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October 2005
The Statehouse
By James Lawlor
Oregon: Land Use Planning Study. Chapter legislative liaison
Stephen Kafoury reports the high point of an otherwise unproductive legislative
session was the enactment of S.B. 82, a bill creating a state task force on
land-use planning, quickly nicknamed the "Big Look." The 10-member
task force, to be selected by Gov. Ted Kulongoski, the Senate President, and
the House Speaker, was supposed to produce a preliminary report detailing its
work plan within three months of the law's August 9 effective date, but as
of October 21, no task force members had been selected.
The task force, once its members are selected and it gets under way, is charged
with studying and making recommendations on the effectiveness of the state's
land-use planning program, the respective roles and responsibilities of state
and local government, and land-use issues specific to areas inside and outside
urban growth boundaries. It is expected to hold public meetings, gather information,
and develop recommended legislation for the next two legislative assemblies.
Its final report is due February 1, 2009.
After laboring throughout the session to come up with legislation clarifying
the intent of the voters' 2004 passage of Measure 37, an initiative intended
to compensate landowners for property value lost because of state and local
land-use restrictions, the Senate Environment and Land Use Committee saw its
compromise bill shot down in a floor vote. Subsequent efforts to pass less
ambitious bills foundered on the question of how to deal with transferability
of rights claimants under the measure. In a related development
a trial court judge in Marion County declared the measure invalid under the
Oregon Constitution, in a decision handed down October 14. The ultimate resolution
of the measure's validity will await a decision by the state supreme court.
The legislature passed two bills limiting local governments' annexation powers.
H.B. 2484 requires annexations to be approved by a majority votes of both the
annexing city and residents of the territory to be annexed. S.B. 887 applies
specifically to the City of Beaverton, and bars it from annexing "islands" surrounded
by the city's corporate boundaries without the approval of the residents or
property owners of the island. It also directs an interim study of annexation
issues in general, aiming at proposing legislation for the next legislative
session.
California: No Eminent Domain Action. The legislature
adjourned September 9 for its interim study recess without taking action
on measures intended to restrict the use of eminent domain to aid private development
projects. The proposals were inspired by the U.S. Supreme Court's Kelo decision
last spring affirming the constitutionality of property takings for private
redevelopment projects.
The chapter joined a coalition of organizations headed by the California
Redevelopment Association opposing the measures. Generally, the opponents of
the proposed legislation and two proposed constitutional amendments argue the
measures are not necessary because constraints on exercise of eminent domain
power are sufficient already to prevent abuse. For example, California law
permits the use of eminent domain by redevelopment agencies only where there
is a clear finding of blight, and the law sets out specific conditions that
must be met for a finding of blight.
Ohio: Eminent Domain Moratorium. The
state senate passed a bill October 5 establishing a one-year moratorium on
the use of eminent domain by the state government or its political subdivisions
to take private property in an unblighted area, when the primary purpose
of the taking is economic development resulting in ownership of the property
by a private entity. The legislation, S.B. 167, is currently under consideration
in the house.
The bill also creates a 25-member legislative task force to study the use
and application of eminent domain in Ohio. The task force's final report is
due by April 1, 2006. The Ohio APA chapter has declared its support for creation
of the task force.
A senate joint resolution, SJR 6, takes a more draconian approach, calling
for an amendment to the Ohio Constitution eliminating the constitution's grant
of eminent domain authority to municipal corporations. It would provide that
municipal corporations do not have authority to take property for public use
unless the general assembly has conferred that authority upon them by law.
So far, there has been no action taken on the resolution, introduced August
2.
The validity under the state constitution of local government's exercise
of eminent domain to assemble property for a private development project is
currently before the Ohio Supreme Court, in a case from the Cincinnati area.
In that case, the local government did make a declaration of blight before
exercising its eminent domain powers.
Maryland: Eminent Domain Reform
Equals Political Advantage? A
group of Republican legislators has proposed a constitutional amendment to
bar taking of private property for economic development. The Republican House
minority whip, Del. Anthony J. O'Donnell, was quoted as saying Republican
legislators wanted to get out in front on an issue they believe will resonate
with voters. An eminent domain amendment would appear on the 2006 ballot
at the same time Republicans will be making a major push to reelect Gov.
Bob Ehrlich, the first Republican governor in Maryland in 20 years, and to
increase their representation in the legislature. Currently, Republicans
are outnumbered 2-1 in the general assembly, so they need Democratic votes
to pass any legislation, and would need substantial Democratic support to
gain the three-fifths majority necessary to get a measure on the ballot.
Democratic legislators are also working on eminent domain legislation and
a possible constitutional amendment. A task force has been working for the
last two years on the eminent domain question, and will soon issue recommendations,
Democratic Del. Samuel I. Rosenberg said. Another delegate who is working on
eminent domain legislation pointed out that seeking a constitutional amendment
would only delay the effective date of any restrictions on government's taking
authority. An amendment must be approved by the voters before going into effect,
while emergency legislation could go into effect as early as next July 1, with
the governor's approval.
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