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Once confined to making private land available for transportation projects,
parks or civic buildings, today the powers are often misused to remove a
local business and replace it with a national chain.
Limiting the powers of eminent domain may be the only thing that can stop
rarely successful developments like the never ending string of ³Renaissance²
and redevelopment schemes in Pittsburgh and other cities. Without these
tyrannical powers, cities wanting to redevelop would have to work with small
business owners, homeowners, tenants and others who are now too easy to
sweep out of the way of ³progress.²
The legal principle of eminent domain has been used at least since colonial
days to allow the government to obtain private land for public use. But
increasingly, the private sector has become involved. The now failed
Fifth-Forbes project in Pittsburgh, as well as another project there
involving an expansion of a Heinz processing plant, used eminent domain to
take private property not for public use, but for private use for public
³benefit.²
In fact, the Institute for justice in Washington, D.C. sees the use of
eminent domain in Pittsburgh as so out of hand it called the action to take
property for Heinz a ³misuse of government power,² and said private property
was being used as bargaining chips in corporate deals.
While this is nothing new--private land had been taken for public use by
railroads throughout the nineteenth century--today no specific project with
clear goals and a defined outcome is apparent when the powers of eminent
domain are used. Since a 1954 Supreme Court decision, private property may
be taken to remove ³blight.²
But just what is blight? Can a business district will almost full retail
occupancy be considered blighted? Can a discount store be labeled as
blighted so that an upscale chain can move in? Can a golf course constitute
blight? Can a working factory be labeled as blighted so that another factory
can raze the plant to build a new facility? Increasingly, the answer to
these questions is yes.
In Las Vegas, some legislators and community activists recently opposed a
new ³development,² not on the grounds of saving historic buildings, but on
the grounds that the local government may have larger goals than removing
blight. The group demanded that potential beneficiaries in ³blight removal²
schemes be named.
Nevada Assembly woman Chris Giunchigliani introduced legislation that would
redirect five percent of redevelopment money away from commercial projects
to be used for sidewalk repairs, street lights and other improvements, but
according to the Las Vegas Sun, officials ³came out in force² to object to
redevelopment money being used for neighborhood blight.
The bill would also have required city councils to say why it is necessary
to condemn someone's property andlist what private parties may benefit if
the city seizes private property through eminent domain.
After seeing a string of failed projects in downtown Las Vegas--the Minami
Tower, the people mover and Bob Snow's Main Street Station--downtown
merchants were presented with another proposal, an $84 million entertainment
and retail complex. The developer, Atlanta-based World Entertainment
Centers, acquired most of the property it needed for the project. But there
was one property owner who refused to sell.
³Naturally, City Hall is considering using its power of eminent domain,²
the
Las Vegas Review-Journal editorialized. ³The city continues to cavalierly
use the tactic to transfer property from one private owner to a more favored
one.² Continuing the criticism, the paper concluded that no matter how
dazzling a project, ³using eminent domain to serve the developer at the
expense of other property owners would be an abuse of this awesome power.²
Las Vegas seems rife with such battles. In another case, the Stratosphere
Resort got the Las Vegas Redevelopment Agency to condemn a parking lot next
to an inn so it could redevelop the site. But the inn had just spent
$700,000 remodeling and knew the loss of the parking lot would destroy their
business.
The inn took the city to court and won. It was unconstitutional, Judge Don
Chairez ruled, to take one casino's land and give it to another casino. But
the decision didn't save the inn or give the Stratosphere what it wanted.
Instead, an undisclosed sum of money, ³considerably more² than the original
amount offered for the lot, was awarded to the inn.
According to local accounts, Deputy Attorney General Chuck Gardner, who
represented the inn, concluded that eminent domain wasn't necessary to build
the casino. ³Redevelopment to me is just one more aspect of using public
money, power and influence to help the big guys,² Gardner told the Las Vegas
Sun.
Another recent case in Pittsburgh put a local ministry up against a
developer and K-Mart against Wal-Mart.
Petra Ministries had purchased the abandoned East Hills Shopping Center and
planned to develop the site bringing in a K-Mart, a supermarket, housing
recreational attractions as well as light industry. But Allegheny County and
the Urban Redevelopment Authority had other ideas and filed to take the
property through eminent domain and give it to the J.J. Gumberg Company, who
wanted to bring in a Wal-Mart.
³It could only be arrogance and ill will that would prompt the county to
move to condemn this property, take it from Operation Nehemiah for the
purpose of giving it to J.J. Gumberg,² Constance Calthorp of Nehemiah, an
affiliate of Petra Ministries told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Or in
other words, rob from K-Mart to give to Wal-Mart.
Located near a large public housing complex, Petra Ministries' plans for the
East Gate Mall were similar to those presented by the developer. Both would
provide a retail store and both have the potential to create jobs for nearby
residents. The differences being the grocery store, the housing, recreation
and social service programs, the ³local² aspect which would serve the nearby
residents.
If the ³market,² which is in this case the ministries, can bring new life
to the old shopping mall, why should the city, county or urban redevelopment
authority use tax money to acquire the property and give it to a developer?
With the mall contained on one lot, there isn't even a need to assemble
parcels to make a site ³attractive² to developers. It was ready for
development, only not by a developer in favor with local officials.
A county spokesman answered the ministry's criticisms saying it felt the
site should be developed ³successfully.² But how good is the track record of
public-sponsored redevelopment? Some parcels taken by government agencies in
mid-western cities have remained vacant for more than a decade after the
owners were kicked out and the buildings razed. The power of eminent domain
in this case and many others allows government organizations to over-step
their bounds, bend to political influence and ³take and give² property at
little more than whim.
Should tax dollars be used to purchase the mall and issue a tax exemption to
developer to bring in a Wal-Mart when a K-Mart would have been developed
anyway without providing the large property with a tax exemption in a
tax-starved area?
Without clear guidelines as to exactly what constitutes ³blight,² a clear
outline of who stands to benefit, and to what degree, from development
projects that require the use of eminent domain, it is sure to breed
corruption.
The powers have allowed some companies, mostly large corporations, often to
do business tax-free, and even be subsidized in heavily-taxed urban areas,
while local businesses, organizations and developers have no recourse if
their business is confiscated, relocated and taxed out of existence.
Eric is editor of The New Colonist, a web magazine about city living
(www.newcolonist.com). His articles have been published in magazines and
newspapers including the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review and San Francisco
Downtown. He is author of "Ayn Rand's New York", included in the new book
Literary Trips, Following In The Footsteps of Fame and Sprawling Capitalism,
available in the current issue of Urban Ecology. He can be reached at
empirebuilder@earthlink.net.
Published by permission.
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