1/20/2005

Delegate withdraws proposed eminent domain bill — The (Maryland) Business Gazette, 1/20/05

by Jeffrey K. Lyles

There has been a swift reversal in the proposed correlation of two bills that could have used eminent domain to tear down homes in Cottage City.

According to one bill, which generated considerable concern by city officials and residents, these homes could have been replaced by businesses.

Del. Justin Ross (D-Dist. 22) of Greenbelt proposed bill PG 31605 that would have given the redevelopment authority the same power as the Baltimore City Economic Development Corp. and the National Capital Revitalization in Washington D.C., in dealing with blight, underutilized, and underdeveloped areas.

In withdrawing the measure Tuesday, Ross told The Gazette that while he still believed it was important, the county's priorities are elsewhere and he would devote his energies towards them, including more funding for schools and providing more county police officers.

Cottage City Chairman Commissioner Edward Hudgins said he and other town officials suspected the bill was introduced to assume control of 38th Street and Bladensburg Road.

The eminent domain power would have only been used on a case-by-case basis when approved by the County Council, Ross said.

While the first bill does not mention Cottage City, the commissioners were concerned that the second, PG 31405, which does, has a connection to 31605.

Bill PG31405 allows the Liquor Board to authorize areas to hold additional Class B liquor licenses.

Cottage City Commissioner Anna Angolia cited a portion of the bill that read "Any of the following area that are under served by restaurants. Section 1 #2, B. Part of the Port Towns business district consisting of properties fronting on or having access to Rhode Island Avenue Bladensburg Road, Annapolis Road or 38th Avenue."

"You don't take a town that's functioning, has a low crime-rate and try to destroy it," Angolia said. "This isn't a slum. This is a well-kept area. You can't take people's properties just because you want to put in a fancy restaurant."

Angolia argues that Cottage City is a residential town and does not need to become a tourist destination.

"They say they're going to make this a Georgetown but Cottage City will never be Georgetown or National Harbor," Angolia said.

"We're a wonderful quiet community that people move here because of its proximity to the District and Virginia not because we have shops like Georgetown."

He cited a battle the commissioners fought four years ago when the county wanted to tear down 10 houses to build a government school.

"These were mainly the houses of older, minority residents. Fortunately, we were able to defeat the proposal," Hudgins said. "Having fought that wrenching battle, we are not interested in fighting another [one]."

Hudgins said that eminent domain is only supposed to be used to take land for public purpose such as roads, courthouses and those kinds of public facilities, not to tear down residential homes.

He said the provision is not to be used by the political elite to impose their ideas on a community or to decide on what businesses should be in their area.

"From what we understand, one of the motivations for this [proposed move] is to replace homes with businesses. That, to me, is illegal and immoral."

Sen. Gwendolyn Britt (D-Dist. 47) of Landover Hills said that Ross' bill did not specifically address Cottage City but did provide for the Redevelopment Authority to take property through eminent domain for some project under consideration when it is in the best interest of the county.

"I am still researching it to determine what, if any, intent there is in the bill. If it's general, I don't really see a problem with it as eminent domain is used quite often," Britt said. "It's used mostly as a process of last resort."

Hudgins said, "The legislation is kind of open-ended," he said. "I don't trust the government planners. Part of the danger is that the legislation is open-ended and therefore we don't know where the government will strike."

County Councilman David Harrington (D-Dist. 5) of Bladensburg said, "While I recognize their concern, eminent domain can be used as a positive economic development tool particularly for older communities," Harrington said.

Harrington used for example, a case of a decaying strip mall where eminent domain could be used to replace it with something more community friendly.

"It's not about the government taking homes," he said. "What it's about is creating open space for older dense areas that allow for other economic development to occur."

Harrington said eminent domain would not be used to put in a business like a liquor store.


The Gazette: www.gazette.net

1/19/2005

Federalist Society symposium on eminent domain — Case Western Reserve University, 2/4/05

Symposium on Environmental Law and Property Rights:
Eminent Domain, Urban Renewal and the Constitution - Legal & Policy Perspectives

PANEL I - Public Use: Fifth Amendment Limits on the Use of Eminent Domain, 9:15 - 10:45 a.m.
This panel considers the extent to which the Fifth Amendment, which provides that "…nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation," limits the purposes for which the government's eminent domain power can be used. Specifically, the panel will examine the extent to which the Fifth Amendment should be read to limit or preclude the use of eminent domain for blight remediation, economic development, or other economic purposes, or whether "public use" constitutes any and all uses deemed by the legislature or other political bodies to be in the public interest. While through much of the 20th century courts gave state and local governments' rather wide discretion in determining what constitutes a "public use," in recent years some courts have begun to read "public use" more narrowly.
  • Professor Eric R. Claeys, Saint Louis University School of Law
  • Professor Thomas W. Merrill, Columbia University School of Law
  • Professor John Edward Mogk, Wayne State University Law School
  • Timothy Sandefur, Esq., Staff Attorney, Pacific Legal Foundation
  • Professor Steven J. Eagle, George Mason University School of Law, Moderator


PANEL II- The Value of Eminent Domain: An Effective Economic Development Strategy? 11:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
This panel addresses the policy questions raised by eminent domain, specifically the extent to which the eminent domain power is necessary, or even useful, for urban economic development. While there is little dispute that eminent domain is an important governmental tool for traditional public purposes, such as road construction and the like, there is much dispute over whether use of eminent domain to spur economic development is, in practice, an effective economic development strategy. Speakers will address the pros and cons of using eminent domain as a policy tool and potential alternatives to eminent domain.
  • Sam Staley, Director, Urban Futures Program, The Reason Foundation
  • Professor Thomas E. Bier, Director, Center for Housing Research & Policy, Cleveland State University
  • Jeffrey Finkle, President and CEO, International Economic Development Council


DEBATE, 1:00 - 2:30 p.m.
The Supreme Court has granted certiorari in the case of Kelo et al. v. City of New London to consider whether the Fifth Amendment authorizes the exercise of eminent domain to promote economic development, in this case to help a government increase its tax revenue and to create jobs. The debate features representatives of the two sides (or sympathetic amici) to give a sense of the arguments that will be heard by the Court.
  • Bert Gall, Staff Attorney, Institute for Justice
  • Professor Jonathan H. Adler, Case Western Reserve University School of Law



Friday, February 4, 2005
Case Western Reserve University School of Law
Moot Courtroom (A59)
11075 East Boulevard
Cleveland, Ohio

For more details and registration information:
www.fed-soc.org/events/eminentdomain/promo.htm

1/17/2005

State forces court date for rural landowner to give up property — Miami (FL) Herald, 1/17/05

By Roberto Santiago

Long-time Collier County land owner Jesse James Hardy has a showdown with a state judge early next month to determine whether the government can force him off his 160 acres of mosquito-infested property.

Last year, the state filed court papers for eminent domain to force Hardy to take a lump-sum buy out. Eminent domain allows states to take a person's property for the public good, giving them fair market value.

For the last three years the government has been trying to get Hardy to sell his land to make room for its $8 billion Everglades restoration project, which will flood land from Lake Okeechobee south to the ocean, artificially turning it into wetlands and, theoretically, restoring a pollution-free water flow.

Having failed, the state filed for eminent domain.

Hardy, 69, has lived in his mosquito-, bear- and snake-ridden property since 1976 and has refused to leave.

"It's my home and it's where I run my business and where I raise my family," said Hardy. "Why should I leave just so the government can conduct its billion-dollar science project?"

The state hearing, scheduled for Feb. 8 in state court in Naples, Collier County, is a critical "right to take" case, according to Hardy's attorney, Charles Forman.

"It's the turning point. The state has said it has a right to take the property. We have tried to hold off the case as much as possible, but it looks like it will go on February 8," Forman said.

Hardy's other attorney, Karen Budd-Falen said, "If the judge rules to allow eminent domain proceedings to continue, the case will eventually turn to a jury, which will determine how much the land is valued.

"We also have a federal suit pending, questioning the Everglades project and why Mr. Hardy's property needs to be taken in the first place."

Hardy, who paid $60,000 for his property 29 years ago, is concerned that unless the judge rules in his favor, he may have to find another place to live.

"I'm 69, and having a comfortable place to live where I am happy means more to me than money. There ain't no price tag on giving up happiness."


Miami Herald: www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald

1/16/2005

Residents STAND against airport plans — Chicago (IL) Daily Southtown, 1/16/05

By Lauren FitzPatrick

Picture it: A three-story brick home sits on 80 acres of arable land in Beecher, nestled among trees and small fishing lakes.

It is Jim Verduin's dream home where he is raising his four children. A former bricklayer by trade, the 52-year-old laid 32,500 bricks himself, with help from a family member, five years ago.

"It took me 30 years to be able to save and be able to do it," Verduin said. "There's fishing in the backyard, all kinds of wildlife.

"My kids mixed the mortar," he added.

But Verduin's dream may be threatened.

Some 50 remaining property owners in a 4,200-acre site near Peotone received letters in late November from the Illinois Department of Transportation explaining they had 60 days to negotiate a state buyout of their homes or face forced sale under eminent domain.

So despite the nip in the air Saturday, Verduin joined a few dozen people outside the building where the letters originated to protest the so-called third airport that planners would like to build near Peotone.

