Bill
of Rights for
Natural
Waterways
The Bill
of Rights for Natural Waterways describes the Best Management Practices
(bare minimum protocols) and requires that these be universally put in
place.
This is
the necessary right of way that the WaterLife requires to stay in loving
shape. The State Constitution is amended such that environmental
health is recognized as part of whole human health. As a health care
package, the Bill of Rights for Natural Waterways becomes law.
Fresh
Water itself, and its community of worker bugs, is identified as a living
member of the biosphere. As such, it has basic Natural rights.
The well-being of the water has a legal right of way to overrule any behaviors
that fall short of BMPs, so that Water's balance of health needs is met.
Stewardship
of this Water is assigned to officers. Every land-edge beside living
water: the seashore, every riverbank, every creekside, every lake every
spring
every well and sinkhole into common groundwater, is recognized
as personal property only so long as the Basic Waterway Rights are manifested
met.
If any
land owner fails to bring their private property into compliance with the
Waterway Health Law, that land owner's use shall be fenced out at a distance
of 30 meters, said fence built and maintained by appropriate agency.
Said
agency shall be funded in full to pay certifiers and correctors by Public
Trust.