9/01/2006

Councilman explains flip-flop on eminent domain: Cherry Hill NJ Courier-Post, 8/22/06

By Wilford S Shamlin

Westville Councilman Woodrow A. Dooley III plans to vote in favor of a $50 million redevelopment plan along Big Timber Creek even if just one of the nearly 30 property owners in the targeted area is forced to sell.

Dooley won a council seat last year after campaigning against eminent domain abuse, as did James A. Pennington Jr. and Susan Rodgers. Only Rodgers held fast to the campaign pledge.

"Many people perceive it as a flip-flop," said Dooley, who said he is pained by daily encounters in a small town with neighbors and others who supported him.

"Before campaigning, I wasn't informed about all the facets of redevelopment and about all the facets of running a town," Dooley said.

There may be political ramifications for elected officials who change their mind in office but their credibility and how contentious that issue really is are also factors, according to one political observer.

"It depends how much that person has the ear of the voters and how much of it actually becomes a campaign issue," Ingrid Reed of the Eagleton Institute at Rutgers University in New Brunswick said.

"And if it's a campaign issue and the incumbent always has to defend his record," she said, "that's a much more riskier position to be in."

An elected official could decide later that circumstances regarding use of eminent domain matters rather than stating that such powers unilaterally should not be used, Reed said.

"In that case, changing your mind is much more palatable to the voters," she said.

Dooley said the issue is less about eminent domain abuse and more about reducing the number of residents who would be affected by turning down the redevelopment project.

Otherwise, he said taxes will continue to escalate and force people on fixed or low income to move away.

"It's really a good plan for the borough. When I realized this, I really thought I was a fool. A lot of people thought I was going to be a hero ‚...‚ and stop the project," Dooley said.

Since unveiling the project in January 2005, Fieldstone Associates has repeatedly stated eminent domain was a last resort, which means it's still possible the borough could seize property legally through court action.

And for that reason alone, Rodgers refuses to support the project.

Pennington did not immediately return phone calls this week.

"Is it right, or is it wrong? That's the basic question," Rodgers said. "Forget everything else. Forget all the reasons why. Do unto others, as you would want them to do unto you.

"I'm for development. I'm not for taking property away when they don't want to sell," she said.


Cherry Hill NJ Courier-Post: http://www.courierpostonline.com

The Spector of Eminent Domain is an Eminent Threat: Gilroy CA Dispatch, 8/22/06

Opinion

By Lisa Pampuch

Now that South County's only Albertson's grocery store, located in Morgan Hill Plaza, has closed, some people are urging City Council to condemn the strip mall on 7.5 acres at the southwest corner of Dunne Avenue and Monterey Road.

It's an eyesore, they say.

It's a drag on the local economy, they insist.

It's hurting downtown Morgan Hill, they claim.

It has seven owners, making it difficult to come up with a plan to rejuvenate the site that everyone can agree upon, they cry.

What it really comes down to is that the owners of Morgan Hill Plaza aren't using their private property the way some people would like them to use it.

They're not doing anything illegal or violating any zoning ordinance. The strip mall just isn't as pretty or as upscale as some people think it ought to be.

Because Morgan Hill has a redevelopment agency that has renounced its eminent domain powers, city officials are now considering granting themselves those powers when they extend the RDA.

"We are thinking about when we extend the redevelopment agency, we'll grant eminent domain for obviously blighted parcels," City Councilman and mayoral candidate Steve Tate told reporter Tony Burchyns recently.

While I could write a column or two on whether or not the city should extend its RDA (and have done so in the past), I'll limit myself in this column to eminent domain.

Eminent domain should be used only in cases where a property is the only suitable site for a government project or facility.

Unless the city determines that Morgan Hill Plaza is the only suitable location for some government project - a fire station, a police station, a library, a road - it should not condemn private property.

In the case of Morgan Hill Plaza, there's no talk of a government facility for the site - far from it.

"We might have to purchase the land and turn it over to another developer," Jim Dumas, project manager for the city's Department of Business Assistance and Housing Services (that's really the city's RDA department; I've always wondered why they used such an obfuscating name for it), told Burchyns.

But at least one Morgan Hill Plaza owner doesn't want to sell.

"We've been there 30 years. We'd prefer to be here another 30 years," Tom Wilson of Duckett-Wilson, which owns most of the property, said. "We'll continue to maintain the plaza, keep it clean and neat … "

Unfortunately, we have to rely on the city to restrain itself, after a lamentable decision last year by the United States Supreme Court in the case of Kelo v. New London. Homeowners sued when the city of New London, Conn., attempted to force them to sell their properties so it could revitalize a neighborhood with a pharmaceutical research facility, other commercial facilities, and residential development.

In that case, the justices ruled 5-4 that governmental agencies can force the sale of private property (like your home or shopping center) on behalf of other private entities (like a developer that wants to build a factory or fancier homes).

"Promoting economic development is a traditional and long-accepted function of government," Justice John Paul Stevens wrote for the majority.

And Stevens was correct in that assertion. In Canton, Miss., homes were condemned to make way for an automobile factory, and in New York City, eminent domain was used to facilitate the development of the World Trade Center.

But just because it has been done in the past doesn't make it right.

After Kelo, all it takes to legally justify eminent domain is an argument that doing so promotes the public good.

The problem is that "public good" is a subjective measure that cannot be equitably applied and about which reasonable people can reasonably disagree.

One person might believe that increased tax revenue from a proposed factory will benefit a community, but another might argue that the plant's pollution, noise and traffic outweigh those benefits.

Who's right?

One person might argue that a casino will bring jobs, ancillary businesses and tourists, but another might argue that gambling will harm the community's moral fiber and believe that outweighs economic benefits.

Who's right?

While I'd love to see Morgan Hill Plaza beautified and filled with exciting retailers, and while I suspect that would benefit downtown and the city as a whole, I have no doubt that using eminent domain to achieve it will damage our already precarious private property rights.

That's too high a price to pay.

No eminent domain for private development.


Gilroy CA Dispatch: http://www.gilroydispatch.com

California's stealth initiative on land use: San Francisco CA Chronicle, 8/20/06

Prop. 90 purports to protect property owners, but it could also do much harm

By Ray Ring

Backers of Proposition 90 on California's November ballot describe it as a campaign to rein in a government power called eminent domain that has fallen into disrepute. But the measure would have more widespread - and more pernicious - impact.

Governments at all levels use eminent domain occasionally, when they condemn private property and force the owners to accept a buyout to make room for utility lines, urban renewal and other projects that benefit the public. The practice dates back centuries, but it's become the target of public outrage recently, thanks to a 2005 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that allowed a Connecticut city to condemn the homes of Susette Kelo and six others to make room for a global drug company's 100-acre manufacturing complex. The court didn't endorse the condemnation; it only said Connecticut can enforce its eminent domain laws without federal interference.

Since then, more than 30 state legislatures have either passed or considered laws limiting eminent domain power. An effort stalled in the California Legislature this year when cities and planning advocates argued that eminent domain has not been widely misused and that it's a necessary tool.

Meanwhile, ballot initiatives to reform eminent domain have sprung up in six Western states, including California. And there's a pattern to them, because it's really a single campaign.

The initiatives have titles like the Protect Our Homes Act (in California) and People's Initiative to Stop the Taking of Our Land (in Nevada), as if the government is about to come in with bulldozers to sweep everyone off their property. Yet governments use eminent domain on behalf of developers only a few thousand times per year nationwide.

Reforming eminent domain is partly a smokescreen. The multistate campaign has a bigger target: It aims to choke off governments' ability to pass land-use regulations affecting millions of property owners.

The libertarian Reason Foundation of Los Angeles revealed the strategy in an April policy paper that recommended pushing "Kelo-plus" initiatives to capitalize "on the tremendous public and political momentum generated in the aftermath of the Kelo ruling. ..."

What is the "plus" in these initiatives? Libertarians and property-rights activists believe that many common government regulations on real estate, such as zoning and subdivision limits, take away property value. Therefore, they say, government should either compensate the owners or back off.

This may sound like a good idea, on the face of it. But here's how regulatory takings work: If you could fit 20 houses on your land, plus a junkyard and a gravel mine, and government regulations limit you to six houses, then the government would have to pay you whatever profit you would have made on the unbuilt houses, junkyard and mine. Of course, the government can't afford to pay you, so it would have to drop its regulations, allowing the maximum development, no matter what your neighbors think.

The text of Prop. 90 runs four pages, and almost all the wording plays up the eminent domain angle. The regulatory-takings "plus" is tucked into a few sentences that talk about paying property owners for regulations that damage their property. It says the damage includes downzoning and even "limitations on the use of private air space." The Web site for Protect Our Homes likewise hardly mentions land-use regulations while playing up the specter of bureaucrats who want to take away your home by invoking eminent domain.

This anti-regulation campaign is not as populist as it would like to appear. A few big financial backers have provided almost all the campaign money so far. The pro-Prop. 90 campaign raised and spent about $2.4 million through the end of June. Of that total, $1.5 million came from Howie Rich of New York, who grew wealthy in real estate and owns apartments across the country. He funnels his political money through his Fund for Democracy, which is based in his home. Following the money trail, an additional $600,000 of Prop. 90's war chest came from a Montana group whose supporters include a Chicago-area Libertarian group called Americans for Limited Government, where Rich is chairman of the board of directors; and $200,000 came from Fieldstead & Co., an Irvine conduit for Howard Fieldstead Ahmanson, Jr., a savings-and-loan heir who also backs efforts to establish a "Christian nation" and oppose gay marriage and stem-cell research.