The group of Peotone-area residents known as Shut This Airport Nightmare Down, or STAND, gathered at the corner of U.S. 30 and Cicero Avenue in Matteson for a few hours Saturday afternoon, hoping to grab the governor's attention and halt any eminent domain proceedings. Many of them have refused to sell their homes.

"We are extremely disappointed with Gov. (Rod) Blagojevich for all the threats to use eminent domain for a project the (Federal Aviation Administration) has not approved," STAND president George Ochsenfeld said. "This is not a transportation issue — this is a development issue.

"It's all up in the air, and yet they're trying eminent domain," Ochsenfeld continued.

Neon-colored signs screamed out as loud as protesters' voices and the drums some of them beat: "Farms not fraud" and "No eminent domain".

But IDOT continues to support the project, which aims to operate seven daily flights in 2011. Leaders in Will County, as well as U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson (D-2nd) of Chicago are standing behind the airport, saying it will help boost the regional economy.

Jim Tobin, who heads National Taxpayers United of Illinois, also grabbed a bullhorn to protest what he believed would result in rising taxes for all Illinoisians.

"It is the worst example of state boondoggles in the state budget," Tobin said. "Threatening people's property with eminent domain to benefit real estate speculators is un-American."


Daily Southtown: www.dailysouthtown.com

1/13/2005

Eminent domain case — Las Vegas (NV) Review-Journal, 1/13/05

Editorial

In an editorial this week, The Wall Street Journal revealed the disturbing news that the Bush administration may side against property owners in a Supreme Court case involving the abuse of eminent domain. [emdo note: see item below]

The matter, which is scheduled for oral arguments on Feb. 22, involves more than a dozen New London, Conn., homeowners and small businesses. The city has threatened to use eminent domain to turn their property over to a more powerful private special interest.

The Connecticut case offers the high court justices their first chance since 1954 to weigh in on the pernicious practice of allowing government entities to abuse the awesome power of eminent domain.

Eminent domain was intended to allow governments to seize private property — after ponying up just compensation — for an important public use such as a highway or a fire station. The fact that the courts have allowed it to morph into a tool for municipalities to forcibly seize private land for the sole purpose of transferring title to a more favored private owner is a chilling indictment of the judiciary's respect for the Fifth Amendment.

The Journal reports that "Business Roundtable types" are likely pressuring the administration to come down on the side of New London. But if the Bush administration hopes to be remembered as a friend of liberty and property rights — in other words, key ideals on which this nation was founded — it should stay out of Kelo v. New London or, better yet, file a friend of the court brief on behalf of the beleaguered property owners.


Las Vegas Review-Journal: www.reviewjournal.com



Send an e-mail message or telephone the White House or the Dept of Justice asking the Bush Administration not to side with the developers in opposition to the property owners on this vital issue.

Telephone comment numbers and email addresses are as follows:
The White House (202-456-1111): president@whitehouse.gov
The Dept of Justice (202-353-1555): AskDOJ@usdoj.gov

Ownership Society — The Wall Street Journal, 1/12/05

REVIEW & OUTLOOK

On the campaign trail last year, President Bush said a priority of his second term would be to "build an ownership society, because ownership brings security, and dignity, and independence." Sounds good to us. But the rhetoric doesn't square with news that the Administration may file an amicus brief against property owners in an upcoming Supreme Court case concerning eminent domain.

Never mind that there's no pressing reason for the federal government to weigh in at all on the case, Kelo v. New London, since the issue before the court is a matter of state and local authority. What's more strange, given the President's ownership agenda and stated affinity for strict constructionism, is that the Bush Justice Department would consider siding with opponents of property rights.

Eminent domain stems from the takings clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution, which allows the government seizure of private property for "public use" with "just compensation." Historically, courts and local governments have understood "public use" to mean roads, bridges, schools and the like.

But in a 1954 decision, the Supreme Court allowed Washington, D.C., to use eminent domain to appropriate land in a slum neighborhood and sell it to private developers. In time other cities, seeking higher revenues from richer taxpayers, followed course and cited urban renewal as a "public use" justification for taking a citizen's private property.

Matters worsened in 1981 with the Michigan Supreme Court's infamous Poletown ruling, which stretched the definition of "public use" further by blessing the city of Detroit's decision to seize an entire community on the grounds that expansion of a nearby General Motors assembly plant would create more economic benefits.

The GM plant was never built, but the floodgates were opened. One analysis of cases between 1998 and 2002 found more than 10,000 instances where local governments — often citing the Michigan precedent — had attempted to use eminent domain to obtain properties not for "public use" but for private development. And nothing is sacred. In 1999, two Atlantic City churches were bulldozed for an MGM casino.

Last year, the Michigan Supreme Court overturned Poletown, calling it a "radical departure from fundamental constitutional principles." In a unanimous ruling, the Court said reversal was necessary "to vindicate our constitution, protect the people's property rights and preserve the legitimacy of the judicial branch as the expositor, not creator, of fundamental law."

Elsewhere, however, eminent domain abuses continue. Just last week a federal judge in New York upheld a Village of Port Chester decision to condemn well-maintained rental properties belonging to William Boyd, a small-business owner, and transfer them to a developer with plans for a Stop & Shop parking lot. And in Norwood, Ohio, a judge has ordered Carl and Joy Gamble out of their home of 35 years to make way for office and retail construction.

The Kelo case, which is scheduled to be argued before the Supreme Court on February 22, also involves developer-driven encroachment. A Connecticut developer in cahoots with local officials and Pfizer is seeking to raze more than a dozen homes and small businesses. This will be the High Court's first chance in 50 years to provide some guidance on eminent domain, and property rights advocates nationwide are hoping the Justices will use the opportunity to remind states and lower courts of what the Founders intended.

Worried that a Bush Administration brief against land owners is in the works, the National Taxpayers Union, the Competitive Enterprise Institute and other free-market groups signed a missive sent to the White House in October. No doubt, Business Roundtable-types are pressuring Mr. Bush on the other side, along with states and localities that feel that private property can be taken and then parceled out to maximize tax revenues. The letter urges the Administration to "affirm its support for property rights and refrain from filing a brief in Kelo." So far, the response has been a troubling silence.


The Wall Street Journal: http://online.wsj.com

L. Merion planners back demolitions in Ardmore — Philadelphia (PA) Inquirer, 12/13/05

By Matthew P. Blanchard

A Lower Merion Township [PA] plan to demolish eight buildings in downtown Ardmore took another step forward Tuesday night, as the Planning Commission lent its formal endorsement in a 5-2 vote.

Business owners threatened with relocation have spent a year making impassioned speeches against the plan. Slated for demolition is Pennywise Thrift Shop, a charity that has donated more than $3 million to patient care at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital since it opened in the 1960s. "It seems as though no matter what we do, nobody's listening," manager Bobbi Simons said.

Robert Fox, Planning Commission cochairman, said the use of eminent domain was justified because the township had a public purpose: to revitalize Ardmore as a whole. The eight businesses are adjacent to the site of a new train station, which planners say will anchor a more vibrant Ardmore. The dispute appears destined for the courts but will first head to the Montgomery County Planning Commission. No date has been set for that hearing.


Philadelphia Inquirer: www.philly.com/mld/inquirer

1/12/2005

Eminent domain may be necessary for Painted Post Airport improvements — The Corning (NY) Leader, 1/12/05

By Jeffery Smith

The Erwin Industrial Development Agency may use eminent domain to acquire land needed to make improvements to the Painted Post Airport.

The IDA held a public hearing Tuesday night to hear opinions on the plan.

Two affected land owners accused the board of making lowball offers for their properties.

The IDA has agreed to pay $588,000 to purchase a 41-acre lot just south of the airport from John Vine. The agency purchased the airport land from Joe Costa for $378,000.

"There is a 10-fold difference in the value (the agency) paid to the other land owners and what you are offering," said Byron Paris, who said he has been offered $12,000 for a six-acre parcel near the airport.

John Sullivan, who owns a 22-acre parcel targeted by the eminent domain, called the situation "insulting." Sullivan said he has been offered $48,000 for his parcel.

"We have been offered between $1,500-$2,000 an acre for our land," Paris said. "Compared to the $15,000-$20,000 per acre (the agency) paid for the other land to be used for the proposed improvement."

Wayne Wegman, a town aviation consultant, said the purchase offers were based on appraisals conducted of each property.

Erwin Town Attorney David English said the start of the eminent domain proceedings does not mean the agency plans to use the power.

"We would like to come to an arms-length agreement with (the property owners)," English said.

Paris and Sullivan each said they would be willing to negotiate a sale price for their parcels if the negotiations were done in good faith.

"Just treat us fairly." Paris said.

The parcels are needed to complete a renovation of the airport that will bring the facility to Federal Aviation Administration standards.

The 40 acres to be acquired from Vine will be used to move the landing strip away from Interstate Highway 86. The Federal Aviation Administra-tion has mandatory setbacks for airstrips near interstates.

The relocation of the runway is part of a major renovation project expected to begin at the 75-year-old facility - previously known as Costa's Airport - in the spring. Improvements will convert the airport into all-season facility.

Upgrades will include building a 3,000-foot paved runway, adding lighting and security systems and expanding maintenance operations. The balance of the federal funding will be used to pay for the upgrades.

