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April 2006
The Statehouse
By James Lawlor
Eminent Domain Update. By the National
Conference of State Legislatures' count, about 42 states have either enacted
or are considering limitations on the exercise of eminent domain for economic
development. As of March 28, legislation had passed in Idaho, Indiana, South
Dakota, and Utah. The last is a technical amendment bill to legislation passed
last year. Legislation in New Mexico was vetoed by the governor. Bills in Kentucky,
West Virginia, and Wisconsin have passed both houses and are awaiting the governor's
signature or veto.
Georgia: Dubious Constitutional Amendment. APA
chapter president Dan Reuter alerted members about the potential problems associated
with a proposal to amend the state constitution. The amendment would make it
easier for landowners to collect compensation for property value losses claimed
to have been caused by government action. S.R. 1040, which has been reported
out favorably from committing and has had its second reading, would amend the
constitution to permit the legislature to enact laws allowing compensation "with
respect to the taking of private property which results from unreasonably burdensome
governmental actions." The amendment also would permit the legislature
to define the scope of actions constituting a regulatory taking.
In his message to chapter members, Reuter pointed out that such legislation
would limit the ability of local governments to enforce land-use regulations
that would have even the most minor effect on property value. He predicted
that the result would be increased litigation over land-use decisions and a
likely rollback of development controls.
In other news, the House and Senate passed different versions of a bill, H.B.
1313, that would substantially overhaul statutory provisions governing the
use of eminent domain. Among other provisions, the bill tightens the definition
of blight, requires personal notice to owners of property slated for condemnation
and bars the use of eminent domain except for a public use.
Michigan:
Constitutional Amendments. In December 2005, the
legislature enacted a joint resolution (Senate Joint Resolution E) proposing
to amend the state constitution to restrict the power of state and local government
to take property by eminent domain to eliminate blight and promote economic
development. The proposed amendment would appear on the November 2006 ballot.
The proposed amendment provides that "public use" does not include
taking of private property to be transferred to another private entity for
the purpose of economic development or enhanced tax revenue. The condemning
authority has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that
the taking is for a public purpose, unless the taking is to eliminate blight.
In that case, the burden of proof is higher, "clear and convincing evidence." In
addition, the amendment would require that where an individual's principal
residence is taken for public use, compensation must be at least 125 percent
of the property's fair market value.
House Joint Resolution Q, introduced October 18, 2005, would amend the state
constitution to provide compensation to landowners for reductions in the fair
market value of property caused by land-use regulations. Like the provisions
of Oregon's Measure 37, recently upheld by that state's supreme court, the
proposal contains exceptions for land uses that constitute public nuisances
under common law, sexually oriented businesses, regulations to protect public
health and safety, and regulations required to comply with federal law. The
compensation provision would not apply to land-use regulations enacted before
the owner of the property acquired it. The resolution is presently in a House
committee.
California: Eminent Domain Initiatives. Although at
least four bills filed in the legislature would affect takings for redevelopment
or economic development, the chapter's legislative representative, Sande George,
predicts the main event will be ballot initiatives now in the signature collection
phase. One proposal, authored by state Sen. Tom McClintock and three others,
would amend the state constitution to bar state and local government from taking
private property for economic development, tax revenue, or "other private
use."
A second measure would bar condemnation of private property for economic development,
defined as selling or leasing the property to a private entity for a commercial
enterprise, or to increase tax revenues, tax base, employment, housing density
or general economic health. It would require a court to examine the proposed
public use and affirm that the use in fact is public. A third measure would
require that the government occupy condemned property or a lease it for public
use. It would also limit governmental authority to adopt land-use, housing,
consumer and environmental and workplace laws and regulations except where
required to preserve the public health or safety, and bar unpublished and eminent
domain court decisions.
Each of the initiatives would need to collect almost 600,000 signatures to
get on the November ballot. The California Redevelopment Association, which
opposes the initiatives, says enactment of any of them would essentially eliminate
the use of eminent domain for redevelopment projects.
The potential for levee failure and ensuing catastrophic flooding in the Sacramento
River Delta have caught the attention of both the legislature and Gov. Schwarzenegger.
In a dramatic move, the governor on February 24 declared a state of emergency
after taking a helicopter tour over the Sacramento and American Rivers, in
company with members of the state's congressional delegation. The declaration
allows the state to set aside environmental and contracting regulations to
speed up levee repairs. The governor also has asked President Bush to declare
a federal state of emergency, permitting federal environmental regulations
to be set aside. He is also seeking some $56 million in federal aid to address
24 critical erosion sites, in addition to earmarking up to $100 million from
the state's reserve fund for repairs. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff
has agreed to tour the Sacramento River levees this month in an effort to expedite
consideration of the emergency funding request.
A survey carried out by the Army Corps of Engineers and the state's Department
of Water Resources last fall identified 100 serious erosion sites in the levee
system, 24 of which were deemed critical, because levee failure in a flood
is a distinct possibility. Last month, residents of the Natomas Basin north
of Sacramento got some bad news, when the Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency
reported that levees protecting the area do not meet the 100-year level of
flood protection. Repairing the problems, due largely to seepage deep below
the levees, could cost upwards of $270 million, the agency estimated.
The governor proposed a $2.5 billion bond package just for improvements to
the levee system over the next 10 years. However, the package would have to
be approved by the legislature and the voters. Some provisions of the legislation
that would enact the bond issue are likely to be controversial, because they
would shift some of the liability burden if levees fail from the state to cities
and counties. Proponents of the liability shift argue local governments would
have a greater incentive to plan more conservatively for development if they
knew that a levee failure would result in significant liability. Local government
officials, on the other hand, contend the state should be the deep pocket,
not local governments.
An attempt to get the governor's full $68 billion infrastructure bond package
on the June ballot failed in mid-March. The Assembly approved a proposal for
a $4.15 billion bond issue for flood control, and the Senate okayed $1 billion
for levee repairs. However, the Senate adjourned before the Assembly could
send its measure over for consideration.
Utah: 'Developer Wish List' Sinks. Sen.
Al Mansell, sponsor of S.B. 170, a controversial measure being pushed by development
interests and the real estate brokerage industry, dropped the bill early in
February, in the face of united opposition from municipalities and the state
APA chapter. He told members of the press he never really intended to pursue
the bill as originally drafted by a coalition of developers, including at least
one that has a number of lawsuits against cities, claiming they are improperly
restricting its development plans.
Mansell, a commercial real estate broker and former president of the National
Association of Realtors, described some of the provisions in the original bill
as "way over the top." Some of those provisions included restrictions
on hillside construction rules and aesthetic zoning, and a provision making
local land-use decisions administrative rather than legislative. That last
provision would have effectively ruled out almost all citizen ballot box initiatives
challenging rezoning decisions.
Instead of S.B. 170, the legislature enacted S.B. 267, which includes largely
procedural changes to the development approval process, and S.B. 268, relating
to the appointment process for the state's property rights ombudsman and the
types of cases he or she can take on.
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