Utah Administrative Code
Topic - Natural Resources
Title R657 - Wildlife Resources
Rule R657-56 - Recreational Lease of Private Lands for Free Public Walk-in Access
Section R657-56-6 - Walk-In Access Compensation
Universal Citation: UT Admin Code R 657-56-6
Current through Bulletin 2024-18, September 15, 2024
(1) The amount of compensation paid to the private landowner may be determined by the:
(a) type of recreational activities
allowed;
(b) duration of the
recreational lease agreement;
(c)
actual acreage of land or flat water, or length of stream or river which is
legally allowed to be hunted, trapped, or fished; and
(d) quality of the habitat, location, species
abundance or opportunities, and potential for public use.
(2)
(a)
Total compensation may be reduced or increased by the division based upon:
(a) the type of recreational lease activities
allowed:
(b) quality of public
accessibility;
(c) number of
consecutive years within an agreement;
(d) number of persons using the
property;
(e) number of visits to
the property per year by the public; and
(f) quality of the wildlife experience
provided by the property.
(3) Final payment for an agreement which is terminated prior to the established expiration date, for which was given a higher rate of compensation due to the term length of the agreement, may be reduced according to the rate equivalent to the actual term length of the agreement.
(4)
(a) Upon mutual agreement, the division may
provide habitat improvement, materials, or labor on the WIA property in lieu of
all or part of the monetary compensation otherwise due for free public walk-in
access.
(b) If a habitat
improvement project performed or funded by the division is used as compensation
for a walk-in access agreement, the division will provide an evaluation of the
property, a summary of the proposed project, and an estimated in-kind value
estimate to the landowner.
(c) A
habitat project proposal must be completed, reviewed, and approved through the
Habitat Council, Blue Ribbon Fisheries Council, or the Watershed Restoration
Initiative to qualify for use in the walk-in access program.
(d) The division and the private landowner
must mutually agree to the use of a habitat project, it's estimated cost, and
in-kind value to be used as compensation for a WIA lease agreement.
(e) A private landowner that received habitat
improvement, materials, or labor in lieu of compensation, who ends a WIA lease
agreement prior to the compensatory conditions of the habitat project agreement
being fulfilled, may be assessed the balance of the predetermined
cost.
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