dickb wrote:I'm just thinking out loud here and I'm not a lawyer so I'm not sure that this is even possible.
I have always wondered why the Cal mining claim holders and the Cal manufactures of mining equipment have never filed a class action lawsuit against the State of Cal for damages caused by the ban on dredging in CA. I think it violates the 1872 mining law.
1, The claim holders pay taxes on the claims that they hold and earn revenue from their labor which are taxed as income by the State.
2, The manufactures pay taxes on their business property and the profit they generate from the sale of their products to the miners in Ca and anywhere else that they sell their products to, which is taxed by the state.
3, The service providers that pay taxes on thier property and the lost revenue from sales that generate profit that is taxed by the state. (ie, motels, resturants, pay to play, any other business that does business with the miners and mining community, gas stations, campgrounds, to name a few.
4, The loss of revenue to the miners from the sale of their gold and the loss to the community from the tax revenue that has not been realized.
I would have thought some legal firm would have felt that this would have been a winable case for them to pursue. After all the lawyers are running adds on tv all over the country to get people to bring their problems to them to solve.
As far as I can tell, the mining community has been discriminated against and harmed by this State Law and everybody seems to feel that nothing can be done.
It's all right if you want to chain yourself to a rock while you dredge and hope that the media will bring their cameras and tv anchors to report on your plight. I just don't think anyone cares!
I guess I'll just crawl back in my cave and go to sleep.
Dickb
It is also discrimination against a minority group.... but don't expect the PLP to be able to run with that either!
OK Russ, show me the proof that not one single person gets any of the donated money... heresay does not count!