment of the owner. This isn't your normal urban backyard.

Its more like someone walked through the parking spot that you paid to park in on their way to somewhere else.

nsagent
0 replies
1d3h

Search online for beware of dog lawsuits in the US as an example of liability. The problem is that these laws vary by jurisdiction, so for example in California those signs do not protect the homeowner if someone is bitten on their land [1]. Michigan State University has a comprehensive overview of dog bite laws in the US indicating where "beware of dog" signs legally protect the owner from lawsuits [2] when someone trespasses.

[1]: https://www.enjuris.com/california/premises-liability/beware...

[2]: https://www.animallaw.info/topic/table-dog-bite-strict-liabi...

mikrotikker
0 replies
20h22m

Yes I want my own kingdom. I worked my ass off to get where I am, purchased a property with land for the sole purpose of solitude and freedom from other people. Being able to roam my own property and be free of social interaction and interruption. Is that not my right?

forgetfreeman
0 replies
1d1h

Some folks absolutely want their own private fiefdoms. I've got a "neighbor" right now that's archetypical. In less than a year of moving in he's already made ham-handed attempts to scam me out of control of my right of way, been an apocalyptic pain in the ass to the young couple that just cleared a couple acres and built a house next to his property, and made several attempts to discuss creating an HOA on our road. Then there are folks like me that are exhausted by having to navigate other people's agendas and just want to be left the fuck alone. Anyway, you're spot on. All of the pearl clutching about liability is just the socially acceptable excuse folks offer for their behavior.

IncreasePosts
0 replies
1d3h

This was a recent issue here with regards to privately owned mountain peaks, with the owners shutting down due to liability concerns.

https://kdvr.com/news/colorado/a-simple-sign-will-allow-acce...

After they were indemnified from liability the peaks opened back up.

balderdash
13 replies
1d3h

I’d also add litter, trampling of grass/shrubbery, illegal structures (e.g. deer stands/blinds), theft (picking flowers, berries, apples, vegetables), and idiots trying to pet or take pictures with livestock that weigh 20x what they do. These are all things my family deals with despite our farm being posted no trespassing the entire perimeter. I literally can not imagine how bad it would be if people felt legally entitled to be there + how hard it would be to get law enforcement involved (“I’m not poaching, I was just taking the scenic route…”)

lambdaxyzw
9 replies
1d3h

litter, trampling of grass/shrubbery

Obviously illegal, in public places too, do no relation to the topic discussed.

theft

Come on. Theft is obviously illegal everywhere.

idiots trying to pet or take pictures with livestock that weigh 20x what they do

Good thing is that it anyone is hurt in this scenario it's the idiot. Why worry about it?

I literally can not imagine how bad it would be if people felt legally entitled to be there + how hard it would be to get law enforcement involved

I used to do a lot of hiking (in Spain, France, and some other European mountain ranges). Many remote routes go nearby or through someone's fields or even properties (like through someone's backyard). There are many farm animals on the trails or just next to them. Fortunately nobody here cares and we are all more happy because of it

s1artibartfast
5 replies
1d2h

These were provided as reasons why people dont want strangers on their land.

Im not sure how actions being illegal is a dismissal of the concerns. People doing illegal things is one of the main drivers for not wanting anyone on the land.

forgetfreeman
4 replies
1d1h

These activities are the post-facto justifications folks typically toss up when objecting to people on their land, but I find their lack of imagination dull beyond belief. If we're constructing hypotheticals around potential bad behavior by unknown actors, spice it up a bit! Why not claim you don't want folks on your land because you're worried someone will construct an unlicensed breeder reactor or idk, perform rituals designed to summon the Elder Ones?

Full Disclosure: I've gotten belligerent with folks crossing my yard to get to the municipal bus stop on my property and spent significant time and effort trying to get it moved off my block. I've intentionally planted invasives along property boundaries to block neighbors views into my property, put up posted signs in a residential neighborhood, and once gleefully ignored a hedgerow full of poison ivy to the point the actual Department of Transportation contacted me to complain about it making the corner of my property unnavigable to foot traffic and a hazard to road traffic. I offer no excuses for any of that, I don't want randos on my property because by and large I despise human beings. All of that is to say I think the entire conversation around ownership rights vs public rights could use a bit more honesty from the landowners who are either afraid of strangers or hate people in general.

s1artibartfast
2 replies
1d1h

The examples are obscure because people are providing examples from a very broad and diverse class.

The category "things you dont want done to or with your property" has millions of things in it, so if you pick 5 randomly they will be odd and dissimilar. That doesn't mean they arent real or legitimate concerns.

I dont think attitudes against trespassing is just fear or misanthropy. Enforcing a permitter is a completely logical method to reduce the number of people doing undesirable things within the perimeter. It is used all the time all over the world as a pre-emptive control.

forgetfreeman
1 replies
1d1h

Understand I don't disagree with you in any meaningful sense, and it may be more of a regional issue (I live in the South), but quite frequently these kinds of excuses are trundled out when what was actually meant is some combination of "the poors disgust me" or "I'm terrified of brown people". :/

s1artibartfast
0 replies
1d

Perhaps it is regional. I grew up in a rural area that was very white.

We had issues with people riding dirtbikes and tearing up our land leading to sand traps. We had vehicles and tools stolen, and one case of home burglary. Most common was hunters trespassing to hunt game we cultivated, and sometimes shooting towards our house.

Im sure some of these people were poor, but my distaste for trespassers doesnt come from that.

property rights and no trespassing sings provide a practical tool to for protecting your property. You might not see someone snooping around your garage, but you are more likely to detect them if they are not allowed within a mile of your house.

yjftsjthsd-h
0 replies
1d1h

If we're constructing hypotheticals around potential bad behavior by unknown actors, spice it up a bit!

I've gotten belligerent with folks crossing my yard to get to the municipal bus stop on my property

So you want people to come up with unlikely reasons, then immediately turn around and deliver your own "dull beyond belief" example? Have you considered that other people's "hypotheticals" are also "boring" because those are the things they're actually worried about?

toss1
0 replies
1d2h

>Good thing is that [if] anyone is hurt in this scenario it's the idiot. Why worry about it?

Because then the idiot or his/her family will sue YOU for the consequences of their stupidity.

It happens ALL the time.

And even if you win the lawsuit, you lose, because you must defend yourself and your property at the cost of insane amounts of time and tens- to hundreds-of-thousands of dollars. So, even, if you win, you lose. Just because some trespasser was an idiot.

Things would change a lot if liability laws were changed so that if you are on someone else's property, the default is that it is at your risk (absent actual intentional man-traps which are already illegal). But this is not the case.

>Fortunately nobody here cares and we are all more happy because of it

Yes, that is nice. The laws are different there, and they should be here. But a famous hiking trail in iirc Colorado was recently closed due to liability concerns crossing private property, and someone got sued. When the law was changed, it was again opened up.

Just because we want things to be a certain way, does not mean they are that way. Until the REALITY is changed to the better way, do not ridicule people for recognizing and acting on the actual reality. (When it changes, they'll likely change too, and of they don't, then you can ridicule them.)

lcnPylGDnU4H9OF
0 replies
1d3h

illegal

I'd imagine it's not about being illegal; probably more about the actual trouble of getting appropriate compensation on top of the fact that you have to catch the person who did it in the first place.

