What's new
Forums
Members
Resources
Whopper Club
Politics
Pics
Videos
Fishing Reports
Classifieds
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Members
Resources
Whopper Club
Politics
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Forums
General
General Discussion
New Land Bills: SB 2036, 2037 and 2038
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="dustit" data-source="post: 314347" data-attributes="member: 6646"><p>In case anyone still cares...an update on the recent bills from The Forum. </p><p></p><p>"The committee gave unanimous do-pass recommendations to Senate Bill 2144 and Senate Bill 2036 <a href="https://video.legis.nd.gov/en/PowerBrowser/PowerBrowserV2/20210114/-1/18625" target="_blank">during a hearing on Thursday, Jan. 14</a>. Two related bills, Senate Bill 2037 and Senate Bill 2038, were given do-not-pass recommendations."</p><p></p><p><a href="https://www.inforum.com/news/government-and-politics/6841462-Bills-on-North-Dakota-trespassing-law-align-ag-and-outdoors-groups" target="_blank">https://www.inforum.com/news/government-and-politics/6841462-Bills-on-North-Dakota-trespassing-law-align-ag-and-outdoors-groups</a></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>Bills on North Dakota trespassing law align ag and outdoors groups</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p>North Dakota's trespassing laws and private property rights have been hot-button issues in the past, but an interim committee's work got high marks in the first committee hearing on the issue during the 2021 legislative session.</p><p></p><p>Written By: <a href="https://www.agweek.com/incoming/author/Jenny-Schlecht" target="_blank">Jenny Schlecht</a> | Jan 14th 2021 - 4pm.</p><p></p><p>BISMARCK — The North Dakota Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee has given a thumbs up to two bills that would revise the state’s trespassing laws on private land — a long-discussed issue that appears finally to have found consensus from the state’s landowners and outdoors enthusiasts.</p><p></p><p>The committee gave unanimous do-pass recommendations to Senate Bill 2144 and Senate Bill 2036 <a href="https://video.legis.nd.gov/en/PowerBrowser/PowerBrowserV2/20210114/-1/18625" target="_blank">during a hearing on Thursday, Jan. 14</a>. Two related bills, Senate Bill 2037 and Senate Bill 2038, were given do-not-pass recommendations.</p><p>SB 2144 would allow landowners to post land for no trespassing electronically or with physical signs, update the definition of a fence, establish that all fenced land is closed to anyone but hunters and fishers regardless of posting, and allow law enforcement to issue noncriminal citations for trespassing related to hunting and fishing. SB 2036 would extend and expand an interim study of the state’s trespassing laws and land access issues and the use of a database for the purpose of posting land for no trespassing.</p><p>North Dakota remains the only state in the region on which private land is considered open unless otherwise posted with physical signs. While the current law is supported by hunting and fishing groups, agriculture groups have long called for an end to the presumption of openness. The 2016 Dakota Access Pipeline protests and related criminal cases brought forward more concerns about the state’s laws and who could enter private land.</p><p></p><p><a href="https://www.agweek.com/business/4561972-ag-groups-hunting-groups-face-nd-trespassing-bill" target="_blank">The issue of revising North Dakota’s trespassing laws on private land was among the most divisive of the 2019 legislative session</a>. Sen. Robert Erbele, R-Lehr, said 36 hours went into hearings and committee work on the matter during the session.</p><p>While the main bill addressing trespassing in the 2019 session failed, <a href="https://www.agweek.com/business/4607303-changes-nd-property-access-fail-yet-again-separate-bill-mandates-land" target="_blank">the budget bill for the Information Technology department contained an item calling for a study of land access and the potential use of a database for electronic posting</a>.</p><p>Erbele said that study represented a breakthrough of sorts in the issue. In addition to legislators and four citizen members with voting rights on the committee, the study included advisors from the state Department of Agriculture, state Department of Game and Fish, North Dakota Association of Counties, state Information Technology Department and the North Dakota State’s Attorney’s Association. Having all parties at the table helped them find common ground.</p><p></p><p>“I think we built a bridge, and communication and relationships are the key to that,” Erbele said.</p><p>As part of the study, Game and Fish built a web-based database to test in three counties: Richland, Ramsey and Slope. Erbele said the site was used during the 2020 hunting season, not to see how many people would use it but to see how it worked.