Here is a link for you to listen to another attack against OVH - - this one regarding Sand Mountain and the Blue Butterfly. Click to the link and then click to listen to segment three.
April 25, 2006
April 13, 2006
San Bernardino County Smarter than Riverside County!!!
OFF-ROAD BUSINESS ASSOCIATION
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY PASSES OFF-HIGHWAY VEHICLE (OHV) ORDINANCE WITH OVERWHELMING SUPPORT FROM OHV ORGANIZATIONS, ENVIRONMENTALISTS AND COMMUNITY GROUPS.
BAKERSFIELD, CA (April 11,2006) – On April 11, 2006 The San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors unanimously passed an OHV ordinance that is fair to both off-roaders in the county and residents who have valid complaints. Early on in this process David Hubbard, attorney for EcoLogic, suggested the formation of a group of stakeholders composed of environmentalists, OHV organizations and community groups from around the county. The goal of this group was to find a compromise on this sometimes very contentious issue and then go before the Supervisors united in their support for the agreement reached. After two very long meetings the stakeholders agreed on the language used in this ordinance.
The compromise includes no property line setbacks, no maximum number of bikes per acre, no restrictive riding period, and no permit process for the person wanting to ride on their own property and not use that property as a staging area. A permit is only required if the property owner plans on staging more than 10 OHV’s on a property. It does include a process by which residents can seek judicial relief from nuisance and harassment. The ordinance includes a noise element requiring OHV’s ridden on private property to measure 96dba at the pipe, the same standard required on California public lands. Also, the language in this ordinance gives enforcement powers to both County Code Enforcement and the Sheriff’s department.
David Hubbard, attorney for EcoLogic stated “I would like to thank all parties involved in this process.” Meg Grossglass of ORBA commented “I hope the process by which this ordinance was crafted is repeated in counties looking at similar ordinances. Other counties have not taken into consideration the needs of all members of their constituency, San Bernardino County wanted to address those concerns and followed through with an ordinance that is fair and reasonable to all citizens.”
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ORBA is a national trade association composed of off-road related businesses united to promote common goals that support the prosperity and growth of the off-road industry.
Meg Grossglass, Membership Representative, & Media Relations
April 12, 2006
Riverside County Sued !!!
OFF-ROAD BUSINESS ASSOCIATION, Inc.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
RIVERSIDE COUNTY SUED OVER RECENT OFF-HIGWAY VEHICLE (OHV) AND NOISE ORDINANCES THAT EFFECTIVELY BAN RECREATIONAL RIDING ON PRIVATE PROPERTY.
BAKERSFIELD, CA (April 11,2006) –On April 10, 2006, EcoLogic Partners, Inc., the Off-Road Business Association (ORBA), the San Diego Off-Road Coalition (SDORC), the California Off-Road Vehicle Association (CORVA), the American Motorcyclists Association District 37 (AMA D37), and the American Sand Association (ASA) filed suit against the County of Riverside alleging that the County’s recently adopted Noise and OHV ordinances violate state law. EcoLogic, the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA), ORBA, The McGrath family and residents of Riverside County have worked for almost two years to help the county craft an ordinance fair to all parties involved. It is unfortunate the Supervisors in Riverside chose to ignore the rights of families in the county to ride OHV’s on their own property.
The lawsuit filed in Riverside County Superior court alleges the noise and OHV ordinances violate various state regulations on four separate issues. The noise ordinance is inconsistent with the County’s General Plan which is a violation of state planning and zoning laws. The section of the OHV ordinance that requires riders to carry written permission when on private property is in direct conflict with California State Penal Code §602.2. The OHV ordinance also fails to include a “grandfather” clause to protect the vested rights of landowners who have used OHV’s on their properties for many years. Finally, the county’s environmental review of the two ordinances were wholly inadequate as they have failed to account for the many impacts expected once OHV use on private land becomes subjected to the severe restrictions imposed by these ordinances.