In all, Rich's Fund for Democracy and Americans for Limited Government have given more than $2.75 million to the eminent domain initiatives in California, Nevada, Arizona, Washington, Idaho and Montana. Petition circulators were paid as much as $4 per signature, which gave them an incentive to be persuasive.

For specific evidence of what regulatory takings could mean in California, check out Oregon.

Libertarians and property-rights activists persuaded Oregon voters to approve Measure 37 in 2004. Oregon had the nation's toughest land-use regulations, and some loosening-up was needed, but Measure 37 blew huge holes in Oregon's system. It allowed many longtime landowners to escape regulations for protecting landscapes, the environment and neighborhoods.

Despite delays in Measure 37's implementation caused by court fights, Oregon property owners have already filed about 2,700 Measure 37 claims, aiming to develop about 143,000 acres. The claimants demand that governments either waive land-use regulations or pay nearly $4 billion in compensation. In almost all of the 700 or so claims settled to date, governments have waived the regulations.

Oregon property-rights advocates say Measure 37 will work out fine, rolling back a heavy-handed, inflexible land-use system. "We've had a centralized planning system for so long, it created a lot of animosity in people," said Dave Hunnicutt, president of the state's leading property-rights group, Oregonians in Action.

But many Oregonians - including thousands of neighbors who have written official comment letters on the claims - say the new law is a disaster. Many say the campaign was deceptive.

"The way Measure 37 was presented to the public, prior to the election, they paraded the little old lady who had 20 acres in the ads, they had (her) saying, 'Well, my retirement was going to (rely on the) 20 acres, and I was going to sell 5 acres, and the land-use laws won't let me,' " says Ted Schroeder, a doctor in the rural Grande Ronde Valley in northeast Oregon. "In my naiveté, I thought I was voting to help relieve those sorts of situations." Now, a neighboring family, operating as Terra-Magic Inc., has filed a Measure 37 claim seeking to brush aside agricultural zoning and subdivide 1,400 acres of prime farmland into 335 home sites.

Bill Rose, who breeds specialty grasses on 2,100 acres in the Willamette Valley, about 20 miles south of Portland, says he voted for Measure 37 because he wanted to relax regulations enough to allow modest subdivisions on hilly, unfarmable rural land. Then one of his neighbors filed a Measure 37 claim to convert a 40-acre berry farm into lots one-seventh of an acre for a total of 280 houses. The developer wanted Clackamas County to waive the agricultural zoning or pay him at least $3.6 million. The county had no choice but to approve the claim. Now Rose is making a last-ditch attempt to persuade the county to limit the number of new septic tanks. He says Measure 37 claims "will destroy this valley - the best place to live and farm that I know of."

"It's happening all over Oregon," says Renee Ross, who lives on 32 wooded and pastured acres near Molalla, southeast of Portland. Two of her neighbors have filed Measure 37 claims: One wants to build nine houses on 60 acres, and the other wants to dig a gravel mine on 80 acres. Handcuffed by Measure 37, the Clackamas County government approved both claims. "We went from having a very strict land-use policy to having no policy," Ross says. "We don't have any rights at all. It leaves us no say in the types of surroundings we live in, the undesirable businesses that can be put in right next to our property."

The initiatives on state ballots this year vary in their specifics. California's Prop. 90 would affect all new land-use regulations, other than the bare-bones protections for public health and safety. But like Oregon's Measure 37, Prop. 90 doesn't explain where governments would get money to pay affected property owners. The measure is really intended to prevent any new regulations.

Many California communities have land-use regulations that are not as tough as Oregon's, and many regulations need regular tune-ups. Prop. 90 would essentially freeze the communities' planning efforts, with no chance of altering the rules in the future, even when they are hit with population booms and other significant changes.

Under Prop. 90, it's tough luck if citizens want a new regulation in the future to protect their properties or neighborhood from intrusive development, to put conditions on a Wal-Mart Superstore, to protect stream banks from new construction or to require developers to do anything for open space and affordable housing.

Don't be fooled by ads like those in Oregon in 2004 that featured victims of regulations - or, even more compelling, victims of eminent domain.

In Oregon, a huge coalition opposed Measure 37, including environmentalists, governments, planners, architects, nurses, labor, neighborhood associations, the Oregon PTA and the American Cancer Society. They won endorsements from every daily newspaper in the state. They spent twice as much money as the property-rights side. And they still lost, on what consultants called "the fairness issue" -- the Measure 37 campaign managed to portray government as the enemy of property owners.

To defeat Prop. 90, California's advocates for planning and neighborhood rights will have to win on the fairness issue. They need to find compelling examples of people who are helped by land-use regulations. They need to communicate to voters that one person's rights can be another person's ruin, and that strong regulations often raise property values rather than lower them.


San Francisco CA Chronicle: http://www.sfgate.com

DeFazio opposes eminent domain in pipeline construction: Roseburg OR News-Review, 8/18/06

By Adam pearson

U.S. Rep. Peter DeFazio has expressed opposition to the proposed route of a gas pipeline across Douglas County.

In a letter he sent Thursday, DeFazio, D-Ore., urged the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to reroute the proposed 225-mile Pacific Connector Gas Pipeline away from private property and onto existing transmission right-of-ways.

Its builder, Williams - a pipeline engineering and construction firm whose Pacific Connector office is in Salt Lake City - insists the proposed route avoids heavily populated areas. The route crosses private and federally owned land.

DeFazio wrote he is opposed to the company using eminent domain to seize private property to facilitate construction of the pipeline.

"I don't think it's right that a company has such extraordinary power," DeFazio said in a phone interview.

In his letter to FERC Chairman Joseph Kelliher, DeFazio said he opposes the Energy Policy Act that Congress passed and President Bush signed into law in 2005, which by-passes the jurisdiction of state and local governments for utility right-of-ways.

"Given that residents and state and local officials have a better understanding of the economic, environmental, safety, and security concerns that exist in affected communities, I believe it was a mistake to concentrate this sitting power with the federal government," he wrote.

The proposed 36-inch pipeline would stretch across southwest Oregon from a liquefied natural gas terminal in Coos Bay and connect to a main natural gas transmission line in Malin, crossing approximately 55 miles of Douglas County in between. It would be capable of transmitting 1 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day.

The Pacific Connector is in FERC's pre-filing status.

DeFazio said that by routing the pipeline to existing right-of-ways, less impact would made to natural resources and private property. He said that should be the greater factor for Williams consider.

"Their job should be more than just minimizing costs," DeFazio said


Roseburg OR News-Review: http://www.oregonnews.com

8/29/2006

Scope of the Project Rule and its effects: New Jersey Eminent Domain Blog, 8/25/06

By Bill Ward

The "Scope of the Project Rule" is an arcane fact of law which prevents property owners whose property is acquired from claiming benefit caused by the project of the condemning authority. There are enormous price differentials between appraisals on property as zoned compared to appraisals on the same property taking into consideration the zoning for the new project. Many people who lose a house, for instance, to a condominium project can’t understand why they cannot value their land for condos. The answer is the "Scope of the Project Rule." However, this may be about to change in New Jersey as it applies to redevelopment projects and property to be acquired under the Local Redevelopment Housing Law.

The following is a brief synopsis of the “Scope of the Project Rule” which is presently the law in the State of New Jersey:
The scope of the project doctrine only excludes value attributable to a governmental project from the date the government is "committed to the project". Jersey City Redevelopment Agency v. Kugler, 58 N.J. 374, 379 (1971).United States v. Miller, 317 U.S. 369, 63 S.Ct. 276, 87 L.Ed 336, (1943); United States v. Reynolds, 397 U.S. 14, 90 S.Ct. 803, 25 L.Ed.2d 12(1970).

The scope of the project doctrine was articulated in the seminal case of United States v. Miller, 317 U.S. 369, 87 L.Ed. (adv. 251), 63 S.Ct. 276 (1943), as follows:
[S]pecial value [of the condemned property] to the condemner as distinguished from others who may or may not possess the power to condemn, must be excluded, as an element of market value. 317 U.S. at 375

As early as Olson v. United States, 292 U.S. 246, 54 S.Ct. 704, 78 L.Ed. 1236 (1934), the U. S. Supreme Court held that because just compensation includes all elements of value that inhere in the property, the land’s most profitable use must be considered, even if that use is the same as the use for which it is being taken.
Nor does the fact that it may be or is being acquired by eminent domain negative consideration of availability for use in the public service. It is common knowledge that public service corporations and others having that power frequently are actual or potential competitors not only for tracts held in single ownership but also for rights of way, locations, sites and other areas requiring the union of numerous parcels held by different owners. And to the extent that probable demand by prospective purchasers or condemnors affects market value, it is to be taken into account.

The scope of the project rule has always been enunciated carefully to limit its application to government projects. For example, in the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 (42 USC 34651 et seq.), Title III on Uniform Real Property Acquisition Policy (Sec. 301) it is provided as follows:
Any decrease or increase in the fair market value of real property prior to the date of valuation caused by the public improvement for which such property is acquired, or by the likelihood that the property would be acquired for such improvement . . . will be disregarded in determining the compensation for the property . . .

Jersey City Redevelopment Agency v. Kugler, 58 N.J. 374 (1971) is equally clear that it addressed enhancement or depreciation caused by an "announcement by a public agency that a public improvement was planned for a particular location or area." 58 N.J. at 379 (emphasis added).