Good thing is that it anyone is hurt in this scenario it's the idiot. Why worry about it?

American culture is very litigious. It's linked elsewhere in the thread but maybe also useful here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attractive_nuisance_doctrine. Not exactly idiots but perhaps people who are a little naive. Although, I also wouldn't be particularly surprised to learn of a case involving adults.

joenot443
0 replies
1d1h

We’ve got horses and alpacas on our farm in Ontario, it’s super common for tourists with their hiking poles and huge cameras to venture off the Bruce Trail and onto our land to take photos with our animals.

Obviously they don’t mean any harm, but horses can be super dangerous and a kick to the head is fatal for humans. What separates places like Canada or USA from Western Europe is that here there’s an entire industry of litigators chomping at the bit for a case like that, regardless of how much of an idiot you think that person is. I’m not happy with the system either, but it’s a reality here.

maxerickson
1 replies
1d3h

In Michigan, agricultural land is treated as if it is posted, so you are trespassing if you go on it, no notice required.

I would think that is not uncommon.

Loughla
0 replies
1d3h

In Illinois, Iowa, and Missouri, it has to be explicitly signed via actual signs, or purple paint (relatively recent laws allow this in rural areas). Alaska requires signs. Indiana requires signs. Those are the states I am familiar with.

I believe the states that do not require notice are in the minority, but I'm not sure how to prove that.

mauvehaus
0 replies
1d2h

Counterpoint: the people who are observing your boundaries currently are precisely the ones who wouldn't make a mess of it and do stupid stuff. And there's probably a set of people using it who aren't being dipshits who you don't know about.

The idiots are already doing the things you don't want them to do and allowing them to roam isn't going to change that. The problematic behaviors are the ones the laws should target (and perhaps already do, e.g. having a blind up without landowner permission is illegal where I live). Merely being on another's property shouldn't be cause to involve law enforcement.

I have supported the right to roam (and generally treated posted property as "open to respectful and responsible use") for years, and that has not changed since becoming a home and landowner. Our land is wooded, not agricultural, and I have no issue with kindly use by all.

duped
8 replies
1d3h

Several states have spiritually similar laws, like how all beaches in California are public and it's illegal for private land owners to cut off access to them. I don't think anyone has won a personal injury lawsuit against a land owner for tripping over a root, but land owners have been sued for breaking that law and trying to create effectively private beaches.

SkyBelow
6 replies
1d3h

Would this be because the beach is deemed public, not private with a right to access it? To allow someone to sue a landowner on the beach would be confirming it is privately owned by the landowner, no?

everforward
2 replies
1d2h

They mean on a person's way to the beach as they're crossing the private property. I.e. you park on the street and have to walk across a private yard to access the public beach, because there is no public walkway to get to the beach.

If someone were to be injured while crossing that private yard to the beach, the owner of the yard could be liable. What happens on the beach is not the yard owners problem, because it's not their property and they have no duties related to it (other than not impeding other people crossing their property).

SkyBelow
1 replies
22h39m

If they are being forced to allow access through private property, and injuries could occur on the private property, I do wonder why there hasn't been any cases? Are we sure it is private property and not some amount of reasonable public property allowed for access to the beach (which the owners might be pretending is private property and then being sued to allow access)? On a non-California beach I've been to, there are public access ways (about 20ft wide) between every 3 to 5 houses. The houses are free to block their own land, but they can't block the accessways, the beach, or the dunes because all of that is public property.

everforward
0 replies
4h22m

I would assume there have been cases, just not specifically about "tripping on a root". I can't actually substantiate that, though. The SEO of the "lawsuits about forcing public access to the beach" is really high, I can't find any lawsuits. I would assume there are some, even if the plaintiffs didn't win though? People in the US sue for everything.

On a non-California beach I've been to, there are public access ways (about 20ft wide) between every 3 to 5 houses. The houses are free to block their own land, but they can't block the accessways, the beach, or the dunes because all of that is public property.

No, California went way farther than that. They mandated that the entire coastline up to the median high tide line (if I remember right), has public access in the 1974 California Coastal Act. In later court cases, the court ruled that if there is no feasible way to access that public area without crossing private property, private land owners must permit the public to cross their land to get to the coast.

E.g. https://www.hcn.org/articles/public-lands-a-battle-over-beac... is a recent case (the Supreme Court rejected his appeal)

It's a little messy for older developments, but for new coastal developments the state requires the developer to sign an easement granting the public rights to use the land. I think there are a couple of beaches that are still holdouts due to various old-timey contractual things, but in general, you can walk across private property to access a beach behind someone's house if there isn't a feasible public route (I.e. you aren't expected to rock climb down a cliff instead or hire a boat, but you should use the public walkway if there is one).

estebank
1 replies
1d2h

They are sued for blocking pre-existing access. Everyone, including those doing the blocking, acknowledge that the beach is public, but by blocking access they are trying to avoid people actually using it so they can enjoy it as if it were private.

SkyBelow
0 replies
22h44m

I was speaking to the idea as to why these people haven't receives lawsuits about the injuries occurring to people on the beach. It is because the beaches are public, which means that it isn't an equivalent comparison to land that is private but which people might be given some sort of right to roam on.

duped
0 replies
1d2h

I'm not sure the specific details of ownership, but the gist is that in California, everyone has a right to access the beach. Private land owners aren't entitled to blocking access to the beaches, even across their property.

This court case has been going on for years over this (1) and the only reason it hasn't been tossed out is the billionaire who owns the land keeps paying lawyers to appeal.

(1) https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/martins-beach-la...

codemac
0 replies
1d2h

martin's beach :(

DoreenMichele
3 replies
1d2h

1. Right to roam (in the US) might might actually reduce homeless encampments.

In my firsthand experience, people are generally more sympathetic and supportive if you are just passing through as a homeless person. They may give you a ride and/or a small amount of cash without you asking, but the US is actively hostile to pedestrians in most places and you have zero right to pitch a tent overnight anywhere.

2. If homelessness is something you dislike, the primary root cause of homelessness is lack of affordable housing. This is a nationwide problem, not peculiar to the West Coast.

So if you don't like homeless encampments, try to find ways to foster the existence of more affordable housing generally. It's a win/win solution that helps the homeless without rewarding or encouraging bad behavior and gets "the homeless" out of "your" face (not intended as a personal attack).

And has zero relationship whatsoever to this issue. None.

5040
2 replies
1d2h

Speaking for myself, I'm actively hostile because of all their littering. Hard to be sympathetic when they toss all their garbage on the ground.

justin66
1 replies
1d1h

"Actively hostile" meaning what?

5040
0 replies
1d1h

Think of it as an inner disposition.

codexb
2 replies
1d2h

I think the problem is that there doesn't appear to be any plan to manage the land usage. In the US, there is tons of public land, but there are giant federal and state departments that manage it, and there are entire books of rules for how that land can be used. The public land is a collectively owned asset that is managed for public benefit. Areas can be closed off, or require permits, or limited to a specific usage.

