Taking Private Land for Public… Nothing

by Greg Walcher on November 5, 2024

The Fifth Amendment is an essential part of the Bill of Rights, ensuring, “nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation.” Sometimes private property stands in the way of public progress, such as when highways are built. The public good cannot be held hostage by one owner, whose refusal to sell might block needed infrastructure projects. Thus, all governments have the right of “eminent domain” to handle such cases, and they must pay owners the fair market value of land taken for public use.

What is a “public use” under the law? It’s more than just infrastructure – a lot more. The Supreme Court determined in the 1950s that elimination of slums could be considered a public purpose, in a case involving Washington, D.C. neighborhoods. More recently, the Court has allowed local governments to enhance their revenue by turning over one person’s property to another owner who will build something more taxable.

Now, the Supremes have let stand a lower court’s ruling allowing a town government to take private property, for no use at all, but merely to stop the owner’s plan to build a store. A store allowed by local laws on property zoned for commercial development.

The case involved brothers Hank and Ben Brinkmann, whose business is a classic American success story. Their parents built a small hardware store on Long Island in 1976 that grew through hard work, reasonable prices, and good customer service. They turned the company over to their sons, who have grown it to five “Brinkmann’s True Value Hardware” stores. In researching locations for a sixth, they identified a perfect parcel of commercial land in the village of Mattituck, which they bought for $700,000 in 2018. Then they ran into a buzz saw.

There is another True Value franchise store a couple blocks away in the same village, so before buying the land, they first considered buying the other store and keeping its owner, Rich Orlowski, as manager. He has a similar all-American success story. He worked at the store as a college student, bought it when the owner retired, and now “Orlowski’s True Value Hardware” is a popular establishment. Rich was intrigued and talked to Hank and Ben several times, but eventually set a price the Brinkmanns thought was too high, so they bought the vacant land and planned a competing store. That’s competition and free enterprise.

But Orlowski decided to use the power of local government to prevent the competition. He hired an insider who had been the town’s attorney, and the town began to use every tool to stop the Brinkmanns. First the town tried to interfere with the land purchase, then imposed an exorbitant fee for a “market impact study.” Brinkmann’s paid for it, but the town never did the study, instead imposing a “moratorium” on building permits that applied only to that parcel. The town lost that lawsuit, so finally resorted to eminent domain to take the land “for a park.”

The town had never planned any park there, nor is there yet any plan for that land, now called a “passive park,” leaving the remains of an old derelict home on the overgrown lot. The town board briefly discussed putting a park bench on the site, but decided it was premature because Brinkmann’s had filed suit to stop the use of eminent domain to take their land for no public purpose.

In its legal filings, the town didn’t mention Orlowski, but instead accused Hank and Ben of trying “to construct a big box hardware store in a small, semi-rural hamlet…” Big box store? The proposed Brinkmann’s store would have been less than one-tenth the size of an average Home Depot. The property is on U.S. Highway 25, across the corner from a chain grocery store, and along the same street that includes a donut shop, a liquor store, two coffee shops, a plumbing company chain, several other businesses and a few homes – and then lots more green space. It’s hardly the last open space around, as one board member claimed.

District and appellate courts supported the town, and this month the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the case, finally exhausting Brinkmann’s legal options and protecting Orlowski’s business against competition. Cases like this have sparked enough public outrage that 43 States have now strengthened protections for private property against local condemnation powers – but not New York.

Maybe the town will stick a park bench on the site and call it good. But good for whom?

{ 0 comments }

Why Bipartisanship Still Matters

by Greg Walcher on November 1, 2024

When President Kennedy explained the goal of sending a man to the moon, he said the nation chose to do such things “not because they are easy, but because they are hard; because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills…” We often face challenges that are difficult, but nevertheless important, and we should not shrink from doing the right thing just because it is hard.

I recently had the pleasure of attending, at CMU’s new Asteria Theater, a conversation with former Colorado Governors Bill Owens and Bill Ritter. It was a wide-ranging discussion, skillfully and personably moderated by CMU President John Marshall, about their varying yet similar experiences, their commentary on the future of the State, and several important contemporary issues.

Both Governors were in great form, looking good and speaking well – articulate, persuasive, and forceful. Two things especially stood out, to me and I think most of the large crowd. First was the level of civility that is so desperately lacking in today’s politics. Owens and Ritter both survived rough and tumble campaigns, to be sure. But campaigns in 2024 are worse than rough, characterized by name-calling, blatant lying, character assassination, legal maneuvers to stifle speech and debate, and if all else fails, efforts to imprison political opponents instead of defeating them in elections.

By contrast, Governors Owens and Ritter, political rivals to say the least, can sit together and talk as friends, disagreeing on most issues yet never disagreeable, and looking forward to sharing beers on the plane afterwards. Although polar opposites in their political outlook and philosophies, they nevertheless are more united as Americans and Coloradans than they are divided as Republican and Democrat.

Yet the second thing that really stood out was precisely that difference in philosophy and outlook. They are very different people despite parallel resumes of