Montana鈥檚 stream access law聽grants anglers, floaters, and other recreational users the ability to access most rivers, creeks, and streams鈥攅ven where they flow through private property. (This is not always the case in other states.)聽It鈥檚 one of the things that makes Montana such a uniquely special place to live, but it鈥檚 threatened by the state鈥檚 Republican candidate for governor, Greg Gianforte, and his potential lieutenant, Kristen Juras, should they be elected. Such a move would represent an unprecedented assault on public access, threatening jobs that rely on outdoor recreation聽and even potentially impacting聽the state鈥檚 booming outdoor-recreation economy.听
Between High-Water Lines
The 1972 Montana constitution within its boundaries. This was further clarified by two state supreme court cases in 1984, leading to the passage of the definitive stream access law in 1985. :
鈥淎ll surface waters that are capable of recreational use may be so used by the public without regard to the ownership of the land underlying the waters.鈥
Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks : 鈥淭he public may use rivers and streams for recreational purposes up to the ordinary high-water mark. Although the law gives recreationists the right to use rivers and streams for water-related recreation, it does not allow them to enter posted lands bordering those streams or to cross private lands to gain access to streams.鈥
Another law, passed in 2009, confirmed that using state or county roads聽or bridges. It allows landowners to fence up to those bridges to control their livestock, and it also supplies聽public funds for the installation of gates to provide public access. Landowners may run fences across waterways, and the law gives聽the public the right to travel around such barriers, provided they do so聽鈥渋n the least intrusive manner possible.鈥
What all this adds up to is a best-case scenario for public access. Your right to access a river or stream is protected, even if it flows through private property. The rights of private landowners are also protected, as聽the public is only able to access rivers and streams within the water鈥檚 boundaries, via roadways that intersect them, or through established easements.
鈥淢ontana鈥檚 stream access law鈥攍ike our public lands鈥攊s about who we are as Montanans,鈥 lieutenant聽governor Mike Cooney wrote聽in an email to 国产吃瓜黑料. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to be a multimillionaire to fish on our blue ribbon trout streams.鈥 Cooney, a Democrat, is also running for governor.听
Of course, the stream access law has been challenged multiple times by those multimillionaires. And 聽came from governor candidate聽Gianforte.
Follow the Money
In 1997, Gianforte, then聽a recent Montana transplant,聽cofounded a customer-service software company with his wife, Susan, called RightNow Technologies. In 2011, RightNow was acquired by Oracle for $1.8聽billion, . Montana senator Steve Daines at the time.听
The Gianfortes聽established a charitable family trust for the primary purpose of . Money from the has gone to everything from . This foundation also backs anti-public-lands and聽anti-public-access causes.听
Between 2007 and 2013, the Gianforte Family Foundation donated to the Foundation on the Economy and the Environment (FREE). .听滨迟鈥檚听, a pro-oil drilling trust from Texas.听
From 2008 to 2017, the Gianforte Family Foundation donated a total of to the Heritage Foundation, which supports聽 and works to .听
In 2013 and 2014, the Gianforte Family Foundation contributed to Americans for Prosperity聽and listed the organization as a 鈥済rantee.鈥 Politico describes Americans for Prosperity as the聽鈥.鈥 It聽聽to聽benefit the oil and gas industries.听
Between 2015 and 2017, the Gianforte Family Foundation gave to the Property and Environment Research Center. Based in Bozeman, Montana, PERC advocates for a free-market approach to environmental problems; in short, that conservation is better handled by private landowners than it is by the government, often taking that to an extreme degree. In 2015, its executive director authored an op-ed in The New York Times calling for . PERC has fought against the Montana stream access law since the early 1980s.
Gianforte in Congress
Following a failed 2016 gubernatorial campaign, Gianforte won the congressional seat vacated by Ryan Zinke when Zinke became interior secretary in 2017.听
There, in collaboration with Steve聽Daines, Gianforte introduced legislation to strip protections from 700,000 acres of public land in Montana. The measure failed, but according to the聽, it would have been聽鈥渢he single biggest rollback of protected public lands in Montana history.鈥
Gianforte has since voted against conservation and environmental protections on , netting him a 5 percent lifetime score from the League of Conservation Voters.听
While serving in Congress, Gianforte expressed support for William Perry Pendley鈥檚 tenure as acting director of the Bureau of Land Management.听
Last year聽 that he was聽鈥渙ptimistic about working with Mr. Pendley to promote Montana鈥檚 interests.鈥 And in July, Gianforte said聽he was 鈥溾 by Pendley鈥檚 nomination to officially run the BLM. That nomination was withdrawn two weeks later, when GOP senators in vulnerable seats about being forced to vote for such an unsavory character. In 2001, in an effort to overturn the stream access law. But last month, Pendley鈥檚 acting status was ruled illegal聽after current Montana governor Steve Bullock challenged his anti-public-lands actions.听
Gianforte鈥檚 Lieutenant
Gianforte is running for governor alongside , a lawyer from Great Falls. And her record on the stream access law is almost as troubled has her running mate鈥檚.听
When Juras faced criticism for her anti-stream-access-law actions while running for a seat on the Montana Supreme Court in 2016, she for the Helena Independent Record in which she called the law聽鈥渟ettled,鈥 praised its balance between public-access and private-property rights, and claimed that her critics were聽鈥測elling wolf.鈥澛
Those critics have reason to worry. brought against the stream access law came in 1987聽from rancher聽Jack Galt, Juras鈥檚 uncle. The state supreme聽court upheld the law, but its ruling represented the most significant diminishment of public rights under the law to date. A commonly understood interpretation of the law that allowed camping below the high-water mark was determined to be聽鈥渙verbroad and unconstitutional,鈥 according to 聽that Juras wrote on the topic.听In that same piece, published in the Vermont Journal of Environmental Law, Juras went on to argue that landowners should have the聽鈥溾 access, moving ownership of the state鈥檚 waters out of public hands and into those of wealthy landowners.听
鈥淎ttempting to whitewash your record and your stance on public access just because you know it鈥檚 popular among us voters is unacceptable,鈥 Kendall Van Dyk, a former state representative and senator, in 2016.听
On the East Gallatin
In 2009, East Gallatin LLC, , sued Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks, arguing that an access easement to the East Gallatin River through the property where the Gianfortes live was invalid, since it had been negotiated with a previous owner of the property. It also argued that users of the easement were causing unspecified damages to the property. A fence was installed to block public access .听
The matter was , with Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks聽returning the fence to its previous boundaries, conducting mitigation work to prevent the spread of weeds (possibly the damage cited in the suit), and restoring public access. You can visit聽and fish Gianforte鈥檚 property to this day, as you can聽on any other river or stream in the state.听
鈥淚鈥檝e been very clear all along that public lands must stay in public hands,鈥 聽on Montana Public Radio in 2017, one year before he wrote the legislation that would have stripped protections from hundreds of thousands of聽acres of state public land.听
Lieutenant聽Governor Cooney, noting the聽聽that 鈥渄epend on our ability to access public lands and streams,鈥 is standing behind the law. 鈥淎nyone who wants to mess with that will have to go through me first,鈥 he warns.听