EcoLogic Attorney David Hubbard stated “We tried to have the deficiencies in this ordinance corrected prior to its approval, the Supervisors chose to ignore our comments and this lawsuit is our only recourse.” Meg Grossglass of ORBA commented “These ordinances violate state regulations and it is the intent of the OHV organizations involved to protect the rights of recreational riders in Riverside County which has traditionally been the home of many families that recreate together on their own property.”
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ORBA is a national trade association composed of off-road related businesses united to promote common goals that support the prosperity and growth of the off-road industry.
Meg Grossglass, Membership Representative & Media Relations
ORBA Off-Road Business Association
1701 Westwind Drive #216
Bakersfield, CA 93301
direct to Meg 951-926-1953, 951-415-1869 cell
Coporate Office 661-323-1464, Corporate Fax 661-323-1487
April 9, 2006
OHV Funds in Limbo
Funds for off-road enforcement in limbo
Audit, lawsuit, outrage prompt a state hearing on the oversight program.
In the wilds of Calaveras County, Deputy Sheriff Eric Lamb boards a dirt bike and goes to work, keeping order on 8,000 acres of forest. “I’m stretched pretty thin,” Lamb said.
In the county of about 45,000 residents, he is the only deputy responsible for keeping tabs on off-road vehicle riders cruising hundreds of miles of trails through Stanislaus National Forest. Because the vast off-road trails burden the rural county’s budget, the county has relied on a grant from the state’s Off-Highway Vehicle Trust Fund to pay for Lamb’s position.
Lamb filed the paperwork in October for this year’s grant, but later learned from the state Off-Highway Motor Vehicle Recreation Division of the Department of Parks and Recreation that his request - along with those of 45 other agencies that provide enforcement or other off-road-vehicle services totaling $18 million - is in limbo. A critical 2005 audit of the state’s off-highway vehicle program, a lawsuit and outrage from the industry have prompted an April 26 hearing of the Joint Legislative Audit Committee.
One pressing issue: The seven-member Off-Highway Motor Vehicle Recreation Commission expires in 2008, so the Legislature must decide to reform it or abandon it - and the same with the whole off-highway vehicle program, which is scheduled to sunset next year. The program operates eight off-road parks funded through fuel tax revenues, vehicle registration fees and entrance fees.
Grants from the commission are used for everything from law enforcement to trail maintenance on locally or federally owned land in the state. The rest of the fund - about $50 million this year - is used primarily to maintain the state off-road parks.
Lamb and other grant hopefuls have been trapped as the off-highway commission and program administrators face charges of mismanaging public funds, and polarized ideological battles have paralyzed the commission. The controversy crests at a pivotal time for the off-road industry, a sport that requires a wide berth from most other outdoor pursuits.
Ownership of off-road vehicles in the state has nearly tripled in six years to 960,495 in 2006 from 333,162 in 1995, according to the Department of Motor Vehicles. At the same time, open space is giving way to urban growth. The audit released in August points to millions of dollars unwisely or questionably spent, including nearly $2 million for a 669-acre “buffer” for Prairie City State Vehicular Recreation Area in Rancho Cordova in 2003. The land is five miles from the park it is supposed to protect.
A 1972 state law dictates the off-road money be evenly used for restoring land destroyed by users and buying and maintaining property for the sport. Off-highway vehicle supporters contend the commission has been largely hijacked by environmentalists who are cold-shouldering enhancement of the sport in favor of conserving land or restoring it.
For several years, appointed commissioners have splintered into a four-vote environmentalist bloc and a three-vote bloc of off-highway vehicle interests or law enforcement. Auditors concluded that commissioners granted money based on “individual interests,” and the program’s administrators and commissioners lacked a common strategy or “shared vision.”
“It’s a spoils system that has been corrupted,” said Terry McHale, a Sacramento lobbyist for the off-highway vehicle industry. “What it has turned into is sort of a slush fund.” Amador County Sheriff Mike Prizmich, a commissioner, said the audit was too harsh on the off-highway division, which changed administrators during the audit period.
“The commission has been the greater problem in the disruption,” he said. Prizmich, who was appointed by former Gov. Gray Davis, said the solution is to reduce the panel’s role to an advisory one.
