The Kelo Calamity
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
The
Supreme Court's Kelo
5-4 decision leaves compensation as the only remaining protection
of private property. No property owner is any
longer secure in his possession of his property if a private
developer can convince an eminent domain authority that he can put
the property to higher use as measured by projected tax revenues.
Kelo's impact is not generally recognized. Even private property's
most ardent defenders deny the impact of Kelo, which permits the
use of eminent domain for private
development projects.
Noted
libertarian Lew Rockwell, for example, argues
that the distinction between public and private use makes no difference
to the owner whose property is taken. He also argues that
the Kelo decision has already produced its own blowback in the form
of twenty-five states and hundreds of localities working to enact
laws against the use
of eminent domain for private takings of property.
Libertarians
are correct that the basic problem is eminent domain, but they are
incorrect that the distinction between public and private use is
"ridiculous," and they are wrong in their supposition
that state and local laws can offset the impact of the Kelo decision.
The
state and local laws to restrict the private use of eminent domain
are merely policy statements that the eminent domain authority of
the state or local government will not be used to take private property
for private developers. A city or county’s policy statement cannot
prevent a state or the federal government from exercising eminent
domain authority in the local government’s jurisdiction, nor could
a state’s policy stop the exercise of eminent domain by the federal
government. Moreover, not all of these efforts to restrict
the use of eminent domain are succeeding, and those that do can
be changed by a majority vote. They do not constitute a constitutional
protection of private property.
It
is clear that the Kelo decision has greatly diminished the protection
of private property. Prior to the decision, there were fewer
demands for takings and fewer opportunities for government to use
eminent domain powers. The distinction between public and
private use of eminent domain restricted its use against private
property. The Kelo decision removed this restriction.
The
Kelo decision created fundamentally new inroads into private property.
Prior to Kelo, zoning authorities could restrict what could be built
in specific locations, but they had no power to assemble or disassemble
land parcels. Thus has Kelo greatly enhanced the reach of
government planning.
The
Kelo decision also further corrupts government by creating another
avenue of payoffs to public officials in exchange for their power
to alter property ownership in behalf of private interests.
Libertarians
are correct that the source of the mischief comes from the government’s
power to take private property for public use. "Public
use" is an elastic concept. Originally, public use meant
roads and bridges. With time and technology the concept expanded
to electric power companies serving public purpose.
The
takings of property were limited to the amount needed to provide
a community with transportation or electric power. However,
in the 1980s a major new development was initiated by the Metropolitan
Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA).
MARTA was one of the first to condemn more property than it needed
to serve "public purpose." The transit authority
reasoned that property surrounding a new transportation station
would rise in value because of the increased ease of commuting from
the site. The authority decided that since its station was the reason
for the rise in property values, it should benefit by condemning
property for re-sale after the rise in value. People with
condemned property blocks from the new stations sued and lost.
Kelo
expands the definition of public use. Condemnation for "public
use" is now justified by higher projected tax revenues made
possible by condemning low-density neighborhoods, for example, and
transferring the land to developers who make multi-millions of dollars
by constructing high-density high rise on the assembled site.
The
Kelo decision threatens all private property, especially low-density
residential neighborhoods that occupy desirable sites. All
coastal and waterfront communities, for example, are endangered
by the Kelo ruling.
Money
is a powerful force. The Kelo decision has made it more powerful.
August
4, 2005
Dr.
Roberts [send him mail]
is
John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy and Research
Fellow at the Independent Institute.
He is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal,
former contributing editor for National Review, and a former
assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury. He is the co-author of
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2005 Creators Syndicate
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