In what is by far the most comprehensive judicial treatment of the scope of the project doctrine, the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals defined the scope of the project rule as follows:
The scope of the project rule can be stated easily enough: If the condemned land was probably within the scope of the governmental project for which it is being condemned at the time the government became committed to that project, then the owner is not entitled to any increment in value occasioned by the government’s undertaking the project . . .

The underlying notion of the "no value attributable to Government demand" principle, then is that the Government, when pursuing public benefits through its condemnation power, should not have to spend more for property than would a reasonable and willing private purchaser solely because (emphasis in original) it is exercising its condemnation power on behalf of the public; instead, Government is to be equated to a private purchaser buying the property for its "highest and best" nongovernmental use in an open market (emphasis added). . .

In the cases applying the latter principle, the value excluded is a direct product of the Government’s actions as a condemnor, and is, by definition, a value that could not be obtained from private purchasers; it is an artificial value not to be found in the private market. (emphasis added) US v. 320.0 Acres of Land, More or Less, Etc., 665 F.2d 762 at 781(1979)

As can be seen, the cases are careful to distinguish those elements of value which flow solely from government demand, i.e. an "artificial value" which could never be realized by the owner in the private real estate market, from those elements of value which would exist separate and apart from the government project which are always part of the constitutionally mandated just compensation. Indeed, recognition of and payment for the latter is mandated by the constitutional guarantee of just compensation, Miller, supra, 317 U.S. at 376.

The New Jersey State Assembly has recommended changes to the Local Redevelopment Housing Law, N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-1 et seq. This bill known as the Burzichelli bill (A-3257) passed the Assembly and its companion bill S-2088 is presently before the Senate Community and Urban Affairs Committee chaired by Senator Rice of Newark. Senator Rice has taken no action on the bill but said he will consider it in September. The important provision of the bill as it pertains to compensation in eminent domain cases is that it does away with the "Scope of the Project Rule" as it presently benefits developers on redevelopment acquisitions. See blog of June 23, 2006, Kelo Anniversary, and portions concerning A-3257.

If the Senate passes the present version of the bill and Governor Corzine signs it into law, developers will be facing significantly higher costs in acquiring property for projects. The property owners will now be able to claim the zoning and use contemplated by the project. For example, in Long Branch, New Jersey, where single family residential properties have been acquired, this was the highest and best use permitted under the underlying zoning. Homeowners, where property has been taken, were faced with providing evidence of value based on single family residential. If the law changes, the homeowner could provide proof of what his land is worth for high-rise condominiums. The value would be significantly higher. The additional cost of property acquisition could make some projects uneconomic for the developer.


New Jersey Eminent Domain Blog: http://www.njeminentdomain.com

Eminent Domain Decision - Appellate panel affirms Judge Costello in Twp. of Bloomfield v. 110 Washington Street: NJ Eminent Domain Blog, 8/29

By Bill Ward

In a Per Curiam decision released today, the Appellate Division of the Superior Court affirmed unanimously the August 3, 2005 decision of Essex County Assignment Judge Patricia Costello in the matter of Township of Bloomfield vs. 110 Washington Street. Judge Costello dismissed the first eminent domain complaint filed by the Township of Bloomfield in furtherance of its flawed redevelopment project.

The three-judge panel rejected the main argument of the Township of Bloomfield outright. The township argued that a previous decision by Judge Coleman, who dismissed 110 Washington Street’s prerogative writ suit on grounds of lack of timeliness, was dispositive of the merits of the case. The Appellate panel disagreed and refused to apply the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel to bar the challenge in this proceeding. The judges said that the defendants were entitled to a full and fair opportunity to litigate all the issues, since Judge Coleman only focused on the lack of timeliness (i.e., it wasn’t filed within the 45-days required to contest municipal action) and not the merits of the case.

The Court deferred to Judge Costello as to the facts and background of the case developed in the record and concluded:

Given the trial court's view of the facts, however, our independent analysis of the legal arguments presented leads us to substantial agreement with many of the reasons for decision Judge Costello articulated in her letter decision of August 3, 2005 (http://www.njeminentdomain.com/Order%20of%20Dismissal%20-%20Bloomfield.pdf).

The practical effect of this win has been that the 110 Washington Street partners were able to strike a deal with Bloomfield taking them out of the redevelopment plan and thereby letting them pursue their own development objectives for the property.

The larger question is, what does this decision do to the other property owners who are contesting the blight designation?

Last month Bloomfield fast-tracked a reconsideration of the blight issue before its planning board. In less than two hours, the planning board heard a regurgitation of the same report by the township’s planning experts, Heyer and Gruel, with minor modifications which purportedly address the criticisms of Judge Costello. The planning board confirmed the blight designation for the remaining properties at a special meeting on July 20. This decision was put before the mayor and council in executive session in three business days on July 24, and was approved by the council at the next meeting on August 7, 2006.

By the end of this week, the five property owners in the other suit, Lardieri et al v. Township of Bloomfield will file a second prerogative writ suit contesting the blight designation for their properties. This time, they will be within the 45-days to contest a municipal action and the trial court will have to afford the property owners a full hearing on the merits.

The Heyer and Gruel planning report is deficient because there was no reinspection of any of the properties in question, neither interior nor exterior. There was no evaluation of changed conditions of the properties in the intervening five years since the report was originally completed. The report is very similar to the planning report rejected by the Appellate Division in the case of ERETC, L.L.C. v. City of Perth Amboy A-2035-04T2, decided Nov. 15, 2005 (http://www.njeminentdomain.com/ERECTCa2035-04.pdf).


new Jersey Eminent Domain Blog: http://www.njeminentdomain.com

8/27/2006

Fort Trumbull Saga Ends On Costly Note: New London CT Day, 8/23/06

City, state pay more than $4.1 million to settle with area's last six occupants

By Ted Mann

City and state officials have agreed to pay more than $4.1 million to the last six occupants of the Fort Trumbull peninsula and waive almost $1.2 million in fees, as compensation for the seizure of homes and businesses for the city's long-delayed redevelopment effort.

In the settlement agreements, which were reached in May and June but only released Tuesday after a vote of the City Council, negotiators for the state, the city and the New London Development Corp. agreed to pay more than $2.3 million more for the remaining 12 properties than their total appraised value in 2000, when the NLDC, acting as the city's agent, first seized them through eminent domain.

The payments include the original appraised values of the properties along with relocation expenses, and the additional funds offered to entice the plaintiffs to settle. The city is also waiving so-called “use and occupancy” fees, which the city and the NLDC argue are owed them by the occupants, since they have not legally owned the properties since they were condemned.

The $2.3 million infusion of additional funds — like most of the money expended over the course of the eight-year, $73 million project — came from the state Department of Economic and Community Development, which has largely underwritten the attempt to transform the peninsula from a neighborhood of modest homes, apartments and businesses into a complex centered on a hotel, office space, luxury housing and a museum for the U.S. Coast Guard.

Caught between that vision and the neighborhood's reality for nearly six years were the six property owners who contested the city's and the agency's right to seize their homes and businesses: Susette Kelo, Pasquale Cristofaro, Charles Dery, William Von Winkle, Thelma Brelesky and Richard Beyer, the owner of a business, Pataya Construction.

The property owners fought the city all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court before losing last year, only to be buoyed by a wave of public opposition to the court's defense of eminent domain takings. In the year that elapsed after the June 2005 decision, the victors — the city, the NLDC, and the state — had attempted to negotiate a middle ground between what city officials saw as their legal win and the plaintiffs' public relations victory, trying to reach a deal with each of the holdouts that would persuade them to surrender their former properties on the peninsula without the messy struggle of eviction.

“We wanted to get out,” NLDC President Michael Joplin said Tuesday, describing the negotiators' mindset as they tried to reach the settlements. “We wanted to end this matter right now so we could get on with economic development.”

Ending that matter cost the NLDC, and the state, millions more than had been planned.

The largest settlement payment was to plaintiff William Von Winkle, who owned apartment houses at 27, 31 and 35 Smith St. initially appraised at $638,000. Von Winkle will now be paid $1.5 million for those properties, plus another $300,000 for a building at 216 Howard St., which stood just outside the project boundaries and had never been seized via eminent domain.

Von Winkle's agreement also forgave what the NLDC calculates as roughly $482,000 in occupancy fees, in part because of rental payments Von Winkle has collected since 2000, when he legally ceased to own the properties. Any rent collected between July 15 and Sept. 1, when Von Winkle is required to depart his property, must be paid to the city.

Kelo, the lead plaintiff in the court case, and one who was rendered an icon by national opponents of eminent domain, accepted an offer totaling $442,155 for her little pink house at 8 East St., more than $319,000 above the appraised value in 2000.

Kelo's agreement will permit her to move her house off of its current lot to another location, and gives her until June 15, 2007, to do so, or else vacate the premises. Kelo also was permitted to forgo roughly $85,000 in use and occupancy fees as calculated by the NLDC.

City officials said the amount to be paid for Kelo's house was based on the estimated cost of moving it, though no location has been specified or purchased.

Pasquale Cristofaro and his family — who, with Kelo, were some of the most outspoken opponents of the project and the last to settle — will receive $475,000, including relocation costs, for their house at 53 Goshen St. It was appraised at $150,000 in 2000. The city forgave $105,000 in use and occupancy fees.

The Cristofaros also retain the right to salvage fixtures and property from the house, will have shrubs from the grounds transplanted to their residences at no cost, and will be reimbursed for real estate taxes paid since the date of the taking in 2000. The NLDC also agreed to install a plaque in the finished development in memory of the late matriarch of the family, Margherita Cristofaro, and to issue a statement on behalf of the agency and the city: “We regret any hardship suffered during the course of this case. We understand that the battle was a principled one.”

