Dave, you keep mentioning existing laws.........help us understand. We all know that there are litter laws on the books at all levels. But, with most litter laws the officers cannot cite until the infraction occurs.xtatik wrote: As for your asking me to comment on laws that you feel may already supercede, be applicable or make redundant the BLM's........where would be a good place to start looking? Here's why I ask.....the BLM has the benefit of plurality when it comes to jurisdiction, and they know it. Should I research county (depending on location), the CPC, or federal level? Cuz, I'm sure as you assert, that they ALL have anti-litter regulations. But, i'm also certain they would have NO impact on the targeted problems/solutions that the BLM is attempting to abate in these areas.
Find me an existing law (not written by the BLM) that will be as effective as a ban in keeping glass, nails and other foreign objects out of the dunes.
Hypothetically speaking, prior to these laws/rules if an officer were standing immediately in the presence of someone with a glass bottle....they could do nothing. If that person set the bottle down without breaking it and walked away, the person could be cited for littering and the bottle could be picked up and properly discarded. If that same person dropped that same bottle and it broke and scattered, again the person could cited, but there is a distinct difference in this case in that much of the litter (glass shards) cannot be recovered and will continue to exist as a danger to person and property and writing the citation did little or nothing to protect future land users.
What current laws (laws that preceded these) would be enforceable, but more importantly EFFECTIVE in keeping dangerous foreign materials out of these very specifically targeted sand dune recreation areas?
If it were your charge to manage this area how would you have gone about it using the preceding anti-litter laws/rules? Keep in mind, at Glamis (ISDRA) on a holiday weekend you may have perhaps 20-40 officers (many brought in temporarily for the holiday) in various vehicles and be patrolling 6-7 main camping areas with a population of approximately 150,000 or more people. This amounts to more officers per capita than most municipalities will put on patrol at any given time so you're not short on manpower/enforcement.
In another similar scenario...you're still in charge, but let's say your officers have had the benefit of the last RAMP rules and have been writing tons of $250.00 glass container infractions and the problem still persists. What then?