Contributors
M. David Stirling- Contributor
Mr. Stirling
served in the California Assembly between 1976 and 1982,
and as chief deputy attorney general from 1991 to 1998. He
is vice president of Pacific
Legal Foundation, a public interest
legal organization.
[go to Stirling index]
The
Heavy Hand of Redevelopment
Blighted?...
[M. David Stirling] 12/1/04
In late 2002,
Elaine Evans, together with business and residential owners
of 22,883
other parcels in over twenty separate neighborhoods
of San Jose, were
notified by the local redevelopment agency (RDA) that their properties were “blighted.” Neither
the 120 property owners who opposed the designation at the agency’s public hearing,
nor the 1,422 who protested in writing, nor the several thousand whose properties
were not except perhaps in a most technical sense blighted, nor Elaine Evans’ court
challenge, were successful in derailing this eventual massive government condemnation
of their properties.
It’s happened
regularly in California for several decades: homeowners and
small business owners in older sections of a community are
informed that their property has been found to be “blighted;” that
the local RDA is prepared to acquire their property through
eminent domain, if necessary; and that an appraiser will be
recommending a price the RDA will offer them for their property,
should they prefer to take the money and leave. Whichever route
they choose, the RDA’s ultimate success is rarely in doubt.
The harsh
reality is that people who have lived and/or conducted business
in the same location perhaps for a generation or more are
forced from their homes and businesses by a little known local
government body with a better use in mind for their property.
Invariably, that better use is calculated to generate substantially
greater revenues for the RDA than the existing property owners
are.
Variations
on this scenario have played out thousands of times in California
since the state’s redevelopment law was enacted over a half-century
ago While the original purpose of this expanded use of eminent
domain was to provide an expedient remedy to city neighborhoods
plagued by boarded-up warehouses, abandoned gas stations, flop-houses,
alcoholics and prostitutes, redevelopment planners quickly
discovered they also could utilize eminent domain on residents
and small businesses in older, modest, yet still viable neighborhoods
of the community.
With the
vast financial incentives redevelopment provides power to
condemn private property and give it to other private parties;
power to give developers public money to develop projects;
sole use of all property tax increases generated over the life
of the project (often 30 years); and authority to sell bonds
to raise revenue to fund the project, all without a vote of
affected property owners or local residents RDAs almost overnight
became the state’s most powerful and least accountable political
subdivisions. Today, 400 of California’s 478 incorporated cities
have active redevelopment agencies.1
Few can reasonably
deny local government the tools necessary to “redevelop” the
decrepit, crime-infested, and virtually hopeless areas so familiar
to many large cities. Even moderate-sized communities have
effectively utilized RDAs to create clean, productive, and
people-friendly neighborhoods where once urban-like wastelands
lay. But as often as not, redevelopment law in California and
in other parts of the country has been misused some would
say abused over the past half-century.
Of redevelopment’s
several controversial elements, two in particular stand out
as the most vulnerable to misuse. The first is the lack of
clear definition and RDAs’ selective application of redevelopment’s
triggering mechanism, the designation of “blight.” The second
is the grossly expanded interpretation of the term “public
use,” as contained in the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution.2
The original
definition of “blight” in California law was taken from the
federal government’s urban renewal statute of 1949. Instead
of Congress defining blight in clear and unambiguous language,
the statute provided federal funds for a “slum area or a blighted,
deteriorated, or deteriorating area.” By granting the urban
renewal administrator unfettered discretion to decide what
property-characteristics fit within the statute’s purpose,
Congress effectively set the future course for blight designation.
As a result, the U.S. Supreme Court’s controlling precedent
essentially defined blight to be in the eye of the beholder.3
Following
Congress’ lead, mid-century California legislators created
a definition of blight as amorphous as the federal statute.
Over the years, as political columnist, Dan Walters, recently
wrote, “local officials stretched the definition to ludicrous
lengths. One city even declared unoccupied, undeveloped marshland
to be ‘blighted’ because it was subject to periodic flooding.” Walters
observed that blight was misused to make way for “shopping
centers, auto malls, big-box retailers and other projects” primarily
for the purpose of generating additional sales-tax revenues
to make up for property tax revenues lost to redevelopment
projects.4
Although
1993 legislative amendments to the redevelopment statute purported
to and did to a degree make blight designations more difficult
to impose, in practice, and with relatively few exceptions,
any city lured by redevelopment’s economic incentives can still
find and declare blight without fear of its designation being
challenged, much less set aside.
When property
owners in modest neighborhoods are told that their properties
have been designated as blighted, virtually none realize the
impact that designation has on their property. No one unfamiliar
with redevelopment law in other words, 99.9 per cent of the
population understands how the initial blight determination
is made. In practice, the city (or county) contracts with and
pays a consultant with past experience in making blight determinations.