In all, federal money will pay for 95 percent of the project. The remainder of the cost will be split between the state and the Erwin Industrial Development Agency, which owns the airport.


The Corning Leader: www.the-leader.com

Eminent domain feared in LL — San Bernardino County (CA) Sun, 1/12/05

Residents confront City Council on proposal to stretch city's rights

By Janet M Harp

The [Loma Linda] City Council heard an uproar of complaints Tuesday night in response to a proposal that would allow the city to seize residents' homes.
At press time, more than 30 of the hundreds of people attending the overflow meeting addressed the council about the amendment to stretch the Redevelopment Agency's eminent-domain rights to include occupied property. The Redevelopment Plan currently allows eminent domain, the power of government to appropriate private property without the owner's consent, only for unoccupied areas, City Manager Dennis Halloway said.

"This scares me very much,' said Tricia Kaiser of Loma Linda, her voice trembling. "The thought that someone would even want to do that is very threatening and intimidating. We want you to leave us alone. We like things the way they are.'

Eminent domain is most commonly used to turn private property into a project for public use, such as a school or street. But cities have extended the "public use' requirement over the years to work for economic or community developments, often seizing property to allow developers to come in and build more expensive homes or retail, increasing the city's property tax revenue. The city often only needs to show that an area is blighted and a certain project would improve it and benefit the public.

Residents of Loma Linda's older neighborhoods are worried this is just a way for the city to bulldoze them off their land and bring in more aesthetically pleasing subdivisions or lucrative businesses.

"As I walk around Loma Linda, I don't see blight,' said 50-year resident April Haindl before the meeting. "They use their own judgment about what's unlivable or what's displeasing. But most people who own property try to keep it up. You don't see things falling apart or graffitied.'

Haindl, whose brother spoke against the issue at the meeting, said she doesn't know if her area is targeted, but it is included in the city's redevelopment project area, which surrounds Loma Linda University and its medical center. City officials said there are no particular homes in mind, but Haindl said she doesn't trust them.

"They wouldn't be bothering to put this in place if they didn't have some certain areas in mind for why it's even needed,' she said.

At the meeting, Mayor Karen Gaio Hansberger insisted that using eminent domain would be a last resort for the city.

"I want to say again, it's not about any specific property,' Gaio Hansberger said. "We're not going to go and take your parents' house. This is about giving the city, and it could be right or wrong, the power to take it under a certain prescribed time as well as having to do with a certain project.'

With eminent domain, the government buys property and pays the owner a determined fair market value.

"A lot of houses are 20, 30, 40 and 50 years old there's no way they'll get true market value,' said resident Rebecca Ludwig, 62. "People work hard to get their homes and now here comes the city who wants to get more power to control.

"Why do you need eminent domain if it's not for greed? It's overkill.'

Ludwig said development in Loma Linda is going backward and pushing out its diversity.

"It's like segregation, we're going back to that,' she said. "We're going back to the dark ages, and these are supposed to be my golden years.'

The council was unable to vote because of procedural requirements to respond to letters received that the city must respond to before taking action. The item was continued to the Feb. 8 meeting.


San Bernardino County Sun: www.sbsun.com

1/10/2005

City takes chance on eminent domain — St Paul (MN) Pioneer Press, 1/10/05

Tactic used in dispute faces test in U.S. Supreme Court

By Mary Bauer

The Vadnais Heights City Council has entered the murky waters of eminent domain in its ongoing battles with Carolyn Alexander and her son Kenneth Staeheli.

The council voted in December to end its dispute with Alexander over a revoked mobile home permit by acquiring the 5-acre property on County Road F through eminent domain. The action came amid accusations of illegal tree cutting, wetlands tampering and nighttime carousing in the woods.

Vadnais Heights is waiting to proceed until the U.S. Supreme Court weighs in on a Connecticut case to decide the limits of a tool cities have used to redevelop blighted or nuisance properties. The court won't hear arguments until February.

But the city's direction raises an important issue: Can a government condemn a property because of an individual's behavior?

Mayor Sue Banovetz and city staff members compared the case to one in early 2002 in which the city purchased a house because neighborhood tensions were rising.

A lawyer who specializes in eminent domain, however, said there's a world of difference between buying and forcibly acquiring property.

"If this was a legitimate tool, you'd see an awful lot more condemnation going on at the municipal level," said Dan Biersdorf with Biersdorf and Associates, a Minneapolis law firm that specializes in eminent domain cases. "I don't see their justification for taking property."

Condemnation proceedings, he said, must either serve a public purpose or enforce police powers such as public safety. It appears that neither threshold has been met, he said.

Officials say the city has spent too much time and too many resources trying to get Alexander to remove the mobile home, being used by her 90-year-old mother. The mobile home's permit was revoked in July 2003.

"There's been a lot of foolishness and a lot of time wasted," said City Administrator Gerry Urban.

Alexander's court appearance for allegedly violating the city's mobile home ordinance has been postponed twice because of illness and is rescheduled for Jan. 24. Staeheli's trial on contempt of court charges for allegedly ignoring a ban on tree cutting has also met with delays and is scheduled for Feb. 28.

In December, several of Alexander's neighbors approached the City Council with a fresh batch of complaints, saying Staeheli had girdled trees that are now threatening their town homes. And brush piles have been placed on the property line, creating a fire hazard, they said.

"He just made a big barricade like he was building a stockade," said Roger Larson, who lives on the north side of the property and who said he has had yelling matches with Staeheli. "You wonder what he's capable of doing."

If Alexander's house were unsafe or blighted, the city might have grounds, Biersdorf said. But the threat of fire on vacant property would be unusual grounds for eminent domain acquisition, he said.

Vadnais Heights officials say their largest concern is that disputes among neighbors are spiraling out of control.

Owners of town homes on the ridge above Alexander's property, many of them retirees, told the council Staeheli is engaging in "psychological warfare," running electric cords near one home to power an electric saw in the middle of the night and tripping their security lights at odd hours.

"He's been a real nuisance," said neighbor Patty Warner.

By the time sheriff's department deputies arrive, Staeheli is always gone, they said.

"We're concerned about this escalating" into a physical confrontation, Urban said. "One of the duties of a city is to ensure public safety."

Staeheli denies the accusations. He says town-home owners are harassing him because of improper drainage across his mother's property, an issue raised recently with wetland agencies.

"Every time they hear a twig snap, they're calling the sheriff," he said.

The neighbors, he said, also confuse the lots owned by his mother and father, who are divorced. He is banned from cutting trees on his mother's lot, but not on his father's.

Such problems sound like matters of civil and criminal law to Biersdorf. "I'm sure they're exasperated," he said of city officials caught in the middle, but he's never heard of condemnation being used to settle squabbling among property owners.

As it awaits the U.S. Supreme Court's decision, the city is not actively pursuing condemnation. And officials must weigh the financial impact of acquiring a large lot in the face of a 5 percent increase in property taxes this year, Urban said.

Alexander said invoking eminent domain is overkill, given the improvements she and her son have made to the property, removing trash and diseased trees. She and Staeheli say they're moving as fast as they can without hiring help they can't afford.

"The people over there have more power than I do with the city," she said, nodding toward the town homes. "They treat me like I'm Ma Barker."


Pioneer Press: www.twincities.com

'Big-box' invasion can flatten us all — The Providence (RI) Journal, 1/10/05

By Froma Harrop

As city residents go, I'm pretty trouble-free. I pay my property taxes. I recycle the garbage. The fire department visited only once, when a roast in my oven set off the smoke alarm. All in all, I've been a good deal for the city.

But that doesn't mean the city couldn't do better by getting rid of me. It could level my house and tomato patch, and have Costco build a big box in their stead. Because Costcos take up a lot of room, the city would probably have to grab 15 of my neighbors' houses, as well. No problem. A Costco could pay more taxes than all of us combined.

There is a problem, however. We like where we live, and this is America. In America, property owners don't have to give up their homes because someone else wants the land. Right?

Not necessarily. States and local governments across the country have been condemning properties and giving them to private businesses. They do so in the name of "economic development:" The new owners will create jobs and pay more taxes, so the old ones should go.

But not everyone is meekly turning in the front-door keys. They've been challenging these takings of property - all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The justices are now considering a case that pits New London, Conn., against property owners in an old blue-collar neighborhood called Fort Trumbull. The drug maker Pfizer had built a research facility nearby and wanted the area spiffed up. So the plan was to raze the area's weathered cottages and auto-body shops, and replace them with upscale condos, restaurants and office parks.

The case is really about the rules covering eminent domain - the right of the state to take property for public use. Governments have always had this right. What's changed is the definition of "public use." Traditionally, this referred to such obviously public facilities as roads, post offices or military bases. Now governments want "public use" to include developments that bring in more tax money.

The law does require governments to pay "just compensation" for condemned properties. But what if the owner doesn't want to sell at any price? For example, Fort Trumbull, Conn., resident Wilhelmina Dery was born in her house 86 years ago. She wants to die there.

Suppose the property owner doesn't want to sell at the price offered. That was the case of Leon Howlett, a farmer in Glendale, Ky. The state wanted to take his family farm for a Hyundai assembly plant. Howlett said he really didn't want to sell his 110 acres but would go along if given $10 million for the land, rather than the $1 million offered. (Hyundai ended up building its plant in Alabama.)