City and agency officials, the settlements public at last, said they were confident that plaintiffs had been well-served in the negotiations.

“I think everyone is aware,” said Joplin, “that if this was a poker game, they maxed out their hand.”

“Everybody was dealt with in as fair and as equitable a way as possible,” said Ronald Angelo, the deputy commissioner of the DECD, which provided a last-minute infusion of state funds that helped seal final settlements with Von Winkle, Cristofaro and Kelo.

The NLDC had already received word that it could spend an existing pool of state funds — variously estimated at around $1.4 million — as enticements for plaintiffs to settle, but eventually used roughly $900,000 more than that, according to those involved in the negotiations.


New London CT Day: http://www.theday.com

Now Ratner faces boot: New York NY Post, 8/22/06

By Patrick Gallahue

Foes of Brooklyn's proposed NBA arena have complained for years that the wrecking ball would knock Prospect Heights residents out of their homes - but now one opponent has the chance to give developer Bruce Ratner the boot.

Property owner Henry Weinstein, some of whose buildings could be condemned to make way for the Atlantic Yards arena and high-rise megaproject, is suing to get New Jersey Nets owner Ratner evicted from one of Weinstein's buildings.

"I want to kick them off my property," Weinstein said of Ratner and his Forest City Ratner Cos.

In 1999, Weinstein leased a former factory on Pacific Street to fellow developer Shaya Boymelgreen for 48 years.

This year, Boymelgreen turned the Pacific Street lease over to Ratner's development company, which could - with the state's aid - end up seizing Weinstein's building to put up the $4.2 billion professional basketball arena and residential complex.

Weinstein claims Ratner took over the lease so that he could tell the state he is in control of the property in making his case for the six-square-block project.

So Weinstein's suing Boymelgreen to cancel the lease.

"[This] has allowed Forest City Ratner Companies (FCRC) to claim leasehold interests in [Weinstein's] properties even as FCRC is threatening [Weinstein] with condemnation . . . in order to construct a basketball arena for the Nets," court papers read.

Ratner lawyer Jeff Braun dismissed the rival developer's claim.

"While Forest City Ratner is not a party to this lawsuit, Mr. Weinstein's claims completely lack any merit," Braun said.

"Mr. Boymelgreen assigned the leases to Forest City Ratner as permitted by the leases, and Mr. Weinstein unreasonably withheld his consent."

A lawyer for Boymelgreen declined to comment.

Weinstein said he doesn't object to the buildings or arena that would make up the Frank Gehry-designed Atlantic Yards.

He just doesn't want his and other private property seized via eminent domain.

"God knows I'm not against housing or economic development. I'm a developer myself," he said. "But constitutional rights are a much bigger issue."


New York Post: www.nypost.com

"Atlantic Yards" Public Hearing, 8/13/06

News Release

It's About Umitigated Adverse Impacts, "Blight," Eminent Domain Abuse, and Ratner's One Billion Dollar Profit

The Empire State Development Corporation holds a public hearing on the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for Forest City Ratner's (FCR) proposed "Atlantic Yards" development project. The hearing is the public's only chance to respond to the disclosure of the proposed project's environmental impact.

Written comment is due by September 22, only 66 days after the 4,000 pages of documents outlining "unmitigable significant adverse impacts" was released. By comparison, the smaller Yankee Stadium project had a four-month review period. "Atlantic Yards" would be the twice the density of the densest residential community in the United States.

Thousands are expected at the hearing today which. The hearing is also the only opportunity for property owners in the proposed site to go on the record concerning the attempt by the State of New York to seize their property under the power of eminent domain and hand it over to the private developer Forest City Ratner for a primarily luxury housing project that would bring profits of at least one billion dollars for the real estate development firm.

Develop Don't Destroy Brooklyn (DDDB) spokesperson Daniel Goldstein said, "The reality is that major adverse environmental impacts from “Atlantic Yards” are ignored or radically underestimated in the DEIS; those impacts have been ignored out of hand because this publicly subsidized land grab is about preserving a billion dollar ot more profit for Forest City Ratner, while the public would take all of the financial and environmental risks and impacts."

"While today's hearing is an important opportunity for the public to respond to the environmental review, the future of the "Atlantic Yards" proposal will be played out in the written comment, the political arena and in the courts," Goldstein said.
"We urge the ESDC to take the use of eminent domain out of the plan, and allow a more reasonable project that does not allow the taking of homes and businesses in an area that is clearly not 'blighted', but would only be taken because this developer desires as much real estate as possible in an extremely valuable and desirable neighborhood. If the ESDC continues to insist on the use of eminent domain owners and tenants will have no choice but to litigate to save our homes and businesses, and no project will be built at this site for years, if ever. The foundational purported purpose of the 'Atlantic Yards' proposal is to clear "blighted conditions" on the development site. The 'blighted conditions' claimed by the developer and the State are phony, and thus the entire project is a house of cards, and if built, a disaster."


Develop Don't Destroy Brooklyn: www.developdontdestroy.org

Daniel Goldstein: press@dddb.net

Mi casa no es su casa! NationalPropertyRights.com, 8/21/06

By Jose Cuevas and Jacob Monty

With the stroke of a pen, five justices of the U.S. Supreme Court gave their assent to taxation by eminent domain by putting tax revenue above private property rights. Our message to the government is: “mi casa no es su casa!”

Because of the Kelo v. City of New London decision, significant new protections for Texas homeowners must be a high priority for the Texas Legislature. Caught in the vice between government’s insatiable appetite for revenue and the Court’s affirmation that homes can be taken as a means of taxation, every homeowner must demand strong protections for private property rights by amending the Texas Constitution.

We are especially concerned about Kelo’s effect on lower-income Texans who tend to be the victims of eminent domain proceedings. It is not residents of Highland Park in Dallas, River Oaks in Houston or Alamo Heights in San Antonio who have most to fear from the Court’s ruling. Low property values in impoverished areas of Texas cities are inviting targets for city, county and state government seeking expand their reach and tax revenue.

Justice Clarence Thomas’ dissent shares our concern for the poor:
“Allowing the government to take property solely for public purposes is bad enough, but extending the concept of public purpose to encompass any economically beneficial goal guarantees that these losses will fall disproportionately on poor communities.”

We have seen first-hand how government exercises the power of eminent domain. Private property rights are often abridged because of the strong union between government and powerful interests to the detriment to the poor who are also politically weak. Where are new stadiums built? Where are new parks built? The Local Government Code gives local governments a laundry list of excuses to take property from low-income Hispanics.

Justice Sandra Day O’Connor underscored the point when she wrote: “…who among us can say she already makes the most productive or attractive possible use of her property? The specter of condemnation hangs over all property. Nothing is to prevent the State from replacing any Motel 6 with a Ritz-Carlton, any home with a shopping mall, or any farm with a factory.” In other words, unless our property maximizes revenue to government then our property can be taken for whatever purpose as long as revenue to government increases. Now, there is absolutely no barrier to government claims on your home and land.

That is a special concern for Hispanics who are less-well off compared to the Anglo population. Dr. Steve Murdock, State Demographer at the University of Texas-San Antonio, has presented compelling documentation at HOPE events that Hispanics tend to live in areas with lower value homes. Many cases that have allowed an "expansive" use of condemnation involve middle to lower income neighborhoods, precisely the areas in which Hispanics reside in large numbers.

Homeownership is the biggest investment most Americans will ever make: it represents the greatest fruit of their labor and demonstrates a willingness to work, save, invest and sacrifice for their benefit of their family. The Kelo decision sends the wrong message to those who are trying hard to climb the ladder of success, and to young Hispanics who are just getting started along the path of homeownership.

The Texas Legislature must pass new legislation and allow voters the opportunity to amend the Texas Constitution not just for the sake of Hispanic Texans, but for every homeowner. It’s time the Texas Constitution clearly protected our homes from the government.

The authors are residents of Texas, and serve on the board of directors of Hispanics for Opportunity, Progress and Education (HOPE), a Hispanic public policy organization. Cuevas is a restaurant owner in Midland, Texas; Monty is an attorney in Houston, Texas.


NationalPropertyRights.com: www.NationalPropertyRights.com

Surprise — Eminent domain can work: Philadelphia PA Daily News, 8/18/06

Opinion

By Elmer Smith

EMINENT DOMAIN. Sounds like something chiseled on those tablets Moses brought down from the mountain.

It has the overarching authority to make you move when you want to stay. It's how big cities uproot little people for what they call "the greater good."

When it's wielded recklessly by ham-fisted, narrowly focused bureaucrats, it steamrolls the people in its path the way the bulldozers flatten their homes.

Growing up in West Philly in what we came to know as the "urban removal" era of the late '50s, I had a healthy distrust of grand schemes and grand schemers.

Cynthia Warren did too. She, her husband, James, and their eight children were in their first house for two years when the winds of change blew down her block.

The Goldenberg Group, a developer new to the city, had grand plans for the 5100 block of Jefferson Street, including a mall with the first supermarket in the area that anyone could remember.

"We kept hearing about all these plans," she said. "They had aerial photos. But nobody told us.

"I felt like we were being undermined."

Diane Marshall knows that feeling.

"I grew up here," she said. "When you've been in a place for a long time and they want to uproot you, it is devastating. You wonder, 'Why are they coming here?'