Administrators of the off-highway program say they are correcting problems attributed to them in the state audit, including the implementing of an objective scoring system for awarding grants. “We took this audit very seriously,” said Daphne Green, deputy director of the division.
The new commission chairman, John Brissenden, who is part of the four-vote bloc, said the present commission is actually bringing parity to a program that has long neglected conservation and restoration. “We believe in a balance, and that’s what we are trying to accomplish,” he said.
Appointed in 2002 by former Democratic Assembly Speaker Herb Wesson, Brissenden said the commission is effective even without a majority not aligned with the sport. “I think we come with fresh ideas and fresh eyes,” he said.
An off-highway vehicle group, Ecologic Partners Inc., has filed suit in against the parks department and the commission, accusing the commissioners of violating state open-meeting laws and illegally creating policies.
Sacramento Supervisor Court
“It would virtually impossible to keep him in that position without it,” said Sheriff Dennis Downum. Before Lamb was on the job, trespassers overran private property near the forest.
“I’m sure it would start again,” Downum said, “almost immediately.”
April 7, 2006
Wild Piglet and Boar Moved Back 2 weeks
Due to the excessive rain, the Wild Boar and Piglet have been moved back 2 weeks to April 21-22. The Sawmill date has changed as well. Let’s hope for great traction in 2 weeks!
April 5, 2006
Stonyford Access
” I am passing this on as a public service to inform the public about OHV road and trail closures at a popular OHV area in N. Cal.
Don Amador
Western Representative
BlueRibbon Coalition, Inc.”
“NEWS
Forest Service
United States Department of Agriculture
Mendocino National Forest
825 N. Humboldt Avenue
Willows, CA 95988
Contact: Paul Montgomery (530)934-3316 TT Y (530)934-7724
Release No.06-04-01
Date: April 5, 2006
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SOME ADDITIONAL ROADS ON
MENDOCINO NATIONAL FOREST
CLOSED DUE TO STORM DAMAGE
Some additional primary roads on the Mendocino National Forest and County roads accessing the national forest have sustained major damage from landslides and other road damage caused by the continued rain and are expected to be closed indefinitely, Tom Contreras, Forest Supervisor, said today.
County Road 43 (Fouts Springs Road/FS M-10), County Road 42 (Goat Mountain Road), and Forest Service Road 20N01 (Ivory Mill Road) have been closed to vehicles due to storm damage. This also means that none of the designated Off Highway Vehicle (OHV) trails on the south end of the Grindstone District can be reached. At this time designated OHV trails on both the Grindstone and Upper Lake Ranger Districts are closed.
“OHV trails are closed any time there is two inches or more of rain in a 24-hour period,” Jeff Applegate, Grindstone District OHV manager, said. “Because of the wet conditions, the trails were already closed. Now, with the damage to the access roads, the trail system on the Grindstone District will not be available until repairs can be made to reopen the roads.”
Other Forest roads that remain closed because of previous storm damage are: M1 four miles north of Lake Pillsbury; M1 at Howard Lake, 22N21 Recer Ridge; and 18N16 Homesite road. M8 also sustained major damage from a recent flood event. Forest Highway 7 (County Road 307) is closed from Alder Springs to Covelo. The Summit Springs Trailhead is inaccessible due to damage on FS Road 17N06, approximately ¼ mile from the junction with M-10. Many other roads are covered by snow and will remain impassable through the winter-like conditions.
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“If you travel to the national forest, be prepared for changing conditions,” Mr. Contreras said. Visitors are advised to contact the nearest Forest Service office for current conditions before entering forest lands.
To check on OHV trail conditions please call Grindstone District (Stonyford area) at (530) 963-3128 or Upper Lake District at (707) 275-1430.
For more information on the road closures, contact the Mendocino National Forest at (530) 934-3316, TTY (530) 934-7724. For questions about road conditions in Colusa County, call the Public Works Department at (530) 458-0466; Glenn County call (530) 934-6530; or the Highway Patrol at (707) 463-4722 for Lake and Mendocino Counties.
Forest Service information is posted on the Internet at http://www.fs.fed.us/r5/mendocino.”















