California Farm Bureau Federation Friday Review
APRIL 25, 2008
A joint hearing of several Senate and Assembly committees took
testimony on the two eminent domain initiatives on the June
ballot. The statutorily required hearing was heavily stacked with
invited witnesses who opposed Proposition 98, the Farm Bureau and
Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association sponsored initiative that
would stop the government from taking private property for private
projects and would add new eminent domain protection for farmers’
water rights. The sparsely attended hearing was held on Thursday,
April 24, 2008, traditionally a get-away day for legislators to
return to their districts.
Farm Bureau’s testimony focused on the fact that Prop. 98 will not
affect the use of eminent domain for public facilities, public
transportation, or public utilities, such as much needed water
infrastructure. Despite the false claims by our opponents, Prop.
98 will not impact future water development in California. We
noted that the Legislative Analyst’s Office (LAO) final analysis
prepared for the June ballot voter pamphlet is devoid of even a
mention of possible impact on water storage or conveyance
infrastructure. While opponents pressed this issue vigorously with
LAO, that office rejected it out of hand.
The committees’ invitation to provide testimony also included a
request that Farm Bureau address the claim that Prop. 98 would
bolster regulatory takings claims when zoning designations are
changed or projects are altered or not allowed. We told the
committees that for a land use regulation to be prohibited as a
taking for “private use” under Prop. 98, the property owner would
have to prove that the regulation was enacted “in order to”
transfer an economic benefit (not a health, safety or welfare
benefit) from the owner to private persons (not the public). Land
use regulations that protect the environment or the health, safety
or welfare of the public will not be impacted in any way by Prop.
98. We also reminded the committees that our opponents’ strained
interpretation of Prop. 98 was even rejected by the courts in
recent litigation challenging the Attorney General’s Summary of
the initiative that will appear on the Ballot. Using the same
logic described above, opponents argued that the Attorney
General’s Summary should mention government liability for
regulatory takings. The court, agreeing with our analysis, flatly
rejected opponents’ interpretation of the initiative, and entered
judgment against them. The Superior Court ruled that “Contrary to
Preston’s interpretation, the measure would not prohibit every
environmental or land use regulation merely because the regulation
involves some transfer of economic benefits. . . The Court is not
persuaded that this limitation necessarily would have a “far
reaching” and “enormous” impact.”
Although it is doubtful that the hearing changed any legislators’
minds, several victims of eminent domain abuse provided powerful
testimony during the time for public comment. Homeowners and small
business owners from the communities of Vista and Baldwin Park in
Southern California told how their lives have been shattered by
the their city governments’ plan to take their property so favored
developers can build a shopping mall or high-rise condominiums.
One small business owner related that his property is being taken
for a second time by the same redevelopment agency.
On the campaign front, Prop. 98 radio spots started running this
week in the state’s five major markets. To hear the first radio ad
simply click on this hyperlink: Listen to our new radio spot . |