Condemning private property can cause great pain even when the use is clearly public, as for a highway. But when improving the tax base is deemed a "public use," feelings can quickly turn raw. For example, Riviera Beach, Fla., voted to oust 5,100 lower-income residents for a yachting, shipping and tourism complex. Merriam, Kan., condemned a used-car business to help a fancy BMW dealership expand.

These flashing abuses have pushed state courts to tighten up the rules. Last summer, the Michigan Supreme Court stopped Detroit and Wayne County from taking private land near Metro Airport for a new high-technology park.

In doing so, the court overturned its infamous Poletown decision. That 1981 ruling had let bulldozers flatten thousands of homes, churches and businesses in an old Polish neighborhood in Detroit to make way for a General Motors factory. Governments everywhere saw the Poletown decision as a green light to take private property for economic development - which came to include upscale shopping and ritzy residences.

A quick word of sympathy for Wayne County, New London, and other local governments starving for tax revenues: They need economic development badly. But there are still rules of the road. States and local governments can work with property owners or work around them. They just can't drive through them. You don't have to be a property-rights fanatic to see what's wrong with forcibly taking one person's home or shop to attract a better class of taxpayer. Let us hope that the Supreme Court drives a stake through this scary idea.


The Providence Journal: www.projo.com

1/09/2005

Legal Plunder — The Cato Institute, 1/9/05

By Doug Bandow
Doug Bandow is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and a former special assistant to President Ronald Reagan

For more than two decades the Michigan Supreme Court's decision in Poletown Neighborhood Council v. Detroit allowed governments in that state to take most any property they wanted to transfer to most anyone they wanted for most any reason they wanted. The U.S. Constitution's "public use" restriction was satisfied, the court ruled, even when Detroit seized an entire ethnic neighborhood to hand over to General Motors for a new factory.

Alas, this case was no anomaly. As Steven Greenhut, an editorial writer for the Orange County Register, observes in his timely new book, Abuse of Power: How the Government Misuses Eminent Domain (Seven Locks Press, 311 pages, $17.95), "governments increasingly use eminent domain to take property from one private owner in order to give it to another private owner." A small home owner or businessman then "must surrender his home or business because a wealthy developer — perhaps a big campaign contributor and mover and shaker in the community, or an out-of-town corporation promising an expanded tax base for the city — has bigger and better plans for it."

The abuses are legion. But sometimes property owners — "ordinary heroes," Greenhut calls them — fight back and beat city hall. Today they often do so with the aid of the Washington-based Institute for Justice, which has made protection of property rights one of its most important objectives.

So rank have been the outrages that in July the Michigan Supreme Court expressly overruled its Poletown decision "in order to vindicate our constitution, protect the people's property rights and preserve the legitimacy of the judicial branch as the expositor, not creator, of fundamental law." The new case, Wayne County vs. Hathcock, barred use of eminent domain to construct an industrial and office park. Michigan may no longer seize private property for "economic development," that is, to hand to new private owners who might pay more in taxes.

Although the case has no formal legal force outside of Michigan, it reflects a slow renaissance of judicial respect for property rights. The Poletown decision was oft-cited by other courts as they ruled that public officials could take land at their pleasure. Wayne County will help shift legal currents in the other direction.

Indeed, all legal eyes now fall on the U.S. Supreme Court, which is considering a case involving the city of New London, Connecticut. The Connecticut Supreme Court, relying upon the reasoning of Poletown, upheld the plan by the New London Development Corporation to take scores of modest riverfront homes and businesses to build luxury houses, expensive office space, and a hotel. "How come someone else can live here, and we can't," asks Susette Kelo, one of the dispossessed landowners.

It's a good question, and Steven Greenhut's answer is that someone else gets to live there when local officials decide to engage in social engineering for fun and profit. Not always, of course — sometimes eminent domain is used for traditional purposes as road-building.

But increasingly government deploys eminent domain in an attempt to create "high-valued," meaning taxable, development. That goal often supplements the desire to benefit local elites, usually with the connivance of the usual civic boosters, including the media. Greenhut dissects how journalists routinely fail to question even the most obvious eminent domain abuses.

The heart of Greenhut's book is a series of examples of government's routine misuse of power. There's abundant bad news. Public officials typically favor the wealthy and influential because they are wealthy and influential. But Greenhut also found good news: though property owners often lose, increasingly they are fighting back and winning.

For instance, the city fathers of Garden Grove, a working class community south of Los Angeles, decided to turn a tidy neighborhood of 400 into a theme park. Explains Greenhut: "There was no developer in mind, just an idea in the head of the city's top planners and bureaucrats. They were going to do what they had been doing on a smaller scale across the city: play land developer by condemning property, then trying to market the acquired tracts to some big out-of-town development company."

Officials attempted to deny the obvious, while treating the neighborhood as blighted. No normal person would have thought that but, writes Greenhut, "Blight, as advocates of redevelopment and eminent domain often point out, is a legal term rather than a descriptive term."

Happily, homeowners organized effectively and forced the city to back down. Garden Grove removed the neighborhood from its "redevelopment" area, while proceeding with similar efforts elsewhere.

Equally outrageous was the attempt by Cypress, another southern California city, to seize Cottonwood Christian Center in order to transfer the property to Costco. Churches don't deliver much in the way of property or sales taxes, a black mark in the view of city councilmen dedicated to the old principle of tax, spend, and elect.

In Cypress, writes Greenhut, "City officials did not dress up what they were doing in legalistic language. They were brazen in their goals. They ridiculed church members at public meetings. They bragged about their ability to use eminent domain for whatever reason they chose, and they made it clear that the government's desires should take precedence over the desires of `a narrow special interest,' which is how city officials repeatedly referred to the church."

The 4,500-member interdenominational congregation fought back, aided by the Becket Fund, which specializes in defending religious liberty. To its credit, the church rejected an offer by Cypress to trade for the property next door — which the city would seize from its owner through eminent domain. Eventually, Cypress, which lost a preliminary court ruling, agreed to a voluntary land swap which yielded the church more room for its new worship center.

Adverse publicity helped derail an abusive taking by Atlantic City. Vera Coking, a widow, was unfortunate enough to live across from Donald Trump's casino. He asked the local redevelopment agency to take her property for a limousine parking lot for high rollers. With the help of the Institute of Justice, Coking won: the term "blight" could be most accurately applied to Trump's enterprise, which has veered towards bankruptcy.

Eminent domain was long thought to be justified for a genuine "public use," that is, something used by the public. That's why the framers of the Constitution included a limited power to take property in the Fifth Amendment. Yet today the public use requirement has almost disappeared, as officials, with judicial approval, regularly take property from Peter to give to Paul. Only if officials forget to invoke an alleged public interest could it be stopped.

Although the courts have been more willing to enforce the provision requiring payment of compensation, they too often have allowed governments to take advantage of property owners. Moving expenses, business goodwill, advantageous locations, as well as real values often are lost or minimized when figuring compensation.

The result would still be rank injustice even if the property was taken for a real public purpose. Instead, more often than not eminent domain is now used as a form of corporate welfare, intended to enrich billionaire retailers like Costco and millionaire real estate moguls like Donald Trump. Other favored beneficiaries are owners of hotels, race tracks, and sports franchises. Its "legal plunder," Greenhut writes, just like the historical experience of mercantilism, which featured "a powerful central state that worked in concert with established, private interests."

Greenhut's worthy call to arms concludes with a practical primer on how individuals, families, churches, and communities can fight back. Most important is an aroused citizenry prepared to defend their rights. "Ordinary heroes" helped create this nation more than 200 years ago. They helped preserve America through many difficult trials in peace and war. They can help restore life to constitutional provisions that were meant to protect all of us from government misuse of its power of eminent domain.


The Cato Institute: www.cato.org

Downtown businesses facing uncertainties — Bowling Green (KY) Daily News, 1/9/05

As new city leaders address owners’ concerns, eminent domain issue still perplexing

By Jim Gaines

In the late 1980s, Bowling Green city officials were pleading for businesses, any businesses, to move into the dwindling downtown.

DJ’s Upholstery answered the call, along with several other businesses that dealt mostly with automotive products.

But the city’s downtown revitalization plan, which seeks to buy sites for several large-scale projects, now seeks to give those same loyally civic-minded businesses the boot, say DJ’s co-owners Melissa and Terry Tarrance.

DJ’s, at 723 College St., occupies a small section of the site where city planners and baseball enthusiasts would like to see the stadium for a minor-league team – or, depending on how projects shake out, the Southern Kentucky Performing Arts Center.

In any event, DJ’s and similar firms are targeted as “nonconforming uses,” businesses that don’t fit the vision endorsed by the previous city commission of a pedestrian- and family-friendly downtown that would attract tourists and new residents. So not only is the building slated for eventual demolition, but DJ’s could not just move down the street. It and other automotive-linked businesses have been officially declared unwelcome in a 29-block area of downtown. The city’s redevelopment plan, in force for almost two years, announces that nonconforming uses may be bought out and forced to move.

But when owners of such businesses asked the city when they could expect an offer, they were told “six months to 20 years,” Terry Tarrance said.

He would like to make some repairs to his building – and possibly some cosmetic changes, to make it fit better into a neighborhood that’s being revived – but can’t see the point of wasting his money on a building slated for demolition, he said.

