1. Once a road is opened up and access allowed, the users become a stakeholder. What gives anyone the right to take it away simply because there isn't anyone there to repair the road.
The government has an obligation to ensure the roads in BC are safe for use, if the continued use of the road would cause harm to the road, the environment, or the user, then the government is obligated to repair/maintain the road or close/deactivate the road.
2. The bad apples will still get there, winches and modified 4wds will be able to breach most obstructions with ease. Blocking off access to keeps out the public and in most cases, effectively the authorities too. This will drastically reduce the number of law-abiding people who would report environmental abuse.
This is true of all currently deactivated roads. If someone breaches a barricade and gets hurt or cause environmental damage, there is a clear case against them as it is clear the road was closed and they were not supposed to be using it.
3. "Use at your own risk"/ "this road is no longer maintained" signs, with legal precedent to back it up.
If the road is left open and the user fails to notice a bridge has been damaged and it collapses into a stream killing the driver, spilling fuel in the river and causing an obstruction in the creek that creates a flash flood when it eventually breaks and injures people/property downstream, would the fact that it was "use at your own risk" really help those negatively affected?
4. I never implied that I would do anything, except state my dissatisfaction about the RRA online on the link I provided. As someone who travels a lot of backroads, I have seen first hand that most deactivations get breached/bridged in short order. I clearly stated that as an observation, not a set of intentions.
No comment.
5. I'm not asking anyone to maintain the roads, just not to block it.
Most roads (as the discussion paper suggests) could and should remain open, only roads that are so degraded as to cause harm to the user, or the environment through continued use, would be closed. (This is the part most people fear could be abused and the "open road" policy ignored or distorted to the effect that
all back roads become closed.)