In the earlier-mentioned San Jose Redevelopment Project case,
Elaine Evans’ court brief showed the consultant’s blight-bias
by revealing that the agency contracted to pay the consultant
$338,080.00, in return for which it would “produce a blight
analysis to be used by the agency . . . to demonstrate that
all or part of the Survey Area is blighted . . . in order to
justify the inclusion of that geographic area within a proposed
redevelopment project area.” When the process is understood,
what targeted property owners are up against becomes all too
clear. For consultants in the business of doing blight assessments,
not finding blight is not in their economic best interest.
The term “public
use,” contained in the Fifth
Amendment, was intended to limit government’s ability to
seize private property through eminent domain, the process
used by RDAs to acquire “the project area.” What historically
was considered a “public use” and what most people even today
readily accept as a public use, i.e., building a highway,
constructing a school, a jail, a post office, and the like only
raises the question of how much money the government will pay
the owner for his property. Over the past several decades,
however, as modern, more ambitious planners came to regard
the traditional notion of public use as too confining, the
term was mutated into the almost limitless standard of “public
benefit.” This resulted in what is now routine practice: if
the RDA makes a plausible showing that its seizure of the property
will benefit the public sooner or later, reviewing courts generally
uphold the taking.
Invariably,
the public benefit standard as compared with the public use
limitation promotes the RDA practice of taking one private
party’s property to give to another private party. In Chula
Vista, for example, the RDA utilized eminent domain to take
a privately-owned 3.2 acre parcel with an old building and
give it to a major corporation at a below-market-value price,
in order to build a parking lot. In exchange, the corporation
agreed that within six years it would develop the adjacent
property it already owned. The RDA justified taking the previous
owner’s land on the basis that the increased business activity
and employment at the corporation’s new facility would generate
greater tax revenues for the city, and that would benefit the
public.
In Cypress,
the Cottonwood Christian Center applied for a permit to build
a $50 million worship center on the 15-acre parcel it had owned
for several years. The city council, however, preferring Costco’s
proposal to build a big retail store on the property, created
an RDA to simply seize the land. The city went so far as to
assert that Cottonwood’s proposed religious center would itself
constitute “blight’ and a “public nuisance.” Again, the justification
for using eminent domain was the public benefit Costco’s big
retail store would provide by way of increased business activity,
local employment, and sales tax revenues, compared with a religious
center. Countless government take-overs of private property
for public benefit have occurred throughout California, and
around the nation, and they continue.
One other
redevelopment concern that deserves mention is the revenue-generating
incentive called “tax increment financing” (TIF). Most often,
TIF explains why so many communities establish and promote
active RDAs. Once a redevelopment project is established, property
values within the project area appreciate, in turn generating
increased property tax revenues. One hundred per cent of those
revenues remain with the RDA to spend at will and without citizen
oversight; and not just for a limited time, but for the life
of the project often 30 years or more. Not one penny of the
RDA’s increased property tax revenues flow to overlapping local
government agencies, including the local school district, to
pay for the increased services those entities are required
to provide to the project area. This is but one of the several
bizarre characteristics of redevelopment law.
Thomas Jefferson
observed, “The natural progress of things is for liberty to
yield and government to gain ground.” One of the surest ways
for a citizenry to lose its liberties is to idly sit by while
ever-more overreaching government planners those in power
over us devise complicated programs to extinguishes our fundamental
right to own and use private property. The onerous burden of
eminent domain in the redevelopment context falls almost entirely
on modest neighborhoods, where homes and businesses are peopled
not by the financially, legally, or politically connected,
but by those with little resources to resist.
With California’s
median-priced home values making home ownership affordable
to fewer households daily, and small businesses struggling
ever harder to compete, it is critical that local government’s
vast power of eminent domain be used with care. While redevelopment
has its legitimate uses, it also uproots and disperses families
and destroys mom-and-pop type businesses. Instead of growing
government intrusiveness, it would be much more constructive
to grow the notion of community pride and individual responsibility,
whereby all small property owners and business people can strive
for a piece of the American dream. CRO
Notes
1. Nearly
all states have adopted redevelopment laws modeled largely
after California’s.
2. “... nor
shall private property be taken for public use, without just
compensation.”
3. Berman
v. Parker, 1954
4. Sacramento
Bee, June 15, 2004.
Mr. Stirling
is an attorney and vice president of Pacific Legal Foundation.
PLF’s brief to the Michigan Supreme Court contributed to
that court’s landmark decision in Wayne
County v Hathcock, which unanimously reversed the court’s
infamous Poletown decision of 1981. PLF is also participating
in Kelo
v. City of New London in which the U.S. Supreme Court
will consider whether a city can “take” by eminent domain
private property from modest owners and give it to large
developers on the grounds that the city will receive greater
tax revenues from the redeveloped property. This article
originally appeared in California
Political Review, July/August 2004 issue.
copyright
2004 Pacific Legal Foundation
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