In fact, several downtown business owners complain that the uncertainties of redevelopment are making downtown worse: Owners are letting buildings fall into disrepair because they’ve been told that the city won’t pay any more for spruced-up buildings, making improvements a waste of money, they say.

For Tarrance and others, it comes down to a simple question: When?

“If they’d just keep us more informed, most of us would be willing to work with them,” he said.

The Tarrances and several other downtown business owners said they want to hear regular updates on city plans, have a probable timeline of redevelopment efforts and get notice of the next area or areas to be targeted – and they hope that the newly seated Bowling Green City Commission will heed their requests.

To that end, downtown businesspeople have been talking among themselves for some time, and have met separately and as a group with the new city commission – most recently, in a large meeting the day before new commissioners were sworn in on Dec. 31.

And incoming officials say that they’re listening.

“I think the biggest thing is that we truly need to change the way that we have handled the whole property-acquisition process,” Mayor Elaine Walker said Saturday. “We need to keep the property owners in the loop. We need to make sure that they are the first informed, and make sure that they are given regular updates.”

Property and business owners haven’t been saying that they are resistant to moving or selling out, but that they feel badly treated because they’ve been left uninformed, she said.

Walker agreed that tagging a building for eventual demolition logically leads to neglect in the meantime. So the city needs to target its moves precisely, and give owners a real timetable, she said.

“We’ve got a good plan for downtown redevelopment,” Walker said. “We just have to make sure that the way that we move forward benefits everybody – and that includes the property owners. I think that we are amenable to taking a look at individual properties to see if we can change the designation for nonconforming use.

“This is probably the most important issue that we’re facing right now, and I think we’re going to spend a lot of time on it because I think it needs to happen.”

Downtown businesspeople also ask that a yes-or-no decision be made on whether “nonconforming” businesses will eventually be asked to move, or can just be fixed up to blend in. And they want to see a detailed review of the exact types of businesses that are currently labeled as “nonconforming.” More than 100 addresses appear on the city’s original list.

“I think they’re absolutely right,” Commissioner Brian “Slim” Nash said. “We do need to re-examine the nonconforming list.”

The city’s plan and the downtown ideals it embodies are good, he said.

“But some of my very first public comments were, ‘Who actually gets to decide what businesses stay and what businesses go?’ ” Nash said.

Those businesses that have moved downtown, or stuck it out for years while others left, should be rewarded rather than told they’re unwanted, he said.

“Nothing, if I were a business and property owner, would make me angrier than that,” Nash said.

But in order to create the downtown atmosphere that the city wants, those businesses may be required to alter their appearance along detailed guidelines, he said.

“To me, that seems like a great balance,” Nash said. “Everybody’s got to give to get, I think. Nobody wins in a power struggle. Even the people who think they’ve won, haven’t.”

Commissioner Brian Strow, backed by Commissioner Mark Alcott, introduced an ordinance at the new commission’s first meeting to bar the city from using its eminent-domain power to force purchase of private property if that property would then be turned over to another private entity for redevelopment.

Commissioners voted 3-2 to table Strow’s ordinance; they said that they agreed in principle, but didn’t want to make such a major decision at their first meeting, or without careful study – especially since the U.S. Supreme Court is scheduled to decide a case on that very subject this year.

The city’s redevelopment plan was written in part to specifically allow that use of eminent domain, and several of the projects now under way were turned over to private developers. Although none of the land sales for those projects was forced through eminent-domain proceedings, some downtown property owners say that the explicit threat of eminent domain makes any negotiations inherently unfair.

Charles Meredith, president and owner of Randolph, Hale & Meredith electrical suppliers at 319 State St., said that he respects commissioners’ desire to study the issue, so long as they do return to it. He compared the potential use of eminent domain as a shortcut past negotiations for private developers to an unscrupulous old-West land grab.

“It’s kind of like someone putting a gun to your head and saying, ‘OK, we want to buy your property and here’s what we’ll pay you – take it or else,’ ” Meredith said.

Any real estate contract declares itself to be between “a willing seller and a willing buyer,” he said – but the threat of eminent domain makes it difficult to negotiate in good faith.

“I don’t go along with transferring property by governmental force from one private entity to another private entity,” Meredith said. “Eminent domain should be reserved, I think, for public projects. And I don’t mean redevelopment projects, but schools, roads and things like that.”

Prohibiting the use of eminent domain for private developers’ benefit would probably slow downtown redevelopment, Nash said.

“There’s going to be, in my opinion, kind of an ebb and flow of downtown redevelopment,” he said, noting that the original plan called for very slow movement, but that several large grants made some projects leap ahead of schedule.

Meredith said that he is not averse to moving his business – which has been downtown for more than 40 years – if he can stay in the same general area.

“But what I’ve been told by the previous people is, ‘We may never purchase you,’ ” Meredith said.

That leaves him in limbo, unable to figure out what to do or plan for, he said.

Commissioner Delane Simpson said that city staff will be talking to Meredith very soon about his concerns, and he hopes that more business owners will be consulted one-on-one.

“Absolutely, the people who have a vested interest in properties downtown must, as far as I’m concerned must, be made aware of what’s going on, just like we need to know what’s going on,” Simpson said.

In the meantime, lack of communication is actually costing local businesspeople money, according to Ed Wilbanks, owner of several pieces of downtown property. He offers himself and his building at 112 College St. as an example of the damage that mixed signals from the city can do. The city announced plans to buy it more than a year ago.

“They actually came down and looked at that property, made an appraisal on the property and made an offer – which was unrealistically low, but they made an offer – and sent a letter to all my tenants, saying they would have to move, all before we consummated the deal,” Wilbanks said.

One tenant did, he said.

“The end result is, they did not buy the property,” Wilbanks said. “But they told me they was taking it, either by my taking their offer or by eminent domain. They sent me a letter saying they had rescinded their offer, but it left me in kind of two bad positions.”

The building’s roof needed repair, but since the city said it would soon buy and demolish the building, Wilbanks waited. But the city took no action, and a leaky roof began damaging the interior, he said.

“In addition to that, I held another building open on Clay Street so that I could move into it, and one of my tenants to move into it,” Wilbanks said. “So I’ve lost rent on that building for a year. About $66,000 that’s cost me, in lost rent.”

Walker said that Wilbanks has told her his tale of treatment by the city.

“It’s just wrong,” she said. “It’s wrong that he was not kept informed.”

Nash said that he has heard complaints similar to Wilbanks’ and the Tarrances’.

“There is no doubt, in my opinion, that the city has done a poor job of communicating with downtown property owners,” he said.

Since taking office, Nash has talked to city staff and asked them to clearly define what properties they’ll be interested in within the foreseeable future. As a result, staff will meet with one property owner next week to tell him that he’s off the list, Nash said.

“I know that that’s one small step, but in order to get anywhere we’ve got to take that first step,” he said. “And I hope that that property owner – and other property owners downtown – at last feel like we’re trying to move in the right direction.”

The Odd Fellows lodge, 710 College St., has been tapped for purchase for an as-yet-undetermined new development adjacent to Circus Square, the large park that planners hope will become the centerpiece of a new downtown.

But the Odd Fellows, too, say that they’ve received conflicting and sketchy information from the city. The only clear message, according to lodge member Auston McCay, is that they will have to move out – sometime.

About two years ago, the city established a six-month moratorium on major building alterations downtown as a kickoff to its redevelopment plans.

“They came down there and told us then that our property wouldn’t be touched for 20 years,” McCay said. “That was probably around January or February of 2003. Then we see in the paper that fall that our property is going to be one of the next ones to be taken. Nobody had talked with us at all.”

After the city had the building appraised, silence fell. Odd Fellows trustees heard nothing – despite several attempted inquiries – until they sent a registered letter in fall 2004 to Richard Rector, who was then the city’s Housing and Community Development director.

He replied that the city would contact the Odd Fellows by Nov. 15, but that it would have no money available for purchase until at least that time, McCay said.

“We still have heard nothing further from anybody,” he said. “And if we move, we have no idea what our cost is going to be in moving.”

McCay helped organize the recent meeting between about 30 downtown business owners and new city officials, and says there are three main issues on downtown owners’ minds.

“The first thing is that they’re not necessarily opposed to moving, but they’re opposed to the idea that the city would come in under eminent domain and move out good, taxpaying businesses ... and maybe replace them with something else, that doesn’t pay near as much in property or payroll taxes,” he said.

Business owners are also unreassured about receiving adequate moving expenses from the city, and finding an affordable new location in an area zoned to allow their businesses, McCay said.

The third issue is the current deterioration of buildings because property owners have been told that the city won’t pay any more for recently repaired buildings, he said.

The city needs to pledge not to use eminent domain for private redevelopment projects, and re-evaluate its downtown goals, McCay said.

“I think we’re still millions of dollars away from completing somebody’s dream,” he said.

Consultant Will Linder of Berea authored the redevelopment plan, which city commissioners ratified in 2003. It lists a number of business types to avoid downtown, including “automotive.”

The Tarrances say they are puzzled by the seemingly arbitrary decisions on who to move and what types of businesses to discourage. All automotive businesses aren’t created equal. Unlike a junkyard or body shop, an auto upholsterer causes no visible mess, Melissa Tarrance said.

