Pacific Legal Foundation Releases
“State of Property Rights” ReportContact: Dawn CollierPhone: (916) 419-7111Sacramento,CA; April 20, 2005: April 20, 2005: Pacific
Legal Foundation, the nation’s leading defender of property rights in the
courts, today released its first annual “State of Property Rights” report that
finds a growing national movement to reclaim individual property rights while
government agencies continue their regulatory assault on those rights.
PLF reports that a number of high-profile property rights cases and
voter initiatives in 2004 show that protecting property rights remains a
front-burner issue for many Americans, especially in battleground regions
where overzealous environmental and “antigrowth” regulation, and property
taxation, have come to a head.
Yet, while there have been notable
successes in some areas on behalf of Americans’ constitutionally protected
property rights, officials at all levels of government around the country
continue to impose ever more burdensome limits on the use of private
property—without compensating property owners.
“Government too often
imposes outlandish limits on the use of private property,” said
M. David Stirling, Vice President of
Pacific Legal Foundation. “Over the last year, we’ve been encouraged to see
more and more people taking a stand against property seizures and asserting
their constitutional rights. Oregon voters passed a landmark property rights
initiative, voters in Hawaii said enough is enough to skyrocketing property
taxes that are driving them from their homes, and Connecticut families whose
homes were taken by the government to sell cheaply to corporate interests
finally got their day before the United States Supreme
Court.”
“Unfortunately, government continues to unreasonably restrict
people’s land use, often in the name of environmental protection,” Stirling
said. “Too often government uses guesswork and bad science to impose needless
restrictions on private property, never compensating the owners or doing the
real scientific research necessary to determine whether the added regulation
will benefit the environment.”
Among the positive highlights for
advancing property rights over the last year are:
- In November, Oregon voters passed Measure 37, a groundbreaking initiative that requires
government agencies to compensate property owners for lost property value
caused by government regulation. The measure passed with more than 60% of
the vote in a state that has been saddled for over 30 years with the most
stringent land use control laws in the country. PLF is currently helping to
defend Measure 37 against court challenges.
- In December, the federal government agreed to pay California farmers
$16.7 million for contracted irrigation water it confiscated and diverted to
protect fish. The government agreed to a settlement after a federal judge awarded the affected farmers
a whopping $26 million a year earlier. The judge ruled the farmers were
entitled to the compensation under the Fifth Amendment, which protects
private property from government seizure without compensation. The case,
Tulare Lake Basin Water Storage District v. United States, is widely
recognized as an unprecedented decision that could have far-reaching
implications on how the Endangered Species Act and other environmental laws
are implemented when water diversions are at stake. PLF supported the
farmers in a friend of the court brief and is working with other farmers
pursuing similar claims.
- In the fall of 2004, the United States Supreme Court announced it would
hear four property rights cases in the 2004-2005 session, setting the stage
for a stunning string of decisions that could change the landscape of
property rights for years to come. In the most high-profile case, homeowners in New London, Connecticut, stood up for
their rights by challenging their city’s effort to throw them out of their
homes under the power of “eminent domain” to make way for private businesses
to build a theater complex and commercial center. Other cases this term
include a rent control case out of Hawaii, a San Francisco case seeking to
keep federal courts open to property rights claims, and a water rights case
out of California’s Central Valley. PLF filed friend of the court briefs in
all four cases.
- In the fall of 2004, western property and business owners who had seen
their property rights frozen and businesses stymied because of excessive
critical habitat designations to protect fish welcomed a Bush administration
decision to reduce critical habitat areas by as much as 80 to 90%. The
decisions involved bull trout in the Pacific Northwest and 19 populations of
west coast salmon and steelhead protected by the Endangered Species Act. The
new critical habitat designations were made using the “Alameda whipsnake
test” established as a result of PLF’s landmark court win in 2003.
- In July, the Michigan Supreme Court unanimously overturned its infamous Poletown decision that allowed
Detroit to raze an entire neighborhood and transfer the property to General
Motors to build an auto plant. The 1981 decision opened the floodgates of
eminent domain abuse by local governments, with state courts nationwide
redefining the Fifth Amendment’s “public use” requirement to include giving
seized property to megabusinesses like Costco to generate a higher tax base.
PLF supported the homeowners in the case.
While these
successes helped to begin a roll back of decades of actions hostile to
property rights, there were detrimental actions to property rights as
well.
“Governments continue to impose unreasonable limits on the
ownership and use of private property,” Stirling said. “For example, rural
property owners outside of Seattle are victims of a government ordinance
denying them the right to use two-thirds of their property—essentially as a
no-touch zone.”
Among the negative developments over the last
year are:
- In October, Seattle-based members of the King County, Washington, county
council enacted a “critical areas ordinance” that requires rural property
owners with more than 5 acres to set aside as much as 65% of their property
in its natural state indefinitely— without compensation. Property owners
stormed downtown Seattle in protest, but efforts to put a referendum on the ballot to repeal the ordinance were blocked
by county officials in the courts. On behalf of a grassroots property rights
group and individual property owners, PLF has filed suit to invalidate the
ordinance.
- In November, Kauai, Hawaii, voters overwhelmingly passed a measure
similar to California’s Prop. 13 to rein in property taxes that have
increased 50% since 1998. Instead of honoring the voters’ mandate, county
officials sued to block the measure, claiming that only government—not
voters—can make decisions affecting property taxes. The county prevailed at
the appellate court level and PLF is now taking the case to the Hawaii
Supreme Court.
- In April, 2004, the United States Supreme Court declined to hear three
cases asking for badly needed clarification of the limits on federal
authority to regulate wetlands under the Clean Water Act. Despite the
Court’s landmark decision in Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook
County v. United States (SWANCC) in 2001, federal courts have continued
to define federal wetlands expansively—and illegally. The Bush
administration has also declined to issue regulations implementing the
decision. As a result, government continues to assert jurisdiction over
private property containing rain-filled depressions in the ground that are
often little short of mud puddles. Property owners are forced to pay
hundreds of thousands of dollars for permits they should not be required to
get or risk millions of dollars in penalties—and even jail time—for permit
violations. PLF is representing property owners in several key cases on this
issue and has filed a petition for review at the United States Supreme
Court.
- In June, 2004, a federal fisheries agency further harmed property owners
when it proposed a policy that fails to comply with PLF’s landmark
court victory in Alsea Valley Alliance v. Evans, where a judge
ruled the government illegally ignored prolific numbers of hatchery fish
when it listed Oregon coast coho as a threatened species. The ruling forced
the government to reexamine 26 listings of salmon and steelhead populations
in the Pacific Northwest. However, when the government issued its new
policy, rather than comply with the court ruling, the government proposed to
“relist” all 26 populations—and add a new one. The decision is a slap in the
face to western property owners, farmers, and businesses that have had their
livelihoods held hostage by regulatory restrictions to protect fish that are
not even threatened. PLF has notified the government that it will file a
lawsuit challenging the listings if the agency issues the proposal as its
final policy in June, 2005.
As a result of these important
events in 2004, PLF predicts 2005 will be a landmark year for property rights
since a number of high-profile cases stand to be decided.
“In the year
ahead, we hope the Supreme Court will return our judiciary to the historic
role of protecting individual property rights and use the four cases before it
to clearly move in that direction,” said PLF’s Stirling. “We hope that a
growing population of property owners will assert their rights whenever
government at any level infringes on those rights, whether by eminent domain,
confiscatory regulation of land use, imposition of rent control, or the taking
of water from farmers.”
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