"Senior citizens who were in their homes for many years had to get a mortgage. It was hard. But, at the end of the day, it worked in my favor."

It worked in almost everyone's favor. But it took a long process of planning and paying careful attention to the concerns of area residents.

"We've been taking the last year and a half setting up the relocations, walking people through properties that would be suitable to them," said Leslie Smallwood, the Goldenberg Group's development director.

"We helped people clear titles, we did credit counseling. The Carroll Park Community Council helped us get mortgages at subprime rates. Parkside Community Association and Community Ventures had just finished rehabbing some properties on Parkside Avenue.

"We provided instant capital for their project; they provided places for some of our relocations."

Call it a harmonic convergence. The original project would only have been a 100,000-square-foot mall with a supermarket. When they couldn't attract one, they increased the scope of the mall to include the biggest Lowe's store in any urban setting in America.

Growing from 12 acres to 30 acres, it became the thing that ate Parkside, including a couple of dozen homes that stood in the path of progress.

There were 26 families that were displaced. Eight families found homes in the rehabbed Parkside Community Association and Community Ventures properties. Another nine vacant homes were condemned. And the Goldenberg Group helped the others find better-than-even swaps.

"It was a combination of great planning, some wonderful people and little luck," said Michael Nutter, who represented the area in City Council before resigning last month to run for mayor.

"The preferred route is amicable settlements," Nutter said, "but sometimes you have to take a property. When you can't reach a settlement, taxpayers' dollars have to be protected, too.

"It can't turn into a bonanza."

It felt like a bonanza to the Warrens. They lost a well-kept but cramped 1300-square-foot home and got a huge house on Bryn Mawr Avenue five minutes away.

"We've come out better than whole," James Warren said. "It's a six-bedroom, five-bathroom, three-story stone house with a two-car garage.

"They [Goldenberg Group] showed us houses all over the area, in Yeadon and Delaware County.

"But we got to stay in our neighborhood. They took their time and treated us with respect."


Philadelphia PA Daily news: www.philly.com

Mayor, Senator Disagree on New Eminent Domain Law: Washington MO Missourian, 8/17/06

By Ed Pruneau


Mayor Dick Stratman and State Sen. John Griesheimer are at opposite ends of the pole concerning a new law that places tighter constraints on the ability of state and local governments to exercise eminent domain.

At last month's meeting of the Washington Area Highway and Transportation Committee, Stratman blasted state lawmakers for passing what he called a "bad law" that is unconstitutional because it "treats people differently."

Griesheimer said he was "taken aback" by Stratman's comments and said the new law is intended to protect the rights of property owners.

The mayor suggested that when the city and Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT) begin acquiring right of way for the dual lane Highway 100 project, the city should consider challenging the law on constitutional grounds.

The city and MoDOT are developing an agreement to share the cost, 50-50, to improve Highway 100 to four lanes. The city's share will come from a half-cent transportation sales tax approved by voters last year.

Among other things, the law includes a 25 percent bonus over market value for property if the owner is unwilling to sell. If a property has been owned by the same family for at least 50 years, a public entity would have to pay 150 percent over the appraised value.

That means the cost of acquiring land along Highway 100 could be much greater, up to 50 percent more, than originally expected, potentially leaving the city with less transportation sales tax revenue for local street improvements.

"I'm sorry for that," Griesheimer told The Missourian. "But the bottom line is that the bill was passed to help protect property owners.

"Unfortunately it will cost the city a little more money," Griesheimer added, "but property owners will have additional protection they didn't have before. It cuts both ways."

At last month's transportation committee meeting, Stratman called the eminent domain legislation "a good example of a bad law," and said lawmakers "savaged" the ability of state, county and local governments to acquire right of way for legitimate public projects, "so they could cover their you-know-whats in an election year."

Stratman said the city may contact the Missouri Municipal League to join in a lawsuit.

But that's unlikely, according to Griesheimer.

"The Missouri Municipal League is not going to sue," Griesheimer stated. "He (Stratman) may have a problem with this, but the MML is on board as supporting the law."

The Washington lawmaker said he spoke with Gary Markenson, MML executive director, and the statewide organization supports the legislation.

Griesheimer said he fears that if the law is struck down by the courts it will trigger a statewide initiative petition that could spell the end of eminent domain power in Missouri.

A group that had been pushing for restricting eminent domain "feels that we didn't go far enough with this bill," Griesheimer said.


However, it was a compromise that garnered broad support, he said. The municipal league, the Missouri Farm Bureau and the Missouri Association of Counties were among the major organizations involved in drafting the compromise, according to Griesheimer.

"It was truly a stroke of genius," is how Griesheimer described the comprise bill.

"If this law gets knocked out and that ballot initiative passes, we won't have eminent domain in the state," Griesheimer said.

Gov. Matt Blunt, who signed the bill into law in June, was in Washington Monday. When asked about the dispute, Blunt said he didn't agree with Mayor Stratman's statements and that supports the measure.


Washington MO Missourian: http://www.zwire.com

Punta Gorda could use eminent domain to build City Marketplace: Sarasota FL Herald-Tribune, 8/17/06

Eminent domain is one option the city discusses to get City Marketplace built

By Patrina A Bostic

An outside law firm Wednesday told [the Punta Gorda] City Council members that they have options to try to move the City Marketplace development forward.

Those options include imposing eminent domain or canceling the city's agreement with the developer.

The problem is that those options would probably lead to a long, drawn-out and costly legal battle and put the city right back where it started three years ago.

City officials have been frustrated with the slow pace of the project to build a complex with condos, shops and hotel and office space on Marion Avenue.

The city hired the Lewis, Longman & Walker law firm of West Palm Beach to advise what actions it could take against City Marketplace developer Ron Bruce Oskey of Charlotte Development Corp. to get him to start building.

The city, however, can't do anything to force Oskey to immediately apply for site plan approval or begin construction, said Kenneth Spillias, attorney for Lewis, Longman & Walker.

A Bealls Outlet lawsuit against Oskey is delaying progress on the City Marketplace project, Oskey's attorney has said.

And Punta Gorda is fed up with it all.

The city has invested $2 million for roads into the planned $520,000-square-foot shopping center.

Recent state legislation regarding eminent domain prevents government entities from condemning private property for redevelopment to remove blight and slum conditions. Eminent domain would be an option only if the city took the property for purposes of transportation, right of way, utilities or public infrastructure.

"We are putting ourselves at great complexity," said Councilman David Phelen. "I think it's premature for us to take any action at this point."

"I agree," Councilwoman Marilyn Smith-Mooney said. Pursuing those actions, she said, would only lead to an adversarial relationship with the developer.

Councilman Tom Poole sees it differently.

"As much as I hate eminent domain, I think it would be very appropriate in this case," he said.

Ron J. Oskey, son of the developer Ron Bruce Oskey, said he hoped the council will work with him and his father instead of taking adverse action against City Marketplace.

"We would like to get going as fast as anybody else," he said.

Charlotte Development has been locked in a breach-of-contract battle for two years with Bealls Department Stores, which had a store on the site that was ravaged by Hurricane Charley. Bealls representatives asked Oskey to repair the store after the storm, court documents state. But the building was torn down instead, prompting the clothing outlet to ask Oskey for $10 million. A lawsuit followed.

That suit could continue to drag on in the courts. Ron J. Oskey said City Marketplace hasn't been able to get a clear title to the land because of the suit. He said the suit has made banks reluctant to loan money for the project.

The city also has other options. It could meet with the developer and try to renegotiate the agreement. Punta Gorda has agreed to provide roads into the development and to provide water, sewer and utilities to the developer.

If the city does decide to take City Marketplace to court, that could be risky because there is no guarantee that a judge will rule in its favor, Spillias said.

Bealls also could file a lawsuit against Punta Gorda if the city's legal action against City Marketplace turns out to affect the retailer negatively.

Wednesday's discussion took place during the regularly scheduled Community Redevelopment Area meeting. No action was taken.


Sarasota FL Herald-Tribune: http://www.heraldtribune.com

Eminent domain pushed by mayor in Sheffield Lake: Lorain OH Morning Journal, 8/17/06

By Megan King

Mayor John Piskura recommended to [the Shefield Lake] City Council on Tuesday night that an eminent domain action be initiated on a portion of the property at Shoreway Shopping Center on Lake Road. City officials said the land is needed for parking at the city boat launch that's scheduled to open next year.

At a July 25 meeting, council gave Piskura an Aug. 15 deadline to negotiate with the center's owner, the Levin Trust, for an agreement to purchase the property.

While the city wants the shopping center redeveloped and will consider taking the entire property by eminent domain, this action is for an 8,000-square-foot parcel that would provide overflow parking for the boat launch.

When an agreement was not reached by the deadline, Piskura recommended that the city begin eminent domain action so parking can be available when the boat launch opens.

A special council meeting is scheduled for Aug. 29 to vote on legislation to proceed with eminent domain, according to an e-mail newsletter distributed by Piskura.

Piskura also said in the newsletter that he recommends that council discuss whether to take the entire shopping center property by eminent domain at a September council meeting.

''Everyone still believes the boat launch is important, and we have to get it done,'' Piskura said yesterday. ''We don't have a signed lease in our hands that gives us the overflow parking that we need. We have to cover all of our bases, so we're starting the process. If the Levin Trust wants to deal reasonably with the city, a lease can always be negotiated, but we're looking out for our best interest.''

Tom Fagin of RMS Investment Corp., which manages the property on behalf of the Levin Trust, declined to comment on the potential eminent domain action, but he noted that the company is making improvements to the center. He said the company is working to remove graffiti and trying to improve the landscaping at the center.

