
Congress, States Slow to Confront Kelo
by Ronald D. Utt
On June 23, the U.S. Supreme
Court sent shock waves through the ranks of the nations
homeowners and small businesses when it ruled 5 to 4 that
government could seize property and transfer it to another
private owner if the change in ownership might enhance the
community through economic development. The case
pitted the City of New London, Conn., against Susette Kelo, who
fought the city for seven years to keep her home from being
seized to make room for a major commercial development.
Because the decision alerted families across the nation that
their homes are threatened, widespread alarm and opposition
quickly spread. Dissenting Justice Sandra Day OConnor wrote
that the specter of condemnation hangs over all property,
and I observed at the time that Perhaps not since Dred
Scott have the weak been so abused by the nations highest
court. Congress, too, reacted with disbelief, and in just
days lawmakers introduced several legislative proposals to limit
the ability of government to seize private property for economic
development. With only a few notable exceptions, however, elected
officials responses have been more talk than action.
House Judiciary Committee Chairman James Sensenbrenner spoke for
many of his colleagues when he said, This decision assaults
the Constitutional rights of all Americans and unsettles decades
of judicial precedent, and he promised that his committee
would soon produce legislation to better secure property rights.
He honored that promise in early November when a bipartisan
majority of the committee reported out the Private Property
Protection Act of 2005 (H.R. 4128). A day later, the House passed the
bill by an overwhelming margin, 376 to 38.
The bill would prevent any government entity receiving federal
funds from taking property through eminent domain for the purpose
of economic development. Any violation would disqualify that
government entity from receiving federal funds for two years. The
House bill has since been sent to the Senate, where it still has
not been considered, and a less ambitious bill (S. 1313) has languished in the Senate Judiciary
Committee since last June.
Because the House bill would leave state and local government
entities that do not receive federal funds free to seize private
property for economic development, citizens in many states have
urged their state lawmakers to pass legislation to prohibit such
takings. Several states already have this protection in their law
or constitutions, and bills to limit eminent domain abuses have
been introduced in virtually every state in the union. But in the
five months since Kelo was handed down, only Alabama and
Texas have enacted laws to strengthen property rights against
eminent domain abuse. The Institute for Justice, a public-interest
law firm in Washington, D.C., maintains a comprehensive and up-to-date
listing of all of these proposals, including their legislative
status, on its website.
While much of the focus has been on the issues associated with Kelo
-- that is, taking property from one private owner and
selling it to another for purposes of economic development and
increasing tax revenues -- a more common type of private property
abuse occurs when communities impose restrictive zoning
regulations on residential developmenta growing trend. For
the most part, these new zoning laws are designed to limit
construction to single-family detached homes on large lots. In
this way, communities effectively exclude moderate-income
households by prohibiting the construction of affordable
apartments and townhouses.
By controlling the number and type of homes that a property owner
can construct, communities can control the demographic profile of
new residents. In most cases, the aim of such exclusion is to
limit the number of moderate-income households living in a
community because the cost of the public services they use, such
as roads, schools, and police protection, often exceeds the tax
revenues that they generate. And as with Kelo, it is low-
and middle-income households that suffer as affordable housing is
zoned out of existence. Perhaps as a consequence of these
restrictive zoning ordinances, the construction of single-family
detached houses in 2005 comprised the largest proportion of new
residential construction in 6 years, according to the Census
Bureau.
Despite the widespread concern that swept the country following
the Kelo decision, state and federal elected officials
have done little to strengthen the protection of property rights.
With the exceptions of the House bill and new laws in Alabama and
Texas, property rights initiatives in other states and in the U.S.
Senate have been bogged down in legislative committees, in large
part due to opposition from mayors, developers, and economic
development officials who stand to see their power diminished. To
date, President Bush has been silent on the issue, despite its
popular appeal and property rights status as a basic
principle of individual freedom. With efforts to strengthen the
protection of property faltering, now is the time for President
Bush to take a strong stand and encourage the Senate and the
states to enact laws that better protect an individuals
property.
CFPA: The government over the years has totally abused this eminent domain business and our Party is totally against it (see #8 of Our Beliefs).
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