The "right to roam" seems almost completely unregulated with no power to manager or limit this public asset. It's a right without any responsibility.

mauvehaus
0 replies
1d1h

There's certainly a responsibility to follow other applicable laws. You aren't allowed to litter or murder your hiking buddy on private property even if you're allowed to be on it.

aramova
0 replies
1d2h

It's a right without any responsibility.

How can you say something so controversial yet so brave?

ben_w
1 replies
1d2h

I think the main reason people get nervous about "the public" roaming their land is the liability and the personal injury lawsuit industry in the USA. If I let someone cross my land and he trips on a tree root and breaks his leg, now I'm possibly facing a lawsuit.

I rather got the impression that it was rich people wanting privacy.

As for lawsuits… I'm not sure how effective they are, but here in Berlin half the woods say "Privatgelände / Benutzung auf eigene Gefahr!" which means what you might guess without a translation.

danaris
0 replies
1d2h

It's entirely possible that the reason this type of lawsuit is still a real thing is because of rich people recognizing that it also gets them extra privacy. (At least in part.)

INTPenis
1 replies
1d1h

You're right, I don't think the US overall system is ready for a right to roam.

I come to this conclusion sometimes, one simple example is that most US suburbs are not ready for public transport because of the distances between each home.

chasd00
0 replies
1d1h

I have some land in SE Oklahoma the going rule that I’ve been told is if you cross an open gate leave it open and if you cross a closed gate close it behind you. However, I still make it a point to meet and shake hands with the owners of the land I cross. I live in Texas and, especially near the border with Mexico, you’re putting your life in danger trespassing on land, no matter how remote, without permission.

techjamie
0 replies
1d1h

Not a lawyer, but an important part of why those lawsuits can happen is under the idea that you invited someone onto your property, therefore, you have a duty to ensure they're safe when they accept that invitation. Places open to anyone, like a restaurant or grocery store, have an implied invitation because they want everyone to come inside and spend money.

So if someone jumps your fence and breaks their leg walking through your property, you didn't invite them there, you aren't intending your land to be open to the public, so the onus would theoretically be on the traveler to cover their own bills.

They could sue anyway, sure. But they can do that right now without any legal changes anyway, it would just be under well established law and they likely wouldn't win.

oooyay
0 replies
1d1h

I think the main reason people get nervous about "the public" roaming their land is the liability and the personal injury lawsuit industry in the USA

This is somewhat a solved problem in the US, what you're describing is actually nefarious behavior by cities and counties. I'll give an anecdote and I'm sure someone will come tell me if I'm wrong :)

In Texas we called these "public easements". Back then in order for the city or county to establish a public easement they had to establish that there was a reason, they had to indemnify the area and some buffer around it, and they were obligated to maintain the land that they created the easement on. Sounds simple, right? Not so much.

Cities and counties would often short change the indemnification, leaving the land owner on the hook for things they shouldn't be on the hook for. Sometimes the city would also have vaguely phrased policies like, "all public easements must have sidewalks" and those sidewalks would often incur some amount of damage to the landscape. Think about, for instance, a sidewalk going from a road, through someones property, to what is a dirt trail through the woods. Doesn't really make sense - but the city has a policy it's obligated to abide by!

I think in general cities and counties could benefit from some non-court oversight to these processes with the public that don't need to involve expensive things like lawyers and are frameworked to understand the perspective of both the public and people giving access. There should also be a zero tolerance policy for underindemnifying the easement.

Since you mentioned homlessness - I now live in Portland. Here's the way I deal with it:

If you camp on public land around my neighborhood I expect you to be a good neighbor. Clean up your trash, no feces or urination in public, no leering/jeering/being creepy etc... I've generally provided water, heating devices, medical aid, etc to people that need it - the same way a good neighbor would.

Some amount of people don't care about those boundaries though and will violate every single basic human expectation you can have. City code enforcement is generally not setup to handle disputes like this and neither are the police so it puts the public in really weird spots. I don't know how to solve that, but those folks aren't using easement rights. They're using public camping rights, which are entirely different and have more to do with camping on BLM and forestry land.

nick7376182
0 replies
1d1h

The law could easily include a liability disclaimer. People just don't like other people, want their privacy, and want their "I got mine" land locked public lands.

mauvehaus
0 replies
1d1h

I know if at least several states that have a recreational use law, the gist of which is generally along the lines of "if you aren't being charged money to access the property, you can't sue the landowner for anything that happens to you while you're lawfully recreating."

Kentucky has a law of this type on the books, and it helps a lot with access to climbing at the Red River Gorge.

kyleblarson
0 replies
1d1h

I live on a large property in a very rural mountain area in the US. My property abuts state land on 2 sides but we've never really had any issues with trespassers, likely because of the first sentence of SoftTalker's comment. Our area is one of the most popular mule deer hunting spots in the Northwest which seems like it could be problematic, but in my experience the hunters are extremely respectful of private property. It's also nice to be able to hunt mulies on my own property and not worry about errant bullets. It is a but unsettling in the last 2 weeks of October (regular rifle deer season) when the local grocery store literally fills the aisles with pallets of Busch Light and Fireball.

groby_b
0 replies
1d3h

If I let someone cross my land and he trips on a tree root and breaks his leg, now I'm possibly facing a lawsuit.

Don't worry, you're impacted by laws anyways. (My fave example is outdoor pools in LA, which by now require a fence. Never mind if there are never any children on the property, there might be at some point)

Simply crossing the land is one thing

Yup. And it isn't just homeless encampments (which we could address, if we wanted to ever provide housing), it's also that a good chunk of people are, well, asocial assholes. See e.g. folks defacing public parks, destroying natural monuments for kicks, destroying vegetation to get their insta pic just right, etc.

I don't have a good answer. People should be free to access public lands. There should be more public lands. But the consequences of that right often are destructive, and we don't seem inclined to fix that part.

chaostheory
0 replies
1d

Also, what are they allowed to do?

In Vermont, where they have something similar to free roam laws, a lot of people are having issues with hunters roaming their property.

bpodgursky
0 replies
1d3h

In the west it's more often that the public "roaming" their land is hunting for big game and trying to edge onto private land to find it. Hikers are inconvenienced but they aren't the norm.

amarant
0 replies
1d2h

Here in Sweden you're allowed to cross any land that is not directly connected to a house(read someone's lawn) you may pick wild mushrooms and berries growing there, and you may raise a tent and spend 1 night. The rule for camping as I understand it is that after you've stayed your 1 night in one place, you have to move "out of sight" from that location before you strike camp again.

You may not damage trees, cross fields where food is grown(as this would damage the crops) and you may not pick any planted fruits or berries.

Landowners are not liable for any injuries you may incur while on their land. Unless(I think?) you're on their lawn, which you're only allowed to enter if you have permission from the home owner.

There are probably a bunch of cornercases I'm unaware of, but that's the gist of it at least

aiisjustanif
0 replies
1d3h

The article is about England not the US, where there are already different laws for this and land has not been seized because that would be crazy.

Also you would already see many areas that people can roam that are private properties especially in the midlands.

_DeadFred_
0 replies
1d

Personally I like to let my children roam on my land unattended. I would not be willing to do this if random strangers were allowed onto my land.

s1artibartfast
31 replies
1d1h

Im with the ranchers in the case of Sutter Buttes. They pre-date the state purchase of the land, which it did without access rights, and before the state turned it into a park.

