Wade Fishing Gets the Boot in New Mexico

Pop Quiz:

1) If a carpenter in San Juan County purchases a New Mexico fishing license for $25, and a hedge fund manager from Connecticut purchases a lifestyle ranch on the San Juan River for $6.8 million, which purchaser acquires constitutional protection of his individual rights?

A) Neither. Rights can’t be bought or sold in the Untied States. That’s why they’re called rights.

B) The “rancher”, by virtue of the Golden Rule. He’s got the gold, so he makes the rules.

C) Rights? Who cares about rights when the Feds are a gang of incompetent, job-killing, freedom hating, anti-American Nazis hell-bent on mismanaging New Mexico’s resources and destroying our way of life? Now hand over the public land.

If you answered A, pat yourself on the back. I applaud your idealism and your faith in American democracy. You obviously paid attention in High School civics class.

If you answered B, award yourself five points. You’ve continued to pay attention since High School, and you’ve picked up on some alarming patterns in our electoral politics.

If you answered C, congratulations! You may have a future in the New Mexico state legislature.

Unfortunately this quiz is not a purely academic exercise. The answers have real world impacts on New Mexican anglers.

In case you missed it in April 2014 outgoing New Mexico Attorney General Gary King issued an official opinion that, “No, a private landowner can not prevent persons from fishing in a public stream that flows across the landowner’s property…”.

He cited as evidence a 1945 Supreme Court case, State Game Commission v. Red River Valley Company, in which the high court decided, “The small streams of the state are fishing streams to which the public have a right to resort so long as they do not trespass on the private property along the banks.”
Repeated attempts to overturn the ruling, noted Attorney General King, had all failed. In fact, following one rehearing the justices added emphasis; “The sovereign power itself, therefore, cannot, consistently with the principles of the law of nature and the constitution of a well ordered society, make a true and absolute grant of the waters of the State divesting all the citizens of a common right. It would be a grievance, which never could be long borne by a free people.”

Rank and file anglers celebrated the AG’s opinion statewide. For generations they’d been excluded from touching bottom anywhere a river crosses private property. They assumed that such an unequivocal stance by the state’s highest court ensured the restoration of their wading rights.

But the New Mexico Game Commission – a seven-member committee of gubernatorial appointees – responded with conspicuous silence and continued enforcement of the unconstitutional status quo.

A year of increasingly heated advocacy ensued. The New Mexico Wildlife Federation, American Canoe Association, America Outdoors Association, American Whitewater, Adobe Whitewater Club, New Mexico Chapter of Trout Unlimited, dozens of small businesses and scores of private citizens demanded that regulations be made to reflect the law.

Meanwhile Soaring Eagle Lodge LLC., Chama Troutstalkers LLC., Z&T Cattle Company, and the New Mexico Council of Outfitters and Guides, sued the state to stop it from doing so. In a bizarre and particularly galling twist, the State Game Commission filed an amicus brief supporting the lawsuit in which they were named as defendants. The Game Commission essentially chose to sue themselves instead of honoring the established rights of the sporting public.

Then the legislature stepped into the fray. On March 20th 2015, the second to last day of the legislative session, thirty-two New Mexican Representatives voted to deny anglers the rights afforded them by their state’s constitution. Senate Bill 226 passed by a single vote.

The New Mexico Wildlife Federation’s Joel Gay summed up the sporting public’s frustration, “We don’t have a lot of water here in New Mexico. We do have 300,000 sportsmen and –women though. It would be really nice to be able to fish the resources that our supreme court says we have a right to fish.”

The bill’s sponsor, State Senator Richard C. Martinez (D- Espanola), did not respond to requests for comment.

Experts agree that the new law is a mess, and would likely have trouble standing up to a legal challenge. After all, as Americans, we enjoy a system of checks and balances in which the judiciary exists, in part, to ensure the rule of law and to insulate an individual’s rights from the whims of politics. And the judiciary has already been crystal clear on the matter.

But no one believes challenging the law would be quick, cheap or easy. In Utah, similar struggles have passed the five-year mark and tallied a legal tab in the deep six-figures. Mounting such an effort against a well-heeled opposition in New Mexico, where the median household income is the eighth lowest in the nation, is a daunting proposition.

Is it unconstitutional to bar New Mexican anglers from wading their rivers? Probably. The Attorney General and State Supreme Court have said as much. Does that make a difference if John and Jane Q. Public can’t afford to prove it? Nope, not one bit. Have fishing access opponents added that up? You bet they have. And at the moment, the calculus looks pretty solid from their perspective.

New Mexico Wildlife Federation Executive Director Garrett VeneKlasen sees the debate from a different angle.

“Passing laws to remove rights is the essence of anti-democracy,” he said. “You may or may not care about stream access. But you have to care about the precedent of the statehouse removing your rights. If we don’t stand-up together, we’re going to lose our incredible heritage in a single generation.”

So which will it be – the loss of our hunting and fishing heritage or a grievance, which never could be long borne by a free people?

The grades are still out, but this much is clear… public water anglers can not afford to fail this test.

 

*Note: This article originally ran in June on the Open Country Blog on Outdoorlife.com

8 Comments on “Wade Fishing Gets the Boot in New Mexico

  1. Encourage a boycott. Take your sporting dollars to states that support your views. Get the word out to sportsmen from out of state and encourage them to fish somewhere else.

  2. This “alarming pattern” is now commonplace throughout the west. If those with the gold can’t purchase the law they want in the legislature, they simply try to buy a judge, and if that fails then hefty campaign contributions roll into the county comission races. The western legacy of public land and water is under threat every day in every state. New Mexico is just the latest reminder that we are only one congressman or judge away from being booted off of our public resources.

  3. Awesome article thanks for this. Blog posts like this remind me why I don’t subscribe to the newspaper anymore. Good luck to those in New Mexico for all our sake.

  4. How about a little civil disobedience? Get many thousands of citizens to wade their rivers every weekend. Enough to fill every jail in the state, and then some.

  5. The politician who sponsors legislation that they know or should know to be unconstitutional should be required to pay both sides legal and any damages from their own campaign fund and or personal funds as well as being barred from office for failing to uphold the constitution they were sworn to protect and uphold. This would stop a lot of the good idea fairies.

  6. A point of clarification. The New Mexico Council of Trout Unlimited did not demand that regulations be made to reflect the Attorney General’s opinion. Rather we expressed our concern that SB226 was a hastily crafted and flawed attempt to respond to that opinion. Instead we recommended that the Governor form a task force of members of her administration, landowners, conservation experts, anglers and boaters to work out better solutions that will protect the rights of the public, the rights of private property owners, and the watersheds and fish.