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August 2006 The Statehouse By James Lawlor California: Opposition to Prop 90. As of July, a coalition of organizations opposed to a proposal to amend the state constitution to bar taking of property by eminent domain to benefit private parties, had gained 38 members, including the California APA chapter. "No on 90" argues that the proposition, ostensibly aimed at curbing abuse of eminent domain power, also would render state and local land-use controls unenforceable by requiring compensation of landowners for loss of land value from future laws and regulations. Proposition 90 is one of a number of a similar voter initiatives that have sprung up in western states this year, as APA Executive Director Paul Farmer, FAICP, noted in July's Domestic Policy Watch column. The double-barreled initiatives have appeared in nine states, buried behind language purporting to protect homeowners from eminent domain abuse. The proposals are on the ballot in four states — California, Idaho, Montana, and Washington — and are pending in Arizona and Colorado. A measure in Nevada attracted enough signatures to qualify for the ballot but is being challenged by a lawsuit claiming it violates the state constitution's single subject rule. Courts in Missouri and Oklahoma ruled measures off the ballot, holding they violated the single subject rule. Most states have similar constitutional provisions, requiring legislation to deal with only one subject whether it is enacted by the state legislature or by popular initiative. However, courts differ on how strictly they interpret that provision.
Like Measure 37, I-933 would give a state or local government agency the choice of either paying compensation or waiving the requirements of a law or regulation that a property owner claims damages his ability to use his property or reduces its value. In its analysis of the initiative, the chapter charges it would cripple communities' ability to regulate location, height, and bulk of commercial uses; take it impossible to enforce billboard regulations; make floodplain regulations unenforceable; and create uncertainty in the residential real estate market.
Six workgroups of task force members will begin to address these issues, and report back at the task force's next meeting on August 18. The task force plans to have identified more specific issues under each of these topics by the end of this year. The 2005 legislation that established the task force directed it to study and make recommendations on:
The condemning agency must be able to establish that any structure on the property to be taken is a public nuisance; dilapidated, unsanitary, or unsafe; has been abandoned; or is subject to tax delinquencies exceeding the assessed value of the property. It must also show that acquiring the property is expected to accomplish more than simply increasing a government entity's tax base. And finally, the condemning agency must submit to mediation if the property owner requests it. The new law also requires that the owner of residential property be paid 150 percent of its fair market value and relocation costs. If the question of damages goes to trial and the amount awarded to the owner is more than the condemner's last offer, the condemning agency must pay the owner's litigation costs, up to 25 percent of the cost of the acquisition. Also, the chapter provides that the condemning agency may not acquire the property if the owner establishes by clear and convincing evidence that the location is essential to the viability of the owner's commercial activity, and payment of damages and relocation costs would not be adequate compensation.
Gov. Richardson vetoed the eminent domain bill, H.B. 746, because he considered it to be overly vague and likely to make it difficult for state and local government to build roads and extend water and utility lines. City and town officials from all parts of the state urged the government to issue a veto.
Gov. Tom Vilsack said he vetoed the bill because he considered it to be a threat to the economy of the state. Opponents of the legislation expect to challenge its validity in court. They argue the bill is unconstitutional because the legislature overrode a veto in a special session, not the session in which the bill originated.
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