It reminds me of the phrase: "Poor planning on your part does not necessitate an emergency on mine".

Maybe it will work out for the state in the long run, but it took the risk to buy land without access, with full knowledge, and cant cry foul later.

dghlsakjg
14 replies
1d

Given the land's Native American heritage, the ranchers leaning "We were here first" argument is... really something.

Private property rights are only as good as the government that recognizes them. Keep in mind that the government that gives you private property rights (California in this case) also has the right to take as much of your land as they want for 'public use'. If the government wants to play hardball, it is perfectly reasonable for them to build a road across the land and open it to the public. You can't stop them, your only recourse is to argue how much they owe you for doing it.

s1artibartfast
7 replies
1d

Re-Native Americans, Luckily, both law and society have improved in the 200 years since the 1800's when Spain annexed Alta California.

I assume you think the forceful taking of native lands by the government was bad, so why do you think it is good to roll back the clock and justify doing it today?

There is an inherent contradiction here. It cant have been bad to do then, but good to do now.

fifilura
6 replies
1d

"why do you think it is good to roll back the clock and justify doing it today?"

They could justify giving it back?

s1artibartfast
5 replies
23h46m

Someone could make a slightly stronger case for giving it back to natives Maidu Indians (depending on the facts of acquisition), but they arent.

fifilura
4 replies
23h43m

This is what I meant.

Or in this particular case, if the landowners are so stubborn that they can not even allow for a road crossing their land, they could at least hint at the idea?

s1artibartfast
3 replies
23h30m

Who would hint at what idea?

fifilura
2 replies
22h57m

So the farmers does not want to give access to the land to the people.

Maybe the government should remind them how they got their land in the first place?

s1artibartfast
1 replies
22h53m

The government should remind the farmers that last time someone resisted, the government exterminated them?

fifilura
0 replies
22h28m

You are right :) sounds like a pretty bad idea.

s1artibartfast
4 replies
1d

That is absolutely not true. There are many restrictions on eminent domain. We live in a society of laws, not a feudal one where the government has god-powers.

If you are making a practical force argument, the government is physically capable of illegally exterminating the ranchers, but there would also be consequences.

dghlsakjg
3 replies
23h11m

It is absolutely true that they can take land for public use in the US. ‘Public use’ is the exact phrase used in the constitution.

Building a road or trails across private land is literally a textbook example of eminent domain.

s1artibartfast
2 replies
23h1m

It isnt that simple. There is 250 years of case law defining what constitutes public use, and the situations where it can be justified. This includes when you can use it to build a road or trail, and when you cant.

dghlsakjg
1 replies
20h3m

Can you point to some precedent where building a public road to a public park across unimproved land was not a valid use of the takings clause?

The precedent is that eminent domain is remarkably unrestricted as to what constitutes 'public use' (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelo_v._City_of_New_London). Condemning occupied and habitable homes to build a shopping center is an allowed use per precedent at the federal level (additional restrictions apply in many states). Eminent domain for building a road is basically a given if that is the method that is chosen.

s1artibartfast
0 replies
19h31m

I do not have a citation.

I dont like Kelo at all and doubt the current SCOTUS would rules that same, but understand the ruling. That said, in it's defense, the court was weighing the claimed benefit of thousands of jobs and millions of dollars of tax revenue. They would not have ruled the same if the public benefit were a park bench with no economic value?

ahmeneeroe-v2
0 replies
23h48m

In-group vs out-group. States can take land from out-group, not from in-group (which is why the in-group participates in that state). Also, as someone else pointed out, this land was taken from Mexico, who in turn took it from the Spanish crown. The Spanish took it from the "natives" (scare-quotes since I don't know if that tribe took it from another preceding tribe).

Clamchop
7 replies
1d

In some cases, the law can be used to force the sale of an easement for access to a landlocked property. So, in that sense, it can amount to an emergency for you.

But it is still a sale.

s1artibartfast
6 replies
1d

I have read about it in some cases, but it seems to depend on the situation. I suspect (and hope) that this is not one of the cases, given that the government bought the land with full knowledge that it was land locked.

Clamchop
5 replies
23h40m

It can be done even in that order of events.

I don't really agree with you, it's not in the public interest that property owners should be able to bogart land merely by encircling it, however the situation should arise, and it invites obvious abuses. Incidentally, the property owners in the article are doing just that, first by selling landlocked property evidently with an agreement among eachother to never sell a public right of way, and then by selling tours that wouldn't be necessary if they had, a form of rent seeking.

s1artibartfast
4 replies
23h17m

I think the fact that the state state initiated and brought about this situation has a major influence on my opinion. The state created the problem which it is now presumably struggling to resolve.

pas
3 replies
22h30m

how is it a problem? eminent domain is basically for this. they should buy a thin slice to make a road.

s1artibartfast
2 replies
22h17m

I dont think the need is sufficiently compelling.

The Californian public got by just fine without access for 180 years. There is no urgent need for the public to access the location. Nobody will die or have major hardship without it.

archagon
1 replies
21h55m

The landowners will not die without a small sliver of their land, either. And one option benefits a lot more people than the other.

s1artibartfast
0 replies
21h34m

Like I said above, I think there needs to be a extremely compelling need to use eminent domain.

I dont think the government should be engaging in minor utilitarian optimization. That is to say, there should be an very high threshold to use government power even if the the cost to the individual is quite small.

Where the government has trump cards which override individual rights and freedoms, they should be used rarely and out of necessity.

_DeadFred_
3 replies
1d

OK, let's do this. But then, at the same time, all grazing rights on public land should be stripped from ranchers.

s1artibartfast
0 replies
23h40m

Why? They arent doing anything wrong, in my opinion. The state exists to serve the people, not the people to serve the state.

ahmeneeroe-v2
0 replies
23h47m

Seems like a large escalation. I think you need to justify this one.

YeBanKo
0 replies
23h56m

California needs to do away with restriction on property tax raise. They tax is probably ridiculously low for the amount of land they own.

lesuorac
1 replies
23h34m

I'm not so sure of that.

It appears that the land had an easement for access which transfers on sale.

The land was served by a road easement at the time it was purchased by the state. An underlying landowner sued asserting that the easement was insufficient to permit park visitor travel between Pennington Road and the park, and lost. The court determined that the easement was sufficient to allow visitor use

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sutter_Buttes

https://casetext.com/case/campbell-v-state-1088

s1artibartfast
0 replies
23h23m

That makes makes sense, so there is limited access, but not permissive for open public access.

YeBanKo
1 replies
23h59m

If the fact that that these families grabbed that land before the union blocks state from having an easement to access the land, then the state should protect private property of these ranchers at all. So if some private militia enters and forcefully take over the ranchers land, the state should not intervene then.

s1artibartfast
0 replies
23h42m

Sounds like an interesting theory, but I dont follow. can you explain it in different terms?

anthk
0 replies
1d

Here in Spain you can't neither freely roam around into some protected nature spaces, but that's done to preserve a delicate ecosystem. Such as Urdaibai, or Doñana.

maeln
29 replies
1d3h

I pretty much knew what I would find in the comments on this one. The right to roam, in country in which it exist in one form or another, is exactly this: the right to roam. Not the right to camp (although some allow it usually with some restriction), live, squat, pollute, destroy, ...