''We're hoping when (the eminent domain issue) is settled, there will be dramatic improvements,'' Fagan said.

The city had made a $4.48 million offer to purchase the center, but the offer expired July 14. The owners said they were not in a position to redevelop and countered with a $6.5 million purchase price.

Piskura said cleaning up the run-down center and providing boat launch parking are crucial to revitalizing Sheffield Lake.

''I believe that this project is important,'' he said. It's paramount to turning our city around, and we not let these details get in our way. We have to do everything we can to make sure that the boat launch gets built next year.''


Lorain OH Morning Journal: http://www.morningjournal.com

Clayton voters send message on eminent domain: St Louis MO Post-Dispatch, 8/18/06

By Ryan Heinz

When Clayton residents were asked if they want stronger restrictions on the use of eminent domain in the future, their response at the polls was a resounding "yes."

The question posed on the ballot was a non-binding issue addressing specifically the use of eminent domain "in conjunction with any economic development or redevelopment project." According to unofficial results, 1,186 of 1,676 Clayton voters, or 70.8 percent, voted in favor of stronger restrictions. A total of 490 residents voted against such potential limitations.

But because this vote was considered merely an advisory measure for city staff and elected officials, the real question is what the city would do with this message sent by the voters. Mayor Ben Uchitelle said the Board of Aldermen intends to carefully take into consideration the results.

"We (the Board of Aldermen) shall certainly be guided by that vote," Uchitelle said.Advertisement

He said he was not surprised by the results.

"I think citizens in general want to make sure their city is careful with the use of eminent domain (on private developments), and I think that bears also on what the Clayton Board of Aldermen think," Uchitelle said.

The state legislature recently passed a law limiting the use of eminent domain. However, the item has come under criticism for a number of reasons, namely for not doing enough to address issues regarding the use of eminent domain for economic developments in urban areas.

One such development that fits that definition is a Centene redevelopment gearing up in Clayton's central business district. The $190 million project will include Centene's national headquarters, which will accommodate 1,200 corporate staff members. City and Centene officials have said the redevelopment would create 800 new jobs.

City officials also believe the development could seriously bolster the city's economy while adding hundreds of thousands of additional tax dollars to the city and Clayton School District each year.

But the development also came with the first use of eminent domain in the city. Two property owners along Forsyth Boulevard reportedly lost their properties to Centene through eminent domain, with the court deciding the compensation. City officials said two other property owners have court dates scheduled for October to determine if their properties could be taken through eminent domain as well.

Uchitelle thinks the city in the past placed numerous restrictions on commercial developers regarding purchasing properties, even before the passage of state legislation limiting eminent domain use. He said he does not anticipate any commercial projects using eminent domain in the near future.


St Louis MO Post-Dispatch: http://www.stltoday.com

March will protest city's eminent domain plans: Ventura County CA Star, 8/17/06

By Anna Bakalis

On Saturday, Moorpark residents and business leaders will march to protest the city's consideration of stretching its eminent domain powers.

This will be the second such protest organized by Jillian Clarke, co-owner of the Cactus Patch restaurant, and the group Citizens For Redevelopment Reform. The group is looking for people who are opposed to the city's plan to reinstate eminent domain.

Under eminent domain, a public agency can acquire private property for public use. The agency must pay fair market value for the property.

Clarke's parents own the Cactus Patch, and, she said, there is concern that the city could use eminent domain, or condemnation, to take over the land where the restaurant has been since 1970.

In Moorpark, the Redevelopment Agency's desire to reinstate its eminent domain power — it lapsed in 2001 — has created strong opposition from the community. The agency is governed by the five City Council members.

In May, a citizen panel voted to recommend the agency keep its previous limited powers that excluded residential properties. But the ultimate vote lies with the City Council. Moorpark is considering acquiring residential properties for urban development.

A joint meeting between the Planning Commission and City Council to discuss the issue was postponed earlier this month and has not been rescheduled. Although city officials have no immediate plans for redevelopment, they do have their eyes set on a particular part of the downtown area.

Moorpark officials have said affordable housing is the main reason they are considering eminent domain. It is unknown if the properties would be sold to a private developer.

The march will start at 10 a.m. and will continue until 1 p.m. Marchers are asked to meet at the empty lot between the Metrolink parking lot and the thrift store "One More Time."


Ventura County CA Star: http://www.venturacountystar.com

Colorado Eminent Domain Conference Resecheduled to November 18

The Colorado Eminent Domain Activist Conference, originally scheduled for August 19, has been postponed until November 18.


For information, contact Tom Wambolt, Save Our Lake, Arvada CO (303-421-5668): twambolt@viawestd.net

Voters urged to support limits on eminent domain: Edison-Metuchen NJ Sentinel, 8/16/06

By Jay Bodas

Eminent domain will be a prominent issue [for Edison voters] in November's general election.

On Nov. 7, voters will have the chance to vote on an ordinance that would limit the government's power to take land away from private property owners.

"We want to take a stand against the use of eminent domain for the sole purpose of the government taking someone's land and in turn giving that land to a private entity without the consent of the property owner," Mayor Jun Choi said at a press conference last week to announce the ballot question.

However, the township reserves the right to take land away from a private owner for public uses.

"[The ordinance] applies to private economic development purposes," Choi said. "We still reserve the right for public uses, such as a small piece of land where we would put up a traffic light in a dangerous area.

"There are legitimate purposes that support the broader purpose. We want to limit the use of this power for private purposes."

A resolution to put the question to voters in November was adopted unanimously by the Township Council last month. It was passed in response to a June 2005 U.S. Supreme Court decision in the case of Kelo v. City of New London.

In that decision, a split 5-4 court ruled that private land may be transferred from one private owner to another because the community's economic growth, such as in the form of new jobs and increased tax revenue, qualified as a permissible public use under the Fifth Amendment.

In their dissent, Justices Sandra Day O'Connor, William Rehnquist, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas said that "the beneficiaries are likely to be those citizens with disproportionate influence and power in the political process, including large corporations and development firms."

"That critical decision has already had ramifications across the country," Choi said last week. "Unwilling working-class people who built homes, businesses and memories have been forced to fork over their properties for the sake of private developers' plans.

"This Supreme Court decision made it clear that middle-class homes could be replaced with malls, offices, luxury homes - anything that might increase tax revenue."

Council members Robert Diehl and Charles Tomaro encouraged residents to vote in favor of passing the ordinance in November.

"If anyone has read the newspapers in the last few months, eminent domain has made headlines in just about every paper," Diehl said. "People have been concerned about it. I applaud the council for moving forward with this, and I encourage voters to vote for it also."

"It is time that we citizens come out to support this," Tomaro said, "so that in the future, eminent domain is not used for private gain. Please come out on Nov. 7 and vote yes, and we will limit the council from condemning someone's property. We need that vote in order to succeed."


Edison-Metuchen NJ Sentinel: http://ems.gmnews.com

National trend suggests coulee susceptible to private eminent domain takings: Grand Coulee WA Star, 8/16/06

Opinion

By Cliff Appel, Cheyenne WY

We are all familiar with the Supreme Court decision involving the people in New London, Conn., who lost their homes to development. The PBS program "NOW" described a similar situation in Ohio about folks losing their homes under eminent domain to a factory, which will pay more taxes than those old homes.

The Denver Post ran a story Aug. 8 about several small businesses that occupy a 31.5-acre parcel in Sheridan, Colo., being "condemned" to make way for a 130-acre, $150 million mixed-use development.

The Rocky Mountain News Aug. 12 cited LaJunta, Colo., ranchers who fear the U.S. Army may take as much as 480,000 acres of their land. The U.S. Army claims it needs this area to train soldiers for war. With homeland security a major issue these days, eminent domain provides a convenient excuse to get the land.

Before the citizens of Grand Coulee area think "who cares," let me toss out a scenario. Assume a wealthy yuppie from the west side with dollars to invest visits the GCD [Grand Coulee Dam] area. He notes the two nice, uncrowded lakes within spitting distance of Electric City and Grand Coulee. He also notes SunBanks Resort is knocking down $250 a night renting out upscale rooms.

Since both towns are pushing their cleanup campaigns, the yuppie tells the towns and the county he can clean up a certain area and also increase tax revenues with a proposed development of vacation condos. If citizens complain about losing houses, both city and county governments can suggest eminent domain to kill two birds with one stone ... clean up the "eyesore" and provide much needed tax revenue for water lines or road improvements.

When it comes to making money by an entrepreneur, there's always a path to get one's way. Recently, eminent domain seems to have become the shortest path between points.


Grand Coulee WA Star: http://www.zwire.com

Floyd eminent-domain vote delayed: Louisville KY Courier-Journal, 8/16/06

Utilities' use of power at issue

By Matt Batcheldor

The Floyd County Board of Commissioners discussed but did not vote on an ordinance last night that would give it final say over whether a public utility can condemn land in eminent-domain proceedings.

Commissioner Steve Bush agreed with Chuck Freiberger that the ordinance was a good idea, but declined to second Freiberger's motion to vote on it. He said he wanted to wait until Commissioner John Reisert, who was absent, could be present.

Freiberger said he expected the issue to come up at the next meeting on Sept. 5.

At issue is whether utilities can use their power of eminent domain to force a sewer line through private properties next to a proposed development.

The issue arose with developer Bob Lynn's planned 223-lot Lafayette Ridge subdivision off Stiller and Fertig Creek roads. The county's Plan Commission approved the project last month, but only if Lynn could get easements on four neighbors' land for sewer lines — and they have refused.

