Removed.
It was getting way too many views and let’s not pretend keeping that up here for much longer and sharing all that it wasn’t career suicide in itself. To be clear it was all true. But no sense in keeping dirty laundry permanently in writing. DWoolley trying ChatGPT on a legal description for the first time is about as far as a win as I am going to push for in making my point. Please keep using that stuff. Our future is about being open minded to new tech.
I also really don’t think you guys fully comprehended who you were fighting against Crownholm. It wasn’t Crownholm. He was a puppet. It was all about deregulation from that non-profit from DC that took up Crownholm’s case. We were clearly specifically targeted by that non-profit.
They tried it in Mississippi in 2018 with their survey board
https://ij.org/case/mississippi-mapping/
Have a whole section about their efforts for occupational licensing across all domains.
https://ij.org/pillar/occupational-licensing/
Read the arguments in that case again. They were trying to get 1st amendment claims up to the appellate or possibly even the supreme court to blow the rights of states have to have make occupational licensing wide open. They even conceded that the board was enforcing 8726 correctly in oral arguments. They were trying to say the State of California didn’t even have the right to make a regulation like 8726. That was the majority of their appellate push. They were trying to win not just by winning the case, but by getting 8726 ruled as unconstitutional and building on their Mississippi case in the 5th circuit. First couple minutes here. I am pretty sure those attorneys were after something much bigger than I think you guys think they were after.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FqSu8i1KQNA&t=669s
I’m pretty sure this was about either actually winning and getting 8726 struck down or getting a circuit split between their case in the 5th to get the supreme court to take up the case for occupational licensing on these first amendment grounds. They seem like they are trying to get a massive precedent set where they twist the first amendment into a new doctrine where it disallows occupational licensing. They can most likely do it with this current bench they just need to find the right argument that SCOTUS can use. SCOTUS is on an a breaking up of the administrative state bender lately and will probably do it for them if they give SCOTUS the right arguments to justify it. That’s what I am pretty sure they are trying to do with this case.
Anyways. Huge win by not having a huge win. The “not precedent” part of the 9th’s opinion is a huge win in itself because it should keep from seeming like there’s a circuit split and SCOTUS should hopefully avoid it if these guys try to file cert. I am pretty sure that firm either wanted to win the case or to lose spectacularly and publicly so that they could do something with the loss. The mellowness of the win is the most powerful thing here.
How does the door open to the next challenge? Its when Judge Koh says at 4:45 in oral arguments, “what are you saying has changed, the prosecutorial discretion, the judgement calls the government is making, what” that’s the door that allows deregulation in. Its them being able to prove the government isn’t effectively administering this and that 8726 is just completely outdated. For everything I am criticizing the board for and as what do I want CBarrett, its about closing that door for the next attack. Because I know its there and I am pretty sure I know how the other side would make arguments for it if they knew about the stuff that is happening and being discussed on this forum. If they had known about the San Diego Case and made these same arguments from inside the license itself and not from an external actor like Crownholm, I think this would have been a whole different story.
This is the activist hippie doo gooder attorney stuff. The rich attorneys who either were born with a silver spoon, or worked in big law and now they don’t need money anymore but they want to feel like they are making a difference (I know more than a few) This is the easy stuff. I’m trying to prep you all for the real stuff that I know is coming in the next few years. The stuff where the money actually talks and the attorneys aren’t just doing this to keep busy. They are doing it because legitimate and overwhelming business interests are paying them to deregulate us.
You need standards, you need to standardize enforcement actions. Minimum accuracy’s, minimum research requirements, when is a boundary survey a boundary survey etc. It cannot appear like the board is all over the place with enforcement actions. I cannot see the actually enforcement actions to know, but that’s how it looks right now from the outside. For the time being that’s what I want. I honestly don't care all that much what is in the standards. I just know we need them.
I also want you guys to go from a mentality of skepticism of new technologies and methods that I know is in the surveying industry to embracing them. It’s the only way we are going to survive what’s coming in the next 5 to 10 years. We are not the only industry that will be affected. But still. We are hugely vulnerable to the tech that is coming out right now. The idea that DWoolley actually tried to use ChatGPT when I know how skeptical he is of RTK from his videos is a big deal. That kind of stuff is our future. We need to embrace it. They can't make arguments that our regulations are outdated if our industry is on the cutting edge.
Again, though. Huge win by not having a huge win. A thank you to the Board and the AG is well deserved.
Also my family says I need to get off this forum and that I have been way to into it over the past few months. So I am going to be off for awhile.