“The list [of the 14 rivers] is way inadequate,” said Ted Wilson, who heads the Utah Rivers Council and promised that recreational river users would be at the Legislature early next week working to change or kill Ferry’s bill. “It is leaving lots of good fishable water out. This a $700 million industry that we are harming here. We are losing what we had before the court opined.”
Wharton: HB187 » Anglers and boaters vow to fight legislation.
Draper angler Chris Barkey said the 14 waters listed in the original bill are already too popular and that restricting access to other waters would put even more pressure on them. He lamented that waters such as Diamond Fork, Huntington Creek, Thistle Creek, the Beaver River and Currant Creek were excluded.
The bill would limit access to areas where anglers’ money and time, as well as taxpayer dollars, were used to re-establish native cutthroat populations, Barkey said.
“We’re not trying to harm anybody’s land or cow,” he said. “We just want to enjoy some peace and quiet.” –> LINK