Built in 1933, the concrete-floored building with garage doors at either end has a long history of housing automotive-themed businesses, Terry Tarrance said.

He doesn’t mind moving, but shifting and arranging everything would cost him two weeks’ lost work, he said. And his $400-per-month rent is less than a quarter of what a comparable building would cost him elsewhere in the city.

If the city wants to put businesses within walking distance of downtown residents, Terry Tarrance asks, won’t there be a need for auto-repair shops nearby?

Word of the city’s plans has already hurt DJ’s business, the Tarrances say. Their work carries a one-year warranty, and customers now wonder if that will be honored if the business isn’t there.

“We’re not interested in the money,” Melissa Tarrance said. “We just want to stay here.”


Bowling Green Daily News: www.bgdailynews

Eminent domain before high court — Camden (NJ) Courier-Post, 1/9/05

Transferring private land to other private hands at issue

By Richard Pearsall

The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments Feb. 22 in a case that could have a major impact on New Jersey's redevelopment law.

Kelo v. New London is a Connecticut case that deals with "eminent domain," the right of government to seize private property for public use.

Eminent domain is the 800-pound gorilla at the center of the debate over redevelopment in New Jersey.

Without eminent domain, says David Speegle, president of the businessmen's association in Riverside, redevelopment would proceed more smoothly.

"If they could take that clause out, if that wasn't part of the hammer, it might go over better," Speegle said, speaking of his township's plan to redevelop the so-called Golden Triangle and the area around it.

The right of government to take private property for public use is rooted in both federal and state constitutions and is based on the assumption that some projects - highways, for example, - are so important that seizure is justifiable.

It is enshrined in the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in a single phrase: "nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation." Connecticut case

In the New London, Conn., case, the plaintiffs are a group of longtime homeowners, landlords and businessmen in what is described as a working-class neighborhood.

They contend their local government overstepped its authority in condemning their properties for "private" use - the construction of a hotel, health club, condominiums and offices.

"Does the U.S. Constitution allow the government to take property from private party in order to give it to another private party because the new owner might produce more profit and more taxes for the City from the land?" their legal team at the Institute for Justice, a Washington-based public interest group, asks.

The Connecticut Supreme Court sided with New London, ruling 4-3 that the economic development the condemnation is intended to promote is sufficient justification for the municipality to proceed.

"This ruling is an invitation to disaster," the plaintiffs' legal team responded, "because every business generates more taxes than a home and every big business generates more taxes than a small one. If the ruling stands, any property can be taken through eminent domain.

"The U.S. Constitution and every state constitution requires that private property only be taken for `public use,' such as a road or public building, not for private economic gain," the plaintiffs' attorneys argue. "The use of eminent domain for the creation of tax revenue is the broadest and most dangerous expansion of eminent domain yet realized."

Supreme Court
In September, the high court agreed to hear the plaintiffs' appeal.

The issues in the case are similar to those that have been raised in New Jersey.

Here, the debate is not over stimulating growth in areas the private sector has walked away from, but over government substituting one private property owner or use for another.

It is an issue that has emerged in Riverside.

Support for redevelopment of the Golden Triangle, a 30-acre former industrial area there, has been strong.

But as the plans have unfolded, they have been expanded to include the surrounding areas - the theory being that a "buffer zone" is necessary.

Stu Scott, 52, has lived in Riverside all his life and has run an auto repair business across the street from the Golden Triangle for more than 20 years.

The future of his and other auto repair ships on Pavilion Avenue are threatened because a developer interested in building townhouses and offices will not want such grimy neighbors in close proximity, township planners reason.

"I know we're out of here," Scott said, wondering just who is going to benefit from the "renaissance" of his town.

"These guys all want Cherry Hill," Scott said of the politicians and businessmen he believes are pushing the redevelopment project. "Well, let them move to Cherry Hill."

Clarence Newton, who operates the Volkswagen repair business next door, has a similar view.

Newton, 62, has lived in Riverside since he was 2.

"I'm a Riverside person," he said, "so if it's good for the town as a whole, I'm for it."

But he knows he's unlikely to find another spot large enough to accommodate the hundreds of old Volkswagens he has accumulated for parts to keep other "Bugs" and "Beetles" running.

And he wonders if it's really Riverside or its residents who will benefit.

"If it's going to be anyone's future, it should be the people who are here, not a gold mine for someone else."

On the other side of the Triangle, on Kossuth Street, Speegle operates a machine shop.

Rising to speak at a public hearing in November, Speegle noted that the list of permitted uses for his area included town houses, professional offices and day care centers, but nothing that seemed to include his business.

"I don't see anything in here for manufacturing," Speegle said. "I've been here since 1986 and have invested a good deal of money in this business."

Speegle was told that it was "very unlikely that the (land use) board would approve a site plan that would do away with a going business" and that, "if you're a pre-existing use, you get to stay."

Speegle stressed that, as a businessman and taxpayer in Riverside, he's not against redevelopment.

"The township will ultimately benefit if it brings in more ratables, and residents benefit if property values go up."

But he's worried nonetheless.

"Basically they tell you, `Don't worry. It's grandfathered.' But if you're in a redevelopment zone, you're in limbo."


Courier-Post: www.courierpostonline.com

1/06/2005

House not for sale — CNN/Money, 1/6/05

Can the government force you to sell your house in the name of new development?

By Sarah Max

The neighborhood of Fort Trumbull in New London, Conn., isn't on the National Register of Historic Places. But it is historically significant to the people who live there.

Wilhelmina Dery, 87, was born in her century-old house near the Thames River.

Her son, Matt, and daughter-in-law, Suzanne, live next door with their teenage son, Andrew. Among their most precious possessions: the garden planted by Matt's grandmother, and the kitchen doorway where they've charted Andrew's height over the years.

The Derys' neighbors have their own, similar stories.

Bill Von Winkle bought his first building in the neighborhood 20 years ago, and went to work making sandwiches in the downstairs deli and renovating the upstairs apartments.

Susette Kelo meticulously restored her small pink Victorian house.

So when the New London Economic Development Corporation, a non-profit organization appointed by the city, approached about 70 property owners in Fort Trumbull about selling their homes to make space for a luxury hotel, condominiums and office space, these and a handful of other owners declined.

Their property, they said, is not for sale.

In November 2000, however, the city invoked eminent domain – a government right to seize property for public use – and sent out condemnation notices to owners refusing to sell. The city planned to pay the owners fair market value, take possession of the buildings and tear them down.

According to Daniel Krisch, one of the attorney's representing New London and its economic development arm, the city had several good reasons for razing the well-kept middle class neighborhood to replace it with a new, private development.

Krisch contends that the new development would create jobs, boost tax revenue, improve the city's infrastructure and provide public access to the river. It's for the benefit of the entire community, he said.

Taking for the greater good
In February, the Institute for Justice, a libertarian public interest law firm that is representing seven Fort Trumbull owners for free, will argue in the U.S. Supreme Court that the city of New London has abused its use of eminent domain.

The case, Kelo v. City of New London, will decide whether the U.S. Constitution's definition of "public use" includes private developments like condos and casinos. The decision will have implications through the country.

The Institute for Justice argues that displacing property owners for private development is not legal. "The Constitution says [eminent domain] should be used for a public use — a road, a court house, a military base. Not a Wal-Mart," said Scott Bullock, a senior attorney with the institute.

According to a study of court papers and published accounts covering a five-year period, the institute found more than 10,000 examples of property being condemned under eminent domain for the benefit of private parties.

The city of New London and other cities using eminent domain in the interest of urban renewal argue that such private projects are for public use, even if the public only benefits indirectly.

"This is a tool that is important to local governments because it allows them to revitalize areas that otherwise would not get revitalized," said Tom Grundhoefer, general counsel for the League of Minnesota Cities, which is filing a "friend of the court" brief on behalf of New London.

Cities want to attract new businesses and developers to their urban centers rather than contributing to sprawl by building in the suburbs, he said. But they can only do so if they can get existing owners to sell.

"Often times there might be one or two owners who will not go along with the voluntary sales situation," he said. "The question comes up, 'Do you stop the entire project because one or two won't sell, or do you use eminent domain to encourage that activity?'"

Encourage isn't a word that Joy and Carl Gamble of Norwood, Ohio associate with eminent domain.

The retirees are scheduled to be evicted from their home of 35 years in early February to make way for Rookwood Exchange, a $125 million development with offices, shops, housing and restaurants.

In this case, the city of Norwood voted to exercise eminent domain after a study — which was funded by the developers of Rookwood Exchange — determined that the Gamble's neighborhood is blighted.

"Blight 50 years ago entailed serious problems and neglect," said Bullock, citing cracked sidewalks and weeds as examples of blight given in the study. Now, he said, blight is just an excuse for the government to take land from one party and give it to another.

"The easy story is to wrap the Gambles in the American flag and say, 'It's not right,'" said Richard Tranter, an attorney representing Rookwood Partners, adding that it's not unusual for cities to ask developers to pay for studies and other expenses related to development. "But it's not that easy."

Norwood is a doughnut hole in the middle of Cincinnati that is about to declare a fiscal emergency, according to Tranter. What's more, the Gamble's neighborhood is cut off from the rest of the city by a major freeway and roads feeding into that freeway.

