Rails to trails lawsuits hinge on historic right of way agreements

Published: Dec. 31, 2022, 10:47 p.m.

b'December 30, 2022 \\u2014 Lawsuits about rails to trails projects have become an industry, according to an expert in the history of public lands in the U.S.\\n\\nIn northern California, close to 300 private landowners are suing the federal Department of Justice over the Great Redwood Trail. Planning efforts for the future recreational trail are the responsibility of a state agency after the Surface Transportation Board, a national body that regulates railroads, ruled that the span of line between Willits and Eureka can be abandoned and railbanked. \\nBut portions of the trail run through or alongside private property, and some of those landowners\\nare demanding compensation for land they say was taken from them by the Surface Transportation Board\\u2019s decision. They maintain that the value of their property has been degraded. John Leshy, Emeritus Professor at UC Hastings College of the law, is author of the book, \\u201cOur Common Ground: A History of American\\u2019s Public Lands.\\u201d From their beginning, railroads have played a central role in the interplay of public and private property...'