As someone who sometime had to go from point A to point B in the countryside without a car, this was a necessity as it was the only safe way to do so (sidewalk are nonexistent in the countryside). It also avoid "trapping" some public land within private one (and effectively privatizing it), although, in my country at least, the state will usually preempt a small piece of the private land to always have a passage between public land.

As for the liability, is should go without saying that there is usually laws that release you from any liability for people hurting themselves while roaming on your property (with the obvious exception that you should not put anything with the intention of hurting people, for example traps).

hanniabu
15 replies
1d2h

with the obvious exception that you should not put anything with the intention of hurting people, for example trap

what if it's bear country and someone puts out bear traps and says they're for bears when really they were meant for people? it's a good alibi so how would you defend against that?

pavlov
10 replies
1d2h

Somehow this is not a problem in Finland, which has both bears and an expansive right to roam.

It seems to be an American thing that landowners actively seek ways to injure both wildlife and people.

dingnuts
9 replies
1d2h

The grandparent is describing someone with murderous motive. That isn't a cultural difference. There are murderers in Finland, lol.

A bear trap "for hunting" on your property would be a very bad alibi as booby trapping your property is extremely illegal in the US regardless as to intent. If you set something up on your property that harms someone, intentionally or otherwise, whether they are legally allowed to be on your property or not in the US, you are liable for whatever happens to them up to and including homicide (intentional or otherwise) charges.

Bear traps are an archaic hunting tool for bears, also, and their use in actual bear hunting is not common anymore.

So please, keep your condemnations about Americans "actively seeking ways to injure wildlife and people" to yourself when you are responding to a ridiculous, contrived, and uninformed scenario with your own cultural superiority narrative.

nerdponx
4 replies
1d2h

set something up on your property that harms someone, intentionally or otherwise, whether they are legally allowed to be on your property or not in the US, you are liable for whatever happens to them up to and including homicide

I know this wasn't your intended point, but this principle in American law does make it basically impossible for any kind of "right to roam [on private property]" to exist here, and creates a strong incentive for property owners to actively restrict/prevent access. I always thought it was stupid that a burglar can sue me if they break into my collapsing shed in the woods on my marked private property, and get hurt because the shed falls down on their head.

jandrese
3 replies
1d1h

To be fair, the threat of lawsuit from situations like this is effectively nill. I think people hold up the idea of this kind of lawsuit as an excuse to do the thing they wanted to do in the first place.

You've probably heard of the story of the burglar who fell down the stairs while robbing someone's home and successfully sued them for the medical bills. What you won't find is the case number because it never happened.

For any such case to not be laughed out of the courts the plaintiff would need to show malicious intent on your part. Avoid setting man traps or actually shooting people and the legal liability is completely within reason.

antisthenes
2 replies
1d1h

It's what I call "argument by edge case".

Because of this one story, people pretend that any change to the contrary is basically impossible in perpetuity in the future, because "precedent exists".

I suppose there is some shred of truth in there, but it seems like a defeatist attitude and a convenient excuse to do nothing even when the status quo is bad. (not all precedents are good)

nerdponx
0 replies
1d

The burglar case of course is silly, but there are plenty of personal injury cases for things like slip & fall on private property, a reckless driver damaging a parked car, etc. where a reasonable person might think "that's bullshit, the property owner shouldn't be responsible" but they end up having to settle.

The problem is a discrepancy between the law as written and the law as practiced. It results in inconsistent law.

jandrese
0 replies
1d

What you often see is "Someone could sue you for X, so you better not do it." This is technically true, but what they should say is "Someone could sue you for X, but they would lose".

In the US you can sue anybody you want for anything under the sun. Saying "someone could sue you for that" is always true. There is a huge gulf between bringing a lawsuit and actually winning said lawsuit.

You also see disingenuous case citations to try to support an otherwise unsupportable point. "20 years ago a trespasser successfully sued the homeowner for injuries sustained on the property." Not mentioned in that previous blurb: "The trespasser was injured when the homeowner shot him with a shotgun without warning."

pavlov
2 replies
1d2h

Unfortunately many American legislators and courts seem to go out of their way to promote this narrative by passing and enforcing laws that permit excessive use of violence by landowners and homeowners.

nerdponx
1 replies
1d2h

Actively shooting trespassers with a gun is different from booby-trapping your property.

jandrese
0 replies
1d1h

Not really. Setting man traps is illegal in all 50 states.

justin66
0 replies
1d1h

There are murderers in Finland, lol.

What is "lol" about that?

nativeit
0 replies
1d2h

It’s much less of an issue in countries where such an injury doesn’t put a person at significant risk of bankruptcy.

everforward
0 replies
1d1h

It's not really a good alibi; someone putting bear traps on a human path is going to have a very hard time arguing they were trying to catch bears. Someone putting out bear traps without signage is clearly doing something funky; would you put bear traps out in the woods and then try to collect them without signage?

More generally, many states ban the use of steel leg traps by civilians already. They're dangerous to humans (often including the owner), they're cruel to the animal, it lacks any of the "sport" attributed to normal hunting, and they can't differentiate between a bear and an endangered kind of deer or whatever.

They're gonna get weird looks, though. I've spent some time in bear country and I don't think I've heard of anyone trapping them; I don't even think the wildlife service around there does it. They generally prefer to shoot or tranquilize them if need be, because trapped bears are pissed off and you do not want to be in eyesight of a pissed off bear. I wouldn't take any bets about what a pissed off bear is capable of, especially in the ability of a trap to immobilize it.

codexb
0 replies
1d2h

Hunting is highly regulated these days. For one, I'm not aware of anywhere that allows the trapping of bear anymore. If you're trapping, you can't just put out traps and leave them. Most places require you to check them every 24 hours.

EDIT: apparently, Maine is the one state that allows trapping bears

a_dabbler
0 replies
1d2h

No bears in UK countryside

bequanna
12 replies
1d2h

As for the liability, is should go without saying that there is usually laws that release you from any liability for people hurting themselves while roaming on your property

This isn't true.

A person can break into your home, fall down stairs and file a lawsuit against you.

ryanmcbride
5 replies
1d2h

Do you have an example of such a lawsuit succeeding in real life outside of the movie Liar Liar?

ryandrake
3 replies
1d2h

A lawsuit still costs money to the defendant even if it doesn't "succeed" in the end. The legal system is pretty much inaccessible to laypeople, so you need to at least hire a lawyer so they can speak the magical incantations and file the right 27b/6 form to the right clerk at the right time so you don't lose due to a paperwork technicality.

stale2002
2 replies
1d2h

So, to clarify, your answer seems to be "No. I do not have a single real life example of this happening"?

ryandrake
1 replies
1d2h

I'm not OP and didn't make any claims about "falling down stairs and filing a lawsuit". You want me to provide a generic example of someone being sued and it not succeeding? I would guess this happens daily.

xboxnolifes
0 replies
23h53m

I could sue you without ever walking onto your property. That doesn't mean anything.

criddell
0 replies
1d2h

They are probably thinking of attractive nuisance lawsuits. For example, if you have a pool without a fence around it and a neighbor's kid trespasses and ends up falling into the pool, you could be found liable to some degree.

volkl48
0 replies
1d2h

Anyone can file a lawsuit for anything. Filing a lawsuit that doesn't get immediately dismissed by the judge because it has no merit, is a different question.

