The other day, my neighbor caught someone dumping on my land. Please bear with me while I vent. My neighbor chased the pick up down, and got the license plate number. The couple raced away and slid a long distance and nearly slammed into people ahead of them. Those ignorant dirtbags not only dispose of their human waste wherever they want, but they could've killed someone! For YEARS this has been going on and nobody's ever paid restitution! I've met various times with my Sheriff, the head of the Solid Waste Athority, and the DNR. I asked the DNR to help enforce my charges against someone I caught dumping beds, garbage, furnature, toxic organic wastes, and those people who committed those crimes have never paid. I contacted the DNR respectfully and frequently, yet the officer in charge has failed to ever follow up on my information, license plate number, descriptions, etc. My neighbors and I have organized and involved the State and County, so we want to do anything legal to keep the riff-raff from literally dumping on us, to clean up our neighborhood and to keep it that way. For years, my road has had the largest open illegal dumps in my whole county. I live in the most scenic countryside in my county. Now, the criminals will likely be prosecuted and recieve a fine, but that doesn't help me since I am the true injured party, and not the state. BTW, I've caught two individuals from the State Road in their company truck dumping on my road too, and damaging my property through rerouting the water shed, And they, (the State Road individuals whose salary we pay, and violate our property), will be the partial recipiants of the fine, and property taxes. (That's for another time). However, the head of the Solid Waste for the county, and another representative in another department of the State have been of much help in separate occasions and in showing up to our meetings.
I plan to bring a claim for land use fee, (I have had it posted for $5,000 per day for over five years), and whatever my damages, and expenses are. These people have NO respect for other people, or their property. I sure hope that these two will be paying for the expense in time, trouble and equiptment that they are causing me. I'm going to do every legal thing in my power to make this happen. I hope we, (the defense and I), get a good just judge with integrity that will uphold my legal land use fee, and my expenses incured. I've read of people getting away crimes like this all of the time, but trust that there must be good judges that make our legal system work.
I do everything possible to maintain my property for my use, but they had to dump over the hill in the steepest, most overgrown part of my property to access. Its grown over w/ multiflora wild roses, green brier, poison ivy, downed deadfall, etc. I know there are many threads already on chaps, and have searched, but I have a few specific requirements that maybe someone could address and help me out.
Over the weekend I tried to gain access to the dump from a side easier to climb. I used a weed eater and shreaded the heavy cord. I got a higher horsepower brush eater and blade and went to work, machete, and kukurhi too. I already have steal toe 100% leather boots, but maybe there's something better to handle that high rpm blade for kickback. I have to climb the hillside and large clusters of saplings cause lots of kickback. I don't think my boots can take a bump from that blade, and I don't want to end up crippled in a wheel chair the rest of my life over this ordeal. I need the right kind of boots for the equiptment.
I have leather gloves, but the wild roses, greenbriar, and assorted thorns shreded my blue jeans, legs, sleeves, arms, etc. It took me over an hour to get my equiptment out of a tight place and pull all of the rose vines out of my arms, skull, and hide before I could walk home! I don't know if the same pants, and chaps that work for clogging up chainsaws if contact is made would help prevent snags, yet allow free movement climbing over obstacles. Here is a list of some requirements, or preferences.
1. Hold up well to washing. Lots of poison ivy to trudge through.
2. Non-snagging
3. Best protection from chainsaw. Husky 359.
4. Best protection from high rpm blade on "weed eater."
5. Not too hot. I'll be working many more hours, climbing, humid, and hot. But this is a preference, not a requirement, since safety concerns for the above far outweigh that of heat stroke/ exhaustion.
6. Short, 28" w/boots inseam, and 36" waist.
7. I've found the front and sides were what needed primary protection.
8. Proper boots for chainsaw and crosscut high rpm blade, with good soles for woodland hills.
Thanks for your best recommendations, and for taking time to read my complaint.
Any other recommendations for necessary equiptment is appreciated!
Best regards,
Frank
I plan to bring a claim for land use fee, (I have had it posted for $5,000 per day for over five years), and whatever my damages, and expenses are. These people have NO respect for other people, or their property. I sure hope that these two will be paying for the expense in time, trouble and equiptment that they are causing me. I'm going to do every legal thing in my power to make this happen. I hope we, (the defense and I), get a good just judge with integrity that will uphold my legal land use fee, and my expenses incured. I've read of people getting away crimes like this all of the time, but trust that there must be good judges that make our legal system work.
I do everything possible to maintain my property for my use, but they had to dump over the hill in the steepest, most overgrown part of my property to access. Its grown over w/ multiflora wild roses, green brier, poison ivy, downed deadfall, etc. I know there are many threads already on chaps, and have searched, but I have a few specific requirements that maybe someone could address and help me out.
Over the weekend I tried to gain access to the dump from a side easier to climb. I used a weed eater and shreaded the heavy cord. I got a higher horsepower brush eater and blade and went to work, machete, and kukurhi too. I already have steal toe 100% leather boots, but maybe there's something better to handle that high rpm blade for kickback. I have to climb the hillside and large clusters of saplings cause lots of kickback. I don't think my boots can take a bump from that blade, and I don't want to end up crippled in a wheel chair the rest of my life over this ordeal. I need the right kind of boots for the equiptment.
I have leather gloves, but the wild roses, greenbriar, and assorted thorns shreded my blue jeans, legs, sleeves, arms, etc. It took me over an hour to get my equiptment out of a tight place and pull all of the rose vines out of my arms, skull, and hide before I could walk home! I don't know if the same pants, and chaps that work for clogging up chainsaws if contact is made would help prevent snags, yet allow free movement climbing over obstacles. Here is a list of some requirements, or preferences.
1. Hold up well to washing. Lots of poison ivy to trudge through.
2. Non-snagging
3. Best protection from chainsaw. Husky 359.
4. Best protection from high rpm blade on "weed eater."
5. Not too hot. I'll be working many more hours, climbing, humid, and hot. But this is a preference, not a requirement, since safety concerns for the above far outweigh that of heat stroke/ exhaustion.
6. Short, 28" w/boots inseam, and 36" waist.
7. I've found the front and sides were what needed primary protection.
8. Proper boots for chainsaw and crosscut high rpm blade, with good soles for woodland hills.
Thanks for your best recommendations, and for taking time to read my complaint.
Any other recommendations for necessary equiptment is appreciated!
Best regards,
Frank
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