</p><p>Brian Hosek, with administrative services at Game and Fish, said landowners in those counties were able to electronically “post” their land for no hunting on the site, and hunters were able to search for information about land to hunt. The system went live in May, and 79 landowners signed up to use it for 260 tracts of land representing 38,000 acres. The system also saw heavy use from hunters in the three counties, with thousands of views on different mapping systems and applications.</p><p>Hosek walked the committee through the system and its capabilities, explaining how quickly land can be posted by landowners and different mechanisms hunters can use to find open land or information to contact landowners. Some hunter-focused options can be downloaded or printed in case of poor cell service.</p><p></p><p>Under the study, there was a deadline of July 15 for landowners to electronically post their land to enable time for compilation of maps. The bills do not give a deadline for posting.</p><p>No one spoke in opposition to the bills. Rep. Gretchen Dobervich, D-Fargo, who served on the interim committee, said her father, in Slope County, used the system to post his land and found it easy to use, though he did identify some glitches.</p><p>Representatives from outdoors groups and agriculture and landowner groups said the interim committee’s efforts and the bills presented were important steps in the right direction.</p><p>“Our members want better hunter landowner relations and we believe e-posting, along with the continuation of physical signs, are good steps to achieving that goal,” he said.</p><p></p><p>Julie Ellingson, executive vice president of the North Dakota Stockmen’s Association, said her membership still believes that removing the presumption of openness from the trespassing laws would represent the simplest solution. However, she said the efforts were an important step toward greater property rights for landowners, which was a founding issue for her group.</p><p></p><p>The two bills given do-not-pass recommendations contained similar provisions to the passed bills, but Erbele explained that SB 2144 was a collaboration completed by citizen members of the interim committee and was more complete than SB 2037 or SB 2038. SB 2037 would have allowed landowners not to list their names on no-trespassing signs, an idea that was opposed by outdoors groups.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dustit, post: 314347, member: 6646"] In case anyone still cares...an update on the recent bills from The Forum. "The committee gave unanimous do-pass recommendations to Senate Bill 2144 and Senate Bill 2036 [URL="https://video.legis.nd.gov/en/PowerBrowser/PowerBrowserV2/20210114/-1/18625"]during a hearing on Thursday, Jan. 14[/URL]. Two related bills, Senate Bill 2037 and Senate Bill 2038, were given do-not-pass recommendations." [url]https://www.inforum.com/news/government-and-politics/6841462-Bills-on-North-Dakota-trespassing-law-align-ag-and-outdoors-groups[/url] [B]Bills on North Dakota trespassing law align ag and outdoors groups [/B] North Dakota's trespassing laws and private property rights have been hot-button issues in the past, but an interim committee's work got high marks in the first committee hearing on the issue during the 2021 legislative session. Written By: [URL="https://www.agweek.com/incoming/author/Jenny-Schlecht"]Jenny Schlecht[/URL] | Jan 14th 2021 - 4pm. BISMARCK — The North Dakota Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee has given a thumbs up to two bills that would revise the state’s trespassing laws on private land — a long-discussed issue that appears finally to have found consensus from the state’s landowners and outdoors enthusiasts. The committee gave unanimous do-pass recommendations to Senate Bill 2144 and Senate Bill 2036 [URL="https://video.legis.nd.gov/en/PowerBrowser/PowerBrowserV2/20210114/-1/18625"]during a hearing on Thursday, Jan. 14[/URL]. Two related bills, Senate Bill 2037 and Senate Bill 2038, were given do-not-pass recommendations. SB 2144 would allow landowners to post land for no trespassing electronically or with physical signs, update the definition of a fence, establish that all fenced land is closed to anyone but hunters and fishers regardless of posting, and allow law enforcement to issue noncriminal citations for trespassing related to hunting and fishing. SB 2036 would extend and expand an interim study of the state’s trespassing laws and land access issues and the use of a database for the purpose of posting land for no trespassing. North Dakota remains the only state in the region on which private land is considered open unless otherwise posted with physical signs. While the current law is supported by hunting and fishing groups, agriculture groups have long called for an end to the presumption of openness. The 2016 Dakota Access Pipeline protests and related criminal cases brought forward more concerns about the state’s laws and who could enter private land. [URL="https://www.agweek.com/business/4561972-ag-groups-hunting-groups-face-nd-trespassing-bill"]The issue of revising North Dakota’s trespassing laws on private land was among the most divisive of the 2019 legislative session[/URL]. Sen. Robert