-----

In the Northern New England states (VT/NH/ME) that have a sort of freedom to roam codified in law (basically - unposted, undeveloped property is generally free to access for low-impact uses like hiking without requiring permission) - there is broad liability protection provided to the property owner.

For example, the law in VT for liability in that land access situation is only if the injury that occurs is "....the result of the willful or wanton misconduct of the owner." (and has further exemptions from even that if the injury is with regards to accessing equipment/machinery/personal property - which you're not entitled to access).

You pretty much need to be setting traps or creating some truly absurd unnatural hazards to be at legal risk.

virtue3
0 replies
1d2h

Not really true - that case was an urban myth I believe from my own searching (as I heard about it when I grew up). Would like sources if it's true.

What I did look up:

"Premises liability laws generally do not extend to trespassers, such as burglars, because they do not have a legal right to be on the property. However, property owners in California may be liable for injuries caused by a crime on their property if they should have reasonably foreseen the crime and failed to take steps to reduce the risk. This is known as negligent security and can apply to crimes such as burglary, theft, and robbery. Factors that may contribute to a negligent security claim include: Broken or missing surveillance cameras, Lack of security guards, and Broken or inadequate locks."

swashboon
0 replies
1d2h

They don't even need to go through the work of breaking in - anyone can in fact just sue anyone for any reason at any time!

notaustinpowers
0 replies
1d2h

I can also file a lawsuit because I don't like the color of your house. Doesn't mean it'll succeed in a court of law.

AmalgatedAmoeba
0 replies
1d2h

You can file a suit against anybody for anything. If it’s obviously without merit, it’s likely to get dismissed pretty quickly. But there’s nothing stopping you from filing it.

9dev
0 replies
1d2h

If a new right to roam law was introduced, why couldn't it include a section on the release of any liability if one makes use of this right to roam? It's not like laws can't be adjusted, right?

reify
22 replies
1d4h

The thirty people who own half of Berkshire here on Airstrip One.

https://whoownsengland.org/2017/04/17/the-thirty-landowners-...

Loads of sychophants in that list.

Airstrip One has been invaded by so many countries over many hundreds of years that those who have defeated the our poor armies have then, without any authority, given "OUR" lands to their friends, lords, ladies, and any sychophantic mendicants.

These lands are not their lands!

All these lands were stolen from the common people.

Its called Berkshire for a reason and where the cockney rhyming "Berkshire" comes from

I never gave my permission to give away my land.

deepsun
17 replies
1d4h

UK is literally still a monarchy mostly, a limited one, but still a kingdom, no surprise there. No one says it was "stolen from common people", because they have always owned it.

UK people still pay land tax to baron families from ancient times in many places, London included. AFAIR the whole House of Lords is created to protect their rights.

You may say it's unfair, but I'm not sure it's productive. Good thing nowadays you can emigrate relatively easily.

graemep
4 replies
1d3h

No one says it was "stolen from common people", because they have always owned it.

Not true. Common land, in particular, was stolen during the agricultural revolution and enclosed. This also created the cheap labour needed for the industrial revolution. The modern world was built on theft from the rural common people.

Good thing nowadays you can emigrate relatively easily.

As an immigrant (as a child) I have already done that. I even have dual nationality so one emigration option is easy. The problem is I do not know of anywhere much better.

groby_b
3 replies
1d2h

Given that the "rural common people" were just as happy killing each other for access to land, good luck finding the "real" owner.

Seriously, there are lots of things wrong with the allocation of wealth and property around the world, but "it was stolen during the agricultural revolution" is an absolutely meaningless argument. Britain e.g. has 900k years of human history. (With the first humans only visiting between cold spells).

There is no "true first owner".

graemep
2 replies
1d2h

There is no "true first owner".

I did not claim there was a "true first owner".

I said that there was ownership by the common people.

groby_b
1 replies
1d1h

Which common people? Unless you'd like to treat "the common people" as an amorphous blob?

hgomersall
0 replies
23h25m

The commons: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commons

A successful system of land stewardship for many centuries. It was maintained and looked after by the people that lived near to it.

abeppu
4 replies
1d3h

No one says it was "stolen from common people", because they have always owned it.

... but enclosure acts were specific legislative acts which privatized land and removed common access. I.e. common people had access to the land, and it was taken away. Whether it is "stolen" is perhaps messier to decide. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enclosure#Parliamentary_Inclos...

Being a monarchy is orthogonal; Norway has a king and right to roam, for example.

arethuza
2 replies
1d3h

Scotland is part of the UK and has right to roam.

abeppu
1 replies
1d3h

I've heard about Scottish bothies. As an American, culturally it seems hard to imagine not only a right to walk over private land, but land owners sometimes even donating shelter for use by strangers, for free.

vincebowdren
0 replies
1d3h

I.e. common people had access to the land

Only in a limited sense. The public did not have access to the land; specific "commoners" (local farmers) had specific usage rights e.g. for grazing.

helboi4
1 replies
1d2h

Blatant ignorance of history said with overconfidence. The land was literally called common land and was in common ownership until the enclosure acts.

deepsun
0 replies
4h39m

As I see it, the Land was in common ownership only until 1066 AD. Then William I distributed the land amongst his 180 barons. However, he promised the English people would be able to exercise their previous rights (pasture, roam etc), hence "common land".

That's important -- all land was (is?) owned by 180 barons (not sure how many families survived till today), it's just the government restricted land owners to prevent people using it in some cases. Yes it was called "common land". But it doesn't mean its owner is common people.

KaiserPro
1 replies
1d2h

I think OP was referring to enclosures

deepsun
0 replies
5h0m

Yep, my point is that owner is owner. Owner can give some rights (e.g. to roam), but owner can take them away (to enclose).

But I don't argue whether it's good or bad. I personally don't even know if land ownership is a good thing to begin with. On the other end of range is Communism, that I've experienced personally, and choosing between the two evils I'd choose Monarchy. Probably some middle ground, like land can be leased from government for max 50-99 year at a market price. Or like with the right to roam -- land is owned forever, but government highly restricts the definition of "ownership".

otherme123
0 replies
1d3h

Funnily enough, the need to have a passport to leave your country is a relatively recent thing. Pre-World War I, people could just pack and go to another country, and passports were rarely enforced. They were more a helping document while traveling than a controling tool.

Only after WWI one of the explicit objetives of the passports was to limit the emigration of skilled people. Not to menction that most countries in America were happily receiving huge amounts of people from everywhere without too much hassle. I don't think that is happening today.

gadders
0 replies
1d2h

>Good thing nowadays you can emigrate relatively easily.

Given than 1.2m people migrated to the UK in the year ending June 2023, it doesn't seem to be putting people off.

dboreham
0 replies
1d3h

As is often the case, Scotland is different. Fue duty was abolished decades ago, for example.

fallingknife
3 replies
1d3h

3 out of the 30 "people" on that list are the government, and some others are companies. And only 7 of these properties are over 3000 acres. I don't really see what the problem is with large rural properties. How many people even want to own empty land in the first place?