Condemnation proceedings began about two weeks ago, said Dan Danzl, one of the four neighbors.

County Attorney Steve Lohmeyer said the county commissioners couldn't stop those proceedings even if they adopt the measure. But Bush and Freiberger said the county could stop such action in the future.

"It's my intention that our private property we have as homeowners should be protected," Freiberger said.

Neighbors at yesterday's meeting applauded the ordinance, but Lynn called it a backdoor attempt to stop development in the county.

"There is a large difference between taking of property … and the acquisition by the utility company of a right of easement to provide services for a future development," he said.

Lynn said he doubted such a law would stand up in court.

"So now you're threatening a lawsuit?" Freiberger asked Lynn.

Lynn said he wasn't.

"I've built 1,000 houses; 25 subdivisions," he said. "I guarantee those houses have done a public good."

Danzl said public good has nothing to do with Lynn's proposal, and that Lynn was the only one who stood to benefit.

"When it's clearly not in the interest of the county, which it isn't, you should be able to say 'thumbs down,' " Danzl said.

George Mouser, who lives on Phillip Schmidt Road and isn't directly affected by the development but has fought "rural sewers" for years, said he's afraid sewage will leak into Indian Creek and flow downstream into his property.

He also suggested the county could block Lynn's subdivision by refusing to let his proposed sewer lines cross county roads, scuttling the project. In an interview after the meeting, Lohmeyer said the county has the authority to do so. But the commissioners declined to say whether they might do that to stop the project.

The commissioners said they didn't draft the ordinance in response to the Lafayette Ridge situation because the U.S. Supreme Court significantly loosened restrictions in a 5-4 ruling last year.

The high court ruled that a Connecticut city could take private homes and transfer them to a private developer for a development project. Previously, governments nationwide have taken private land only to build publicly owned facilities like a road or a park.

The Supreme Court case prompted Indiana's General Assembly to adopt a law earlier this year making it much more difficult for a local government to take private land. The land must be considered blighted, unsafe or unsanitary, and a percentage of landowners would have to agree with a project before eminent domain could be used to proceed.

But that law doesn't address eminent-domain seizures by public utilities. And if state government isn't doing anything, local government should, Bush and Freiberger said.


Louisville KY Courier-Journal: http://www.courier-journal.com

Cities Race to Acquire Land Before U.S. Court Ruling Is Undone: Bloomberg.com, 8/15/06

By Greg Stohr

Officials in Riviera Beach, Florida, needed to act fast. Governor Jeb Bush was poised to sign a bill to limit government seizures of private land, jeopardizing the town's vision for a $2.4 billion waterfront redevelopment.

So city officials called an emergency meeting for May 10, the night before Bush's planned signing. Looking to beat the clock, the City Council approved a contract with the project's developer and promised to use the city's power to take land for public use to secure the necessary property.

The maneuver is part of the fallout from the U.S. Supreme Court's 2005 Kelo v. New London ruling. The decision said the U.S. Constitution lets governments use their power of eminent domain for economic development, while leaving states free to enact stronger property protections. Since then, dozens of states have passed new laws, even as local governments move to acquire land at what critics say is an unprecedented rate.

``What happened after Kelo was an explosion at every level,'' said Dana Berliner, an attorney for the Institute for Justice, an Arlington, Virginia, advocacy group that plans to represent Riviera Beach property owners challenging the redevelopment plan. ``In some states there's a sense that at some point the law is going to change. They'd better get as many projects started, property acquired, before that happens.''

The issue pits property owners' rights against efforts by cities around the country to boost their economies and increase tax revenue with new stores, hotels, offices and housing.

New York City aims to build a new arena in downtown Brooklyn for professional basketball's Nets, while San Francisco plans to redevelop 150 blocks in its Bayview-Hunters Point neighborhood. And in an unusual twist, officials in Hercules, California, are vying to seize land owned by Wal-Mart Stores Inc. in the hope of filling the space with smaller shops.

Taking Property
The 5-4 Kelo ruling said governments can constitutionally take property and transfer it to another private party for development so long as they pay for the land. The decision interpreted only the U.S. Constitution's takings clause, saying states remain free to tighten their own takeover restrictions. The court has long let governments take private land to make room for highways and public buildings or to clear slums.

The Institute for Justice says it has identified almost 5,800 instances in which agencies at least threatened to seize properties for transfer to other private parties in the year following the Kelo decision. That's up from an average of about 2,000 annually in the five preceding years, according to the group's figures.

``They've been doing this all along but never quite knowing if it was legal,'' Berliner said. ``And now the Supreme Court says it's perfectly legal, green light. So they're moving forward.''

Removing Blight
Defenders of eminent-domain power question those numbers. The Washington-based National League of Cities says many of the 5,800 properties are part of multi-phased projects that began years ago as local officials sought to redevelop blighted areas.

Indeed, negative reaction to the Kelo decision has made officials more cautious in their use of eminent domain, says Jason Jordan, a consultant at the American Planning Association, which represents 39,000 professional planners, elected officials and citizens through offices in Chicago and Washington.

``If anything, the trend seems to be tracking in the opposite direction,'' Jordan said. ``Eminent domain has become a third-rail issue, and elected officials are extremely reluctant to go down that path.''

Much of the backlash against Kelo has come from the grass roots. In New Hampshire, critics of the ruling unsuccessfully sought to seize the home of Justice David Souter, one of the justices in the majority, and build a lodging to be called the ``Lost Liberty Inn.''

Riviera Beach
Many government agencies are pressing ahead, at least with long-planned projects. In Riviera Beach, Mayor Michael D. Brown says eminent domain is crucial to his plan for transforming a pocket of poverty in otherwise-wealthy Palm Beach County. The city's population of 30,000 is two-thirds black and has a 23 percent poverty rate, compared with 12 percent nationwide.

The city's plan, developed over six years at a cost of $6 million, calls for the acquisition of 800 acres near the Atlantic Ocean. The area, according to Brown, is largely dilapidated, featuring abandoned buildings and trailer parks. In their place would go condominiums, a hotel, restaurants, shops, a yachting center, beaches and other modern facilities.

``It is designed to really transform a city into a middle-class community as opposed to one that is a majority-impoverished community,'' Brown said. He said he anticipates the city ultimately will take 40 to 50 properties through eminent domain.

`Blatant Abuses'
The Institute for Justice calls the project ``one of the largest and most blatant abuses of eminent domain in the country.''

A key legal issue will be the impact of the new Florida law. The statute all but precludes the use of eminent domain for private commercial development, requiring governments to wait 10 years before transferring land to another owner.

In enacting the measure, lawmakers rejected Riviera Beach's bid for an exemption. That prompted the city to call the May council meeting to approve the development agreement. Riviera Beach now plans to invoke a U.S. constitutional provision that forbids states from interfering with contracts, Brown said.

Florida is one of 29 states that have moved to tighten their eminent-domain laws since last year, in many cases turning aside objections from developers and local governments. Some states, including Georgia and Pennsylvania, now bar or restrict takings aimed at economic development; others give landowners more procedural rights or require compensation above market value.

State Courts
In addition, state supreme courts in Oklahoma and Ohio have ruled that their constitutions impose tighter restrictions than are required by federal law. At least six states will put questions before voters in November.

Some groups say they worry that limiting governments' power to take private property will allow one or two property owners to thwart projects that would provide community-wide benefits. Donald J. Borut, executive director of the National League of Cities, says Florida and some other states have ``overreacted'' to perceived abuses.

``Where there are abuses, they need to be addressed,'' Borut said. ``The problem is the blanket assumption that somehow this process is bad and should not be used. In framing it that way, there are terrible losses in terms of the ability of communities to address blighted areas.''


Bloomberg.com: http://www.bloomberg.com

Addressing eminent domain in Ohio: Hillsboro OH Times-Gazette, 8/14/06

Opinion

By Ohio 8th District Representative, David Daniels

From the beginning of our nation's history, our founding fathers recognized that the needs of the public and the rights of private citizens would often be at odds with each other, especially when land was concerned. When framing the U.S. Constitution, they were of the opinion that an individual's private property rights superseded the rights of the government and included a clause which recognizes the sanctity of those private property rights.

However, the founding fathers also recognized that at some point the needs of the many would have to outweigh the needs of the few and included an eminent domain clause.

The clause allowed eminent domain exceptions only when property is needed for "public use" and when the property owner is justly compensated.

When the Ohio Constitution was written 15 years later, state leaders included a similar eminent domain clause stating that "private property ought and shall ever be held inviolate, but always subservient to the public welfare, provided a compensation in money be made to the owner."

In recent years, the definition of "public use" has been interpreted more liberally, often to the point where many citizens are uncomfortable or even outraged at its application.

Most commonly, local governments are using the eminent domain clause to free property for the use of private companies, hoping to encourage economic development or revitalization.

Some argue this is not strict "public use" and the clause should only be used to build government-owned public properties, such as roads or schools. Others argue that the development of commerce and the local economy benefit all people in the community and is therefore a public use of the clause.

Recently, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled that local governments cannot seize private property solely for economic development.

The court rebuked the Cincinnati suburb of Norwood for defining a neighborhood as "deteriorating" for the purposes of bulldozing homes for a mall and condominium building. The court's decision was the first by a state supreme court to address the issue of eminent domain since last year's U.S. Supreme Court decision in the Kelo v. New London case.