"With the exception of the Gambles, every resident is saying they want to get out of the neighborhood," he said. "An 80-year old blind widow called it a blessing."

Tranter says the developer has signed contracts with 65 residents to buy their property for no less than 25 percent above market value, pending the outcome of the Gamble's appeal.

Still, the Gambles don't want to sell for any price.

"We're very proud of this house. It's extremely well built," said Joy.

"We raised our children here. All of our memories are here," she said. "We don't want to move, especially for a shopping mall."


CNN/Money: www.money.cnn.com

Revitalization breeding fear — San Diego (CA) Union-Tribune, 1/6/05

Business owners worry they're not part of future

By Elizabeth White

Debbie Mrozinski's parents owned their auction house on Eighth Street [in National City] for more than 30 years. She took it over about 1½ years ago when they sold the property to the city.

Mrozinski now pays the city rent on a month-to-month basis. She wants a longer-term agreement, but the city won't give her one.

She believes that's because the city wants to be able to push her out on short notice to make way for a more upscale business. She said city employees have told her there are plans for a condominium development behind her big blue auction building.

Mrozinski feels vulnerable. And she is not alone.

Other business owners in National City fear they'll also be victims of the city's vast redevelopment plans, which include Filipino and Mexican villages, a new hotel and a revitalized downtown populated by specialty stores and sleek office buildings.

Several factors are driving their fears: a lack of information, the rapid pace of redevelopment planning and a proposal to expand the city's power to seize property. As the city undergoes a makeover, many small-business owners believe the city may lose its small-town, community feel.

"My parents only sold because they thought they were going to be pushed out," Mrozinski said. "It's all nice and good but they (city officials) forget about how many jobs there are here."

Mrozinski employs 19 people, and she says 75 to 100 customers come to her weekly auction at H & M Goodies to sell and buy furniture, clothes and antiques.

She and other small-business owners have employed workers and paid taxes in National City for years. Now the city has decided to revamp itself, and in the business owners' worst-case scenario, redevelopment will kill their livelihoods.

City officials say their concerns are unfounded.

Mayor Nick Inzunza said that while city redevelopment plans are moving fast, most businesses won't be affected.

"I wouldn't worry," he said. "I think that's a natural response, but small business wins big with redevelopment."

Ben Martinez, executive director of the Community Development Commission, which is overseeing much of the redevelopment process, said only undesirable businesses need to be concerned.

"The last thing we want to do is redevelop and move businesses that are thriving in the city," Martinez said. "It's easy to distinguish the types of businesses that need to go and those that should stay."

So who needs to go? Auto mechanics, if they're located on prime commercial real estate, check-cashing businesses and pawn shops, to name a few.

"There are winners and losers in redevelopment; let's be honest," Martinez said. "But we try to limit the losers to businesses" that don't fit in with the city's plans to bring in more retail and improve its image, he said.

And that means Mrozinski's auction house.

"The building is very old, very unattractive, dilapidated," Martinez said. "The sales tax from the building is very low."

Martinez said Mrozinski's case is unique – meaning she can be forced out more easily than others – because the city already owns the property. He said the auction house will have to move to make way for another development, probably condominiums above retail stores.

It's talk about situations like Mrozinski's that scares Glenn Batchelor, owner of the Sizzler on Plaza Boulevard near Interstate 805. Batchelor's parents bought the property in 1966.

"I have nothing against redevelopment if it's done right," Batchelor said. "But why can't the city show everybody what they want to do?"

Batchelor's fear is that he'll get pushed out so Filipino-themed businesses and restaurants can move in. A Filipino Village is planned for that stretch of street, but Martinez said the plan features streetscape and building facade improvements, not new businesses.

"A business that's well-maintained like the Sizzler is least likely to be moved," said Byron Estes, deputy director of redevelopment.

It's not just change itself some fear. They are wary of how fast the city is pushing its plans through the approval process.

At a December Community Development Commission meeting, the commissioners – who are also City Council members – were scheduled to certify an environmental impact report for a downtown redevelopment plan. The commission was then supposed to approve the "downtown specific plan," which sets guidelines for the revitalization of parts of National City Boulevard and Eighth Street. The City Council was supposed to take the same action that night.

But so many people showed up at the commission's meeting to complain that commissioners postponed a vote on the plan until February. They also scheduled a community workshop for Saturday so residents can ask questions about the plan.

If the pace of redevelopment isn't alarming enough to some business owners, the city's proposal to expand its eminent domain authority is whipping up even more fear.

This past fall city officials proposed an amendment to the general plan that would allow them to acquire – by seizure, if necessary – commercial, industrial and abandoned properties to make way for redevelopment projects. The amendment would expand the city's relatively limited power to cover the two-thirds of National City that lies west of Interstate 805.

With eminent domain, the city can negotiate to buy properties for a fair-market value. If owners don't want to sell and all possibilities are exhausted, the city can go to court and force property owners to take the payment and vacate.

The proposal has induced anxiety and outrage among business owners and residents alike. Again, Martinez said their fears are unfounded.

"The message is that just because two-thirds of the city is in redevelopment, that doesn't mean that that whole area of the city is going to see huge urban renewal demolition," Martinez said.

But his words ring hollow with a number of property owners. They simply don't believe that their homes and businesses won't be in jeopardy.

After the eminent domain proposal was announced, about 250 residents attended two city meetings in October and November to speak against it. Each resident who spoke told city officials he or she did not want the city to hold blanket power for the next 12 years over such a large portion of the city. The city held off on a vote, and now it is slated to consider the proposal in February.

Exactly when a city can use eminent domain is a question the U.S. Supreme Court is considering in Kelo v. City of New London, Conn. In that case, the court will address whether a city can seize property for a private development that would pay higher taxes, even if the area isn't blighted.

Inzunza has said he is willing to use eminent domain only to make way for housing. However, the city has used its authority – stopping short of eminent domain – to clear the path for other projects.

For instance, for the Education Village that opened in November on National City Boulevard and Eighth Street, the city closed an empty furniture shop, an adult bookstore and the Pussycat Theater, an adult theater that was a longtime landmark. The new complex houses a satellite campus for Southwestern College and a center for the county Office of Education.

"We've really only gotten rid of the businesses that were really problematic," said Martinez, the director of the Community Development Commission.

If the city decides to get rid of some businesses, it will deal with them according to state regulations, he said. Viable and successful businesses will either be relocated or purchased for what Martinez called a "goodwill value for fixtures, furniture and equipment."

Eminent domain is always a last resort, Martinez said.

Not all small-business owners oppose the city's plans. Nancy Estolano, owner of San Diego Leather on the corner of National City Boulevard and Fourth Street, said she thinks the city is moving too slowly. She's been attending meetings about redevelopment for more than a year, she said.

"It's actually going to be a benefit to everyone who's here but some people are just angry," she said. "And I don't know how anyone can honestly say they don't know anything about it because there's been meeting after meeting."

And while city officials make assurances that redevelopment will help, not hurt, local businesses, some still feel they haven't received enough information to back up that claim.

Even some council members say they don't know exactly what's going on.

At a December Community Development Commission meeting, Councilman Luis Natividad said he sympathized with residents and their fears about the city's plans, adding that he also felt in the dark about some development issues. He directed some of his comments at developers in the audience.

"If you're going to talk about anything in the city, you've got to talk to all five of us," he said of the City Council. "Because if I didn't hear from you, then the community didn't hear from you. I'll be glad to work with you, but not like this."

Councilman Ron Morrison said many people are confusing the issues of downtown redevelopment and expanded eminent domain, a power the city already has in the downtown area. He hopes the city's decision to delay the votes on those issues and to host Saturday's workshop will help residents work together "to get to the point where we want to be."

For now, Morrison said, the perception remains that the city "is on a train and the train's moving too fast and that the business people are being left behind."


San Diego Union-Tribune: www.signonsandiego.com

Board: Eminent domain is not the only option — Asbury Park (NJ) Press, 1/06/05

By Bill Bowman

There are planning alternatives that could be used to spruce up the Steiner Avenue industrial area that do not require the borough taking private property, the [Neptune City] Land Use Board was told Wednesday night.

Planner James Higgins — who said he has also worked on the Asbury Park downtown and waterfront redevelopment — appeared on behalf of the owner of G&M Eastern Construction on Steiner Avenue, which is among those fighting the designation of that 21-acre area as being in need of redevelopment.

Higgins was still testifying at press time. The board is expected to hold at least one more meeting before voting on the matter.

Colts Neck-based Beacon Planning and Consulting has recommended that the borough designate more than 30 properties roughly bordered by Steiner Avenue, Memorial Drive and Route 35 as an area in need of redevelopment.

Such a designation would equip the borough with a number of tools to renovate the area, including use of eminent domain.

Higgins told the board that redevelopment and all that it implies "should be done as a very last step" and that, in his opinion, the board is not considering alternatives other than redevelopment.

"The implementation of public redevelopment policies is a very drastic step, probably the most drastic step a community can take in terms of land development," he said. "It's a very serious and overwhelming power that you have because you're taking peoples' property away from them."

Higgins said that among the alternatives supported by the state Department of Community Affairs are zoning changes, overlay zones — which would allow multiple uses in one zone — and declaring an area as being "in need of rehabilitation."

The latter option, he said, gives a town all the powers of the redevelopment designation save eminent domain.

