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Where are the Oath Keepers and Patriot Railroad people from this area on this?
Are there any?
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Where are the Oath Keepers and Patriot Railroad people from this area on this?
Are there any?
He's simply telling you read up on what a claim is, how to get one, and what it allows you to and your rights. It's pretty easy for you to sit in your recliner and just say, show me. You don't know what your talking about so your kind of looking like a fool.Excuse me none issue.
He's simply telling you read up on what a claim is, how to get one, and what it allows you to and your rights. It's pretty easy for you to sit in your recliner and just say, show me. You don't know what your talking about so your kind of looking like a fool.
If you have the filed claim you have the mineral rights. However, the claim must be worked(improved). This is so squatters don't file a claim for the purpose of just aquiring the land. Just like a drivers license the claim must be renewed after a designated period of time. I once worked for Untied States Pumice Mine in Momo County in Calif. They let several claims lapse and someone filed on them the next day. There are responsibilities involved in maintaining and keeping a claim. Just because a person filed a claim 100 years ago doesn't mean that it is a valid claim today. A mining claim is not a deed. I am not supporting the BLM in this. Just saying.
I caught 3 Russians operating an illegal gillnet on the Columbia at night 2 years ago, so lets outlaw fishing on the Columbia.
Same fricken logic.
He's simply telling you read up on what a claim is, how to get one, and what it allows you to and your rights. It's pretty easy for you to sit in your recliner and just say, show me. You don't know what your talking about so your kind of looking like a fool.
If you have the filed claim you have the mineral rights. However, the claim must be worked(improved). This is so squatters don't file a claim for the purpose of just aquiring the land. Just like a drivers license the claim must be renewed after a designated period of time. I once worked for Untied States Pumice Mine in Momo County in Calif. They let several claims lapse and someone filed on them the next day. There are responsibilities involved in maintaining and keeping a claim. Just because a person filed a claim 100 years ago doesn't mean that it is a valid claim today. A mining claim is not a deed. I am not supporting the BLM in this. Just saying.
If you have the filed claim you have the mineral rights. However, the claim must be worked(improved). This is so squatters don't file a claim for the purpose of just aquiring the land. Just like a drivers license the claim must be renewed after a designated period of time. I once worked for Untied States Pumice Mine in Momo County in Calif. They let several claims lapse and someone filed on them the next day. There are responsibilities involved in maintaining and keeping a claim. Just because a person filed a claim 100 years ago doesn't mean that it is a valid claim today. A mining claim is not a deed. I am not supporting the BLM in this. Just saying.
In Oregon you can get a permit to gillnet pretty much anywhere on the Columbia river.
The permits are for CARP only and you can get one. Now what are you going to do with all them carp?? Well according to the ODFG person I talked, to the Russians eat them. So unless you asked to see there permit, well careful.
What you are claiming is post 1955 surface resource act grandfather clause. The Sugar Pine Mine has been a mine since the 1800s...
Has the mine passed through hands since it's original opening? Yes.
Imagine owning a home and handing it down from person to person through trusts then a government agency, with a deputy, shows up and tells you to move out, the house isn't yours, the laws changed and good luck fighting it...
We get that if you just started putting up a mine in the middle of nowhere you've got to abide by certain laws, regulations, licenses and conditions. Nobody is disputing that.
But just because nobody has been working in the mine until recently doesn't mean they're suddenly subjected to the 1955 resource act.
Just like how you might not be able to dig any more wells on your property, that doesn't automatically mean you can't repair or re-dig an existing well...