In addition to the Ohio Supreme Court's ruling, the Task Force to Study Eminent Domain issued a report calling for changes in Ohio's eminent domain laws. The 25-member task force was created by the legislature after the Kelo v. New London decision to study laws under which the government may take private property.

The task force's report included recommendations that governments should not be allowed to seize homes to clean up blight unless at least half of the properties in that neighborhood are contaminated, unsafe or badly deteriorated and when the government does take property it must fairly compensate property owners for business losses or moving expenses.

Over the next few weeks and months, my colleagues and I will consider many of the proposals made by the task force and decide how best to address the issue of eminent domain in Ohio law. We will continue to work with local governments and supporters of property rights to create a standard definition of blight and address many of the issues brought up by the Ohio Supreme Court and the report of the legislative task force.

Eminent domain has been in use for many years, and it can be a very powerful tool in the revitalization of a neighborhood or community.

We will work hard toward providing legislation that addresses the Ohio Supreme Court's ruling and also protects the rights of property owners while allowing economic growth to continue throughout our state. We have worked hard to bring economic prosperity back to Ohio and we will continue these efforts in the future.


Hillsboro OH Times-Gazette: http://www.timesgazette.com

8/14/2006

City denies Rep's eminent domain claims: United Press International Newstrack, 8/18/06

The city of Monrovia, Calif., has denied U.S. Rep. Gary Miller's claims that he was forced to sell property under eminent domain rules.

The California Republican's claims allowed him to avoid a 31 percent capital gains tax on a $10 million profit he made from a property sale in Monrovia, the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday. In a financial disclosure form he filed in Congress, Miller claimed the city forced him to sell the property under threat of eminent domain.

However, city officials have denied Miller's claims, saying the sale was made willingly by the congressman and no threats of eminent domain, a rule that allows the government to force a property sale if it is deemed to be in the public's best interest, were made.

Monrovia Planning Commissioner Glen Owens said the city could not have forced Miller to sell the property because the state rules would not allow it.

"The state doesn't go along with eminent domain," he said. "You have to have a willing seller."

IRS and the state Franchise Tax Board officials said they do not comment on individual cases.


United Press International Newstrack: http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack

Ruben Chapel subject of eminent domain proceedings: Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal (Tupelo MS),8/13/06

By Lena Mitchell

Negotiations have been under way for more than a year between Prentiss County [MS] and a church that stands in the path of lengthening the Booneville-Prentiss County Airport runway.

Having reached an impasse, county officials have begun eminent domain proceedings to acquire property where Ruben Chapel CME Church and a small cemetery now stand.

Trustees of the church have received papers summoning them to court in September, said the church’s pastor, Rev. Henry Damons Sr.

“We’re praying we do not have to go to trial, and that this be settled without going to court,” Damons said.

At issue is conflicting appraisals of the property by representatives for the county and the church.

The church’s appraiser, Jack Sabely of Pontotoc, has said the fair market value of the property is $285,000, although to rebuild will cost the church $340,000.

The latest offer the church received was $180,000 from attorney Tyler Moss on behalf of the county, and members of the church voted to not accept the offer.

“All we’re asking for is a fair market value, and they claim they don’t have the money to give us what we have as the appraised value,” Damons said.

Information was not immediately available as to what other property owners may be subject to the eminent domain proceedings.

However, Chancery Clerk Travis Childers said Friday that settlement had been reached with at least one other property owner earlier in the week.


Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal (Tupelo MS): http://www.djournal.com

City pursues eminent domain of shooting range: (Ashtabula OH) Star Beacon, 8/11/06

By Margie Trax Page

Major steps are being taken by the city [of Geneva OH] in the eminent-domain proceedings to acquire the Ohio Rubber Co. Sportsman's Association's Gun Club, even as gun club members resist any land sale.

City Council has long had it's eye on ORCO's land, which adjoins a proposed community park along Romeo Road.

The proposed 100-acre community park cannot move forward without the purchase, or acquisition by eminent domain, of ORCO's 40-acre outdoor shooting range. Council has determined that the club's outdoor shooting range, in the middle of the property, would deter families from using the nearby park.

The proposed park would include a soccer field, football field, six baseball fields, a playground, swimming pool, community center, exercise trail, cross-country skiing, an obstacle course, bicycle track, walking track, track and field area, nature classroom, dog run, rollerblade park and an outdoor water park.

Last week, council officially expressed it's interest in the land with the passage of an ordinance that sets a price goal for the ORCO property at $2,000 per acre for 40-plus acres, including an indoor shooting range. Failing the outright sale of the land, the city will pursue eminent-domain proceedings, Councilman William Buskirk said.

"This just means that we are moving ahead and trying to negotiate with (ORCO). This step is needed because ORCO's representatives have refused to negotiate in the past," Buskirk said.

ORCO President Geoff Kotzar called the city's offer "a ridiculous low ball."

"Right now, land in rural areas is going for $5,000 an acre," Kotzar said. "There are 2.4 acres of land between Eagle and Swan streets with an asking price of over $100,000. How is it that our land that is only a one-half mile farther west is worth so much less? It boggles the mind," he said.

Kotzar said the indoor shooting range alone cost more than what council is offering for the land.

Buskirk said council is only trying to "make lemonade out of lemons" on a sweet land deal gone sour.

Geneva purchased the 100-acre property on Romeo Road originally to develop an industrial park, but it was deemed unsuitable for industrial use.

Kotzar said the public should question the actions of a government that has made so many planning mistakes.

"This reflects bad planning from the get-go," Kotzar said. "They have not done a traffic study. The land backs up to (Geneva Township) land that is used for hunting, and there is no zoning to regulate the hunting in the township," he said.

"It sounds illogical because it is illogical," Kotzar said.


(Ashtabula OH) Star Beacon: http://www.starbeacon.com

The hammer is smaller: My Web Times (Ottawa IL), 8/12/06

Cities, property owners mull impacts of new state law

By Jonathan Bilyk

Tim Jobst is glad the rules have changed.

He only wishes he could have played using the new set.

"Would things have been different? I don't know," said Jobst. "But down the road, I hope this will spare other people some of the headaches we went through."

Last week, [Illinois] Gov. Rod Blagojevich signed into law new legislation that supporters say will make it more difficult for cities and other local governments to seize private property for private development.

The law comes in response to a controversial ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court last year, which declared that governmental bodies can use eminent domain to take property from one private owner and give it to another when a project might benefit the larger community.

But the high court invited states to impose their own restrictions.

And in Illinois, beginning Jan. 1, local governments will face a more stringent process when attempting to use condemnation powers to combat economic blight or when seeking to aid a developer in building a new hotel, retail complex, industrial building or other private venture.

And Jobst, for one, welcomes the changes.

In 2004, Jobst felt eminent domain first hand, when the city of Ottawa filed a condemnation suit against him to compel him to sell his restaurant, Jimmy John's sandwich shop, to a developer seeking to build a hotel on the 100 block of West Main Street, which lies adjacent to Jobst's store.

The block, known locally as the Jordan block, has stood largely vacant and decaying since it was ravaged by fire in 1998.

The threat of eminent domain alone compelled Jobst to settle out of court, at a price he believed too small.

Ultimately, the hotel plan was scrapped in favor of a new proposal by a new developer to find an investor willing to develop retail stores, restaurants and condominiums on the block.

And, while the search for that investor continues, Jobst has been allowed to continue to operate his sandwich shop.

But Jobst said the process still troubles him.

"To allow something like this is wrong on a lot of different levels," said Jobst. "So I'm glad there have been some corrections."

Most notably, the new law shifts the burden onto the city or other entity desiring to take the land to prove that the property in question actually is blighted, meaning that it is no longer economically productive.

And that, said Anita Kopko, an attorney for the city of Ottawa, is a key provision.

Previously, she noted, a city council could simply pass a resolution declaring a property to be blighted.

Then, it was essentially up to the property owner to prove to a judge that the city's assessment was wrong.

"This will place a heavier burden on the city or unit of local government," said Kopko. "There is no question that this will make our job harder when using condemnation proceedings."

That appraisal of the law was shared by local state legislators.

State Rep. Frank Mautino, D-Spring Valley, one of the bill's co-sponsors, said he believed Illinois law was already stringent concerning eminent domain.

But he said the new law strengthens the balance between private property owners and the public good.

And State Sen. Gary Dahl, R-Peru, also praised the law.

"Before, municipalities could use eminent domain as a hammer against private property owners in negotiations," said Dahl. "But now that hammer is a lot smaller."

Steven Anderson, an attorney with the Washington, D.C.-based libertarian public interest law firm, the Institute for Justice, described the Illinois law as "a good start."

He praised the law for prohibiting the seizure of farm land for economic development and for requiring cities to prove blight.

But Anderson said the law still would allow municipalities to abuse eminent domain, as the law does not spell out a clear definition of economic blight.

He said Illinois would have been better served to follow the example of Florida, which enacted a law prohibiting cities from using eminent domain to cure blight.

"Florida stands as the example of a state that takes the property rights of its residents businesses seriously," said Anderson.

Kopko said the new rules, if they had been in place in 2004, would have likely slowed the city's task of accumulating the properties that were ultimately sold to the Jordan block developer last month.

"There would have been more hoops for us to jump through, definitely," she said.

But she predicted that cities will likely continue to use eminent domain to aid developers seeking to redevelop areas city officials believe to be in need of work.

"There are some parts of the law that are vague, yes," said Kopko. "And cities will still move forward with ridding areas of town of blight and non-productivity."


My Web Times: http://mywebtimes.com/ottnews