Erbele, R-Lehr, said 36 hours went into hearings and committee work on the matter during the session. While the main bill addressing trespassing in the 2019 session failed, [URL="https://www.agweek.com/business/4607303-changes-nd-property-access-fail-yet-again-separate-bill-mandates-land"]the budget bill for the Information Technology department contained an item calling for a study of land access and the potential use of a database for electronic posting[/URL]. Erbele said that study represented a breakthrough of sorts in the issue. In addition to legislators and four citizen members with voting rights on the committee, the study included advisors from the state Department of Agriculture, state Department of Game and Fish, North Dakota Association of Counties, state Information Technology Department and the North Dakota State’s Attorney’s Association. Having all parties at the table helped them find common ground. “I think we built a bridge, and communication and relationships are the key to that,” Erbele said. As part of the study, Game and Fish built a web-based database to test in three counties: Richland, Ramsey and Slope. Erbele said the site was used during the 2020 hunting season, not to see how many people would use it but to see how it worked. Brian Hosek, with administrative services at Game and Fish, said landowners in those counties were able to electronically “post” their land for no hunting on the site, and hunters were able to search for information about land to hunt. The system went live in May, and 79 landowners signed up to use it for 260 tracts of land representing 38,000 acres. The system also saw heavy use from hunters in the three counties, with thousands of views on different mapping systems and applications. Hosek walked the committee through the system and its capabilities, explaining how quickly land can be posted by landowners and different mechanisms hunters can use to find open land or information to contact landowners. Some hunter-focused options can be downloaded or printed in case of poor cell service. Under the study, there was a deadline of July 15 for landowners to electronically post their land to enable time for compilation of maps. The bills do not give a deadline for posting. No one spoke in opposition to the bills. Rep. Gretchen Dobervich, D-Fargo, who served on the interim committee, said her father, in Slope County, used the system to post his land and found it easy to use, though he did identify some glitches. Representatives from outdoors groups and agriculture and landowner groups said the interim committee’s efforts and the bills presented were important steps in the right direction. “Our members want better hunter landowner relations and we believe e-posting, along with the continuation of physical signs, are good steps to achieving that goal,” he said. Julie Ellingson, executive vice president of the North Dakota Stockmen’s Association, said her membership still believes that removing the presumption of openness from the trespassing laws would represent the simplest solution. However, she said the efforts were an important step toward greater property rights for landowners, which was a founding issue for her group. The two bills given do-not-pass recommendations contained similar provisions to the passed bills, but Erbele explained that SB 2144 was a collaboration completed by citizen members of the interim committee and was more complete than SB 2037 or SB 2038. SB 2037 would have allowed landowners not to list their names on no-trespassing signs, an idea that was opposed by outdoors groups. [/QUOTE]
Verification
What is the most common fish caught on this site?
Post reply
Recent Posts
Predictions for deer season 26
Latest: Kurtr
18 minutes ago
R
Spring has sprung-
Latest: Ruttin
27 minutes ago
POS
Latest: Obi-Wan
42 minutes ago
Contemplating a shop build
Latest: Obi-Wan
47 minutes ago
P
2007 Yukon headrest
Latest: PrairieGhost
Today at 12:24 PM
Buying gold and silver.
Latest: Big Iron
Today at 10:18 AM
Accuracy Oil YT
Latest: SDMF
Today at 9:53 AM
S
Morels
Latest: snow2
Today at 9:02 AM
S
Retardation (turkey shells) YT
Latest: snow2
Yesterday at 8:41 PM
Ice Fishing
Latest: bowcarp
Yesterday at 5:59 PM
Boat carpet
Latest: Slappy
Yesterday at 5:44 PM
ND bighorn sheep lottery
Latest: luvcatchingbass
Yesterday at 11:18 AM
Sucker Minnows
Latest: Lycanthrope
Yesterday at 11:15 AM
What are you listening to these days?
Latest: svnmag
Yesterday at 1:39 AM
A.I. Are you Excited?
Latest: Lycanthrope
Monday at 10:47 PM
Tea/Laxative?! YT
Latest: svnmag
Monday at 9:27 PM
Training for the outdoors
Latest: risingsun
Monday at 6:10 PM
N
Tritoon on a pontoon trailer?
Latest: NodakBob
Monday at 3:48 PM
K
Fishing in Valley City
Latest: kyle12bravo
Monday at 1:00 PM
Yellowstone
Latest: tikkalover
Monday at 11:40 AM
Reloader 26 For Sale
Latest: luvcatchingbass
Monday at 7:09 AM
Auroras from last night
Latest: 5575
Sunday at 11:04 PM
Missouri River Bismarck area
Latest: Allen
Sunday at 10:41 PM
Friends of NDA
Forums
General
General Discussion
New Land Bills: SB 2036, 2037 and 2038
Top
Bottom