Higgins said that the board could also recommend that the general area be declared in need of rehabilitation, while declaring certain distressed properties as being in need of redevelopment, as is being done with the Asbury Park waterfront.

Board chair Irene Allegro noted that Asbury Park had not yet demonstrated that the approach works.

"I'd be curious to know if there were any towns that took that sensitive route" to fruition, she said.


Asbury Park Press: www.app.com

Eminent Domain Abuse in Haverstraw NY

A Letter to Eminent Domain Watch

By Bruce Kanner

My family is the owner of property in Haverstraw, NY. The building was a chair manufacturing facility until my father's retirement/death in 1995/1996. It was one of the largest employers in the Village of Haverstraw.

As a vacant industrial site we met with Mayor Bud Wassmer of Haverstraw in 1997 and asked him to consider housing on our site which is on the Hudson River. He told us that under no conditions would he consider housing on the waterfront in Haverstraw.

Despite several meetings we were deterred from submitting development plans. ubsequently the same Mayor had a change of heart and has now approved an urban revitalization plan of 850 housing units on the Hudson River which includes our site. Despite having our own Developer who was willing to pay us market value for our property, the Village entered into an agreement with Ginsburg Development to acquire all the parcels using eminent domain.

Ginsburg Development has offered us about 15% of the value that we could receive from a conventional open market sale. They have been named the only game in town by the Village through their agreement and our hands have been tied. No developer will acquire our property since it will be condemned and sold to Ginsburg Development.

Additionally, the owners of the property are saddled with the expenses until such time as Ginsburg Development decides to authorize the acquisition of our parcel which may not be for ten years. We anxiously await the Supreme
Court hearing this year.



The following is an article discussing this situation from the August 14 2003 issue of the Westchester, Rockland and Putnam NY Journal News.

With development, Haverstraw must wait and see

By Bob Baird

For the next five to 10 years, this is a test.

It's probably going to take that long to see if the promise of economic rebirth holds true as Westchester developer Martin Ginsburg builds 850 units of housing along Haverstraw's waterfront.

But, like it or not, the first gut check already is unfolding.

The Empire State Chair Factory site has emerged as a rallying point. How fairly and how quickly Ginsburg deals with the families who own the property might be seen as the first barometer of how he will operate. That can win over critics or confirm their fears.

During hearings on Ginsburg's plan, several people have spoken about Andrew Kanner, who worked his way from sweeping floors at the factory to become its owner. They worked there and remember the man they knew only as Andy. He was their boss, their benefactor and their friend until age and illness forced him to sell.

Now his and his partner's families own the building left behind after they sold and the new owners moved away.

The factory has been silent since 1995, but the partners still pay their taxes, though they've sought and been granted reductions. They say they wanted to build on the site — a peninsula jutting into the river — but were discouraged by village officials who told them they wouldn't entertain plans for housing there.

Because they are in the condemnation zone, the families say they can't sell to anyone but Ginsburg and they can't develop the property themselves, even though son Bruce Kanner carries plans in his briefcase.

Their situation has been a concern for village Trustee Angelo Cintron, who said Monday night he based at least one of his votes on reports that Ginsburg and Bruce Kanner were negotiating.

But in the public portion of the meeting — long after the votes to approve the waterfront revitalization and Ginsburg's role were cast — Bruce Kanner told the board there had been no negotiations, just a conversation about talking in the future.

A few minutes earlier, Haverstraw resident Bolivar Marchand spoke eloquently about Andrew Kanner and his factory.

Until the discussions over the future of the waterfront, he said, "I didn't realize how important the Empire State Chair Factory was to me."

The factory, which at its peak employed about 100, "was the blood that moved the heart of this village," he said.

He worked at the factory, he said, and made his first rent payment in Haverstraw with money earned there.

"It is the biggest hope in my life that the people running this will come to a fruitful decision for the Empire State Chair Factory — something good for Andy."

Bruce Kanner thanked Marchand for his kind words regarding his father, who died in 1996, but told the board he had no deal with Ginsburg.

Speaking after Kanner, resident Hector Torres turned to him and said, "You were speaking to the board, the developer and the people." But, he noted, Ginsburg and his staff were no longer in the room. "They came, got what they wanted and left," he said.

Outside after the meeting, Kanner said once again that he had a developer ready to move to build on the property, but that Mayor Francis "Bud" Wassmer only wanted Ginsburg.

As Wassmer left Village Hall, he and Kanner spoke briefly. "I applaud your vision for the village," Kanner told Wassmer. "I just think you could have more concern for us."

"I'm concerned about you," Wassmer said, as he moved to get into his car, "but my main concern is the entire village."

Kanner had expected to wait seven to 10 years for Ginsburg to deal with him, based on the schedule for building sections of the waterfront development.

As part of the measures approved Monday night, Ginsburg has three years to acquire the properties from the time the project's approvals are final and beyond appeal.

Residents like Marchand and Torres will be waiting and watching.

They'll watch for the village to develop amenities they once thought Ginsburg would pay for.

They and others will look out for the interests of bodega owners and others who fear they might be pushed out of a village they've called home if the development results in gentrification.

They'll watch to see if new residents bring prosperity for all of the village.

And they'll watch and wait to see how Ginsburg treats the little guys and the family of a man who once was their boss, benefactor and friend.


The Journal News: www.thejournalnews.com

Don't Junk Property Rights — Forbes Magazine, 12/27/04

Fact and Comment

By Steve Forbes

In the coming months the U.S. Supreme Court will issue two critical rulings on property rights, which are the bedrock of a vibrant, free-enterprise economy. They are rooted in the principle of equality before the law, whereby the least of us can be protected from the most powerful. This is what enables an entrepreneur to start a business — not to mention create a whole new industry — that may challenge existing powerful business entities and not have it effectively seized or gobbled up by those already-existing bigcorporations. Under our Constitution the government can't seize what you own (even while providing "fair market" compensation) unless it is for a public project, such as constructing a highway.

In recent years, however, local and state governments around the country have been misusing this right of eminent domain. In essence, they're seizing individuals' homes and small businesses to aid developers or big companies. Governments say all this is done for the "public good" because the moves increase property values and, thus, government revenues. They also supposedly aid "job creation." In a Michigan case, for instance, Detroit and the state of Michigan seized private property to help General Motors build a new manufacturing facility. In Kansas the State Supreme Court approved of a locality's taking individuals' private property for the construction of a Target distribution center. Developers love this abuse of condemnation powers because they avoid having to negotiate with possibly recalcitrant business- and homeowners.

But the trashing of property rights ultimately means less economic progress and is a threat to our basic freedoms because it gives governments untrammeled powers that inevitably will be perverted for political favorites. Whoever has the power has the "rights." This is manifestly not what constitutes government based on the principles of liberty and equality before the law. Why should a small homeowner have his house seized for the benefit of a large corporation? More to the point, why should politicians take what you own — if you don't wish to sell — to help another private party get richer?

Too often in these cases the victims lack the political clout to protect themselves in the face of a raw exercise of political power. The Institute for Justice, a nonprofit, public interest law firm, has found that in recent years local governments have taken or threatened to take by force more than 10,000 homes or small businesses to further private economic development. And that apparently is the tip of the iceberg. (The best way to promote development, by the way, is to cut taxes and antigrowth regulations, as well as to improve local schools.)

Another abuse of even longer standing, of course, is local rent control. Capping what a property owner can receive in rent for an apartment or house decreases the market value of that building. Cities and towns proclaim that controls are a public good, yet they don't compensate the owners for their economic losses.

As with the misuse of condemnation powers, rent control perversely hurts the very people it is supposed to help. New York City, for example, is chronically short of housing, and rents are outrageously high. Many New York apartments are "rent stabilized." It's no surprise that developers prefer to build condominiums or cooperatives, which they can sell outright. Such sales give them real profits — or at least the prospect of gains — and none of the risks of politicians forcing them to charge rents that are not economical. Chicago, in contrast to New York City, has no rent control, and it has abundant housing for all levels of income earners. Free markets work when politicians allow them to.

The condemnation case the Supreme Court will be hearing is Kelo v. the City of New London (Conn.). There the government is aiding a private corporation to seize the homes of Susette Kelo and others to build a hotel, high-priced condos, an office building and other projects to complement a major pharmaceutical company. New London is strapped for cash and figures the project will help it out of its fiscal straits.

Fifteen state supreme courts have ruled on the issue of this perverse exercise of the power of eminent domain. Nine have decreed that government powers cannot be used to help private developers in this way; six have deemed it to be within the law's purview.

In the second property rights case, the state of Hawaii put a cap on the amount of rent that oil companies can charge their service stations. A federal court has recently ruled that form of rent control as being unconstitutional, saying that such a cap discourages investment and therefore leads to fewer independent dealers. If the Supreme Court upholds this finding, then rent control in New York City and elsewhere could very well fall by the wayside. Many politicians are up in arms, believing that the "public interest" should be whatever they want it to be. Voters may have a better understanding. Oregon, one of the bluest of the blue states, saw voters overwhelmingly pass an initiative that permits property owners to force government to compensate them for losses resulting from environmental or zoning rules.

The Supreme Court can strike a blow for liberty — and for our future well-being and progress — with these two cases.


Forbes Magazine: www.forbes.com