Loughla
2 replies
1d3h

How many people even want to own empty land in the first place?

My experience, based on the price of property, is that a shit ton of people want to own empty land, in the anticipation of it not being empty at some point in the future.

ghaff
0 replies
1d3h

Or they like the buffer space. Between my smaller amount of property and my two neighbors, we’re collectively on about 75 acres. (My house is the property’s original 1820s farmhouse.) I’m not sure the rest of the property would be buildable anyway.

cratermoon
0 replies
1d3h

Yeah, you never know when Wal*Mart might want to come along and buy it to put up a another big box.

frankharv
17 replies
1d3h

This authors mindset is unfathomable to me:

"repairing the damage caused by centuries of private land ownership."

ta1243
10 replies
1d2h

Do you not think this would start to repair the damage?

s1artibartfast
9 replies
1d2h

I think they are objecting to how the article assumes that the damage exists and people agree upon this.

What exactly is the damage?

hansjorg
7 replies
1d2h

The damage being that people have been conditioned to being unfree in a very fundamental sense.

s1artibartfast
6 replies
1d2h

can you expand on that?

I'm unfree in a lot of ways. Not all of them damaging. I cant walk into someone's house, use their toothbrush, and grope them.

It sounds like there is some theory of damage stemming from lack of specific freedoms, but it certainly hasn't been articulated.

hansjorg
5 replies
1d1h

For some people freedom means being able to violently deny others to roam the land, to deny access lakes, to deny foraging for berries and mushrooms and even to deny them access to the coastline and the ocean.

For them, freedom might entail being able to deny these basic modes of being e.g. based on monetary worth, social standing or even ethnicity (like country clubs in the US).

If that's what you consider freedom, I don't think I'm going to be able to convince you otherwise.

s1artibartfast
4 replies
1d1h

you didnt answer the question about what "the damage" is. It is a simple question.

Instead, you evaded it and tried to redirect the topic.

ta1243
1 replies
1d

The use of the land is removed from the people

s1artibartfast
0 replies
1d

So the damage is opportunity loss. What makes it a legitimate grievance opposed to a bogus one?

There are lots things that were once possible, but no longer are.

Of course, there is also the question of who "the people" are.

hansjorg
1 replies
1d

I already explained what I meant by damage. Being unable to see how the freedom of a tiny minority shouldn't trump the freedom of basic modes of being of the vast majority, that's damage.

s1artibartfast
0 replies
1d

What are "freedoms of basic modes of being"?

Is there a lexicon guide I should be referencing with definitions to these vague phrases.

ta1243
0 replies
1d1h

All monopolies are damaging

bigstrat2003
2 replies
1d3h

Trying to be charitable, I think maybe it's just a cultural thing. If someone grew up immersed in a culture which tells them that walking everywhere is a natural right of man, then it wouldn't be surprising if they think of private land ownership as being heinous. It's a very alien view to me, but values shaped by culture generally are. It's just how it is.

rsynnott
0 replies
1d3h

Many countries allow private land ownership, but also have a right to roam; the land ownership is qualified (as indeed almost all land ownership is nearly everywhere; that's how eminent domain works).

ajkjk
0 replies
1d2h

I think the claim is more like: "We grew up in a culture that forgot how the freedom to go everywhere ought to be something we value. I have remembered that this is a good thing to value, and you should too."

g4zj
0 replies
1d3h

Could you elaborate on this?

francisofascii
0 replies
21h57m

If you were to ever try to create a new railway, or even a small hiking trail along an existing body of water, you will discover it would have been much easier centuries ago before the local municipalities gave away all the land. It is a hard thing to undo, is the point. You wish you could go back in time and set aside the necessary land for trails, parks, etc.

ajkjk
0 replies
1d3h

Well they're writing to change minds like yours.

gorbypark
8 replies
1d1h

My ideal "right to roam" laws would be 1) you have the right to pass through any piece of land 2) you have to stay x amount of meters away from a house/building/etc 3) you have the right to camp for one night in a spot and you can't have a tent pitched until one hour before sunset and it must be down by one hour after sunrise. There should probably be an even further minimum distance from a house compared to the distance set for just passing by. 4) no fires / pack it in, pack it out / etc

There's a bunch of places in Europe now that have a no camping policy, but allow (or tolerate) "bivouacking", which originally meant sleeping on the ground without a shelter but now kind of includes small tents. I think it's the ideal tradeoff, it still allows long distance backpackers to do their thing while discouraging the "party camping" crowds.

sandworm101
4 replies
1d1h

So would this ideal legal framework extend to the suburbs? Do I get to roam through people's backyards? Am I allowed to hop over fences so long as I stay X meters away from buildings? How big does a property have to be before I can pitch my tent in the middle of someone's lawn? No matter what the number, 10m, 25m, 100m, I can probably find a nice neighborhood on google maps full of lawns big enough to become my next campsite.

antisthenes
2 replies
1d1h

The policy needs to be reasonable, unless you want home owners taking matters in their own hands (you don't).

Policy or not, seeing a steady stream of strangers "roam" through your property next to your (vulnerable) family members will generally do more harm than good. Also, how would you deal with unintended property damage?

Am I allowed to hop over fences so long as I stay X meters away from buildings?

A reasonable policy would probably specify at least 50-100 meters from buildings, which would outlaw roaming in suburbia.

sandworm101
0 replies
1d1h

> A reasonable policy would probably specify...

There is no reasonable policy, not in the US. No matter what number is picked, homeowners will install anything from doll houses to razor wire to prevent their back lot becoming the next homeless encampment.

lukeschlather
0 replies
1d

As a child I routinely cut through neighbors' yards in a suburban area. It's not reasonable to deny this sort of passage to anyone. IMO it's reasonable that there be footpaths which allow general passage between buildings.

gorbypark
0 replies
23h23m

I haven't really thought it through but off the top of my head 250m from a house just passing by seems reasonable, and maybe something like 750-1000m for biouvacking? No one (who wants the right to roam in the wilderness) desires to roam around the suburbs, and having some reasonable limits like 250m/1000m would prevent people from doing that. It would prevent people from entering tracts of land that are even a few acres in size. When I think "the right to roam" I am thinking about places with vast tracts of wilderness. Think some "ranches" in the American West, though could be tens of thousands of acres of land not really used for much besides grazing cattle. No one advocating for the right to roam wants to camp in your backyard.

tyfon
0 replies
1d1h

This sounds like the Norwegian right to roam (allemannsretten) with a few modifications.

You can camp/roam in non farm/garden land, but not closer than 150 meters to a house/cabin.

Time limit pr spot is 2 days.

Some areas are restricted for environmental reasons like restriction on camp fires certain times in the year.

You can harvest wild berries and fish.

You are expected to be considerate to the environment and people.

Norwegian text: https://miljostatus.miljodirektoratet.no/tema/friluftsliv/al...

soneil
0 replies
22h2m

That's really not far off Scotland's "responsible access" (the proper term for the 'right to roam'). It's just more fleshed out.

The Outdoor Access Code contains such gems as "You only have access rights if you exercise them responsibly", which I love - it's the closest I've ever seen to "don't be a dick" being codified. But also such details as in crop fields you only have access to the margins, fields with animals, bringing dogs, etc.

But they do have "land on which there is a house [..] and sufficient adjacent land to enable those living there to have reasonable measures of privacy and to ensure that their enjoyment of the house [..] is not unreasonably disturbed". Which isn't "x metres", but is again wonderfully close to "don't be a dick".

They don't have set times for camping, however.

ApolloFortyNine
0 replies
1d1h

you have the right to camp for one night in a spot and you can't have a tent pitched until one hour before sunset and it must be down by one hour after sunrise.

If you have land in a desirable location, I fear your at best one tiktok away from people coming to your property each night to camp.

I think right to roam is an interesting idea, but the camping part should probably just be left out, or the fine minimal enough where if you made a best effort to stay out of sight and out of the way (as you should) no one would care. And if you got 'caught' you don't head to prison.

KingOfCoders
5 replies
1d3h

The Bavarian constitution says:

"All parts of the great outdoors, in particular forests, mountain pastures, rocks, wastelands, fallow land, floodplains, riparian strips and agricultural land, may be entered by anyone free of charge."

(Though you can't camp there like in Norway)

lima
0 replies
1d1h

And in hammocks! They don't touch the ground and therefore don't count.

KingOfCoders
0 replies
14h10m

Looks like it is allowed when not planned but an emergency.

techterrier
0 replies
1d3h

all the keep out signs on picturesque parts of southern ireland (eg galway) are helpfully translated into German.

__MatrixMan__
4 replies
1d2h

I want this in the US so badly. Thrice now I've had my commute double because somebody fenced off a trail and now I have to go the long way around.

onthecanposting
1 replies
23h48m

I think abrogating the property rights of every property owner in exchange for some people getting a shortcut is not a very good trade.

There are legal routes for public agencies to purchase portions of land to create routes for transportation, including pedestrian paths, that ensure you're at least paid for the lost property. If there is a need, then lobbying your mayor or council is the way to go about this. That's a lot less risky than letting anyone enter your property anytime for any reason as long as they say they're on a nature walk or something.

__MatrixMan__
0 replies
20h24m

I know my corner of the world will not embrace right to roam anytime soon. I'd settle for something that requires owners to acknowledge that when they buy land with a trail on it they have to maintain that trail. I don't mind going around, but it shouldn't take me an additional 30m.

ThrowawayTestr
1 replies
1d1h

Climb the fence.

__MatrixMan__
0 replies
1d1h

That'll get you shot 'round these parts. Or bit by someone's dog.

Although there's one fence in particular, around an apartment complex parking lot which I cut through to go to the grocery store, which I've been dismantling. They've repaired it three times so far, we'll see who gives up first.

theodric
2 replies
1d

Well here's something that will be taken as an inflammatory comment, which I nevertheless believe with absolute certainty and will hold to despite the inevitable loss of karma/banning:

Anglosphere countries cannot be trusted with this level of access to another person's property. If the change gets through, people will abuse their rights, overstep, overstay, and leave a mess behind them; owners will complain bitterly, and some owner who has enough land or sway or title will complain strongly enough to the right person, and this will be dialled back. If you wait 50-70 years, it'll come back for another go.

I know Anglosphere mentality. I'm American, but have spent 21 years in Europe, living in Ireland, the Netherlands, and Switzerland, and travelling extensively in Scandinavia, Germany, and the UK. Folks differ in their attitudes toward collective responsibility and respect for others and their things. Not only that, but that's what's germane to this discussion.

Rastonbury
1 replies
1d

Have you ever walked in British countryside? There is already limited right to roam and people are generally courteous about walking through people's property, shutting gates etc.

theodric
0 replies
22h51m

Walkers are one thing; it's when people stay overnight and can't be asked to pack away everything they hauled in that a layer really begins to accumulate: plastic wrappings, bottles, butts, wads of beshitted toilet paper, and so on. But I've witnessed enough hedge-rubbish in Snowdonia to not be blown away relative to what I saw in Switzerland and Norway.

vincebowdren
1 replies
1d3h

This article never mentions the existing access setup:

1. a really dense network of rights of way – almost entirely on privately-owned land https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rights_of_way_in_England_and_W...

2. open access to unimproved wild land: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_to_roam#England_and_Wa...

The way this article reports the campaigners, you'd be forgiven for thinking that there are no existing rights of access in law, and for thinking that private ownership of land necessarily means absolute access restrictions.

This is not just a problem with this specific article; I've seen it numerous times, and it makes me think that this is a consistent pattern of this campaign; the campaigners are either wilfully ignoring the rights which already exist or are themselves woefully ignorant. Either way, they're doing the public a disservice by spreading what looks a lot like misinformation.

vincebowdren
0 replies
1d3h

Another bit of ignorance: they refer to 'commons' as if that meant, in English, unrestricted public use or access. It doesn't. A commons is a piece of land with specific usage rights for specific people - e.g. local farmers allowed particular grazing rights. "give the commons back to the public" implies a history which this country has never had.

mprovost
1 replies
1d2h

There was a big high wall there that tried to stop me;

Sign was painted, it said private property;

But on the back side it didn't say nothing;

This land was made for you and me.

-- Woody Guthrie

orthecreedence
0 replies
22h34m

I love how they cut this verse out in the presidential inaugeration.

surfingdino
0 replies
1d2h

The right to roam ought to be given together with an obligation to restore the land to the original state after you have roamed.

mbonnet
0 replies
1d

Some of the best climbing in the world is in karst topography. The best known is in Central Europe. Far away from that is the Texas Hill Country, which while possessing incredible rock, is almost entirely privately owned. Central Texas could be a climbing mecca, but isn't, because of a lack of right to roam.

geff82
0 replies
5h35m

The right to roam/access was so natural and ingrained to me that it took me 3 decades of my life to finally realize that it was not everywhere like in Germany/Switzerland/Austria where the entire landscape is essentially one big recreational park. Vacation away from home is great, but living in a place where I am confined to my own ground/public roads and a few select pieces of federal land? Unimaginable. Freedom comes in many forms.... the right to roam is one I exercise every day.

I feel that the right to access/roam (depending on the country it is called and framed differently) hurts no one and makes everyones life better.

gadders
0 replies
1d1h

I'm not sure people should have unrestricted rights to roam over private property, but where public land is fully enclosed by private land there should be an allowance made (or compulsory footpath introduced) to grant access.

I think there is a similar issue in the US with land that is only accessible on touching corners. https://www.onxmaps.com/onx-access-initiatives/corner-crossi...

bilsbie
0 replies
1d1h

I kind of like this idea but I’d prefer it only applied to commercial land owners or very large personal land holdings.

It would suck to buy a couple acre plot to get away from the city and constantly have people camping or hiking on your land.

TurkishPoptart
0 replies
1d

Doesn't Scandinavia have a right like this?

Dylanfm
0 replies
1d2h

Another interview with Jon Moses: https://novaramedia.com/2023/07/13/novara-fm-revenge-of-the-...

Putting the 'right to roam' movement in a greater context. Coming about after de-peopling of the land, trying to counter the effects that has had on people. By returning land access to people, people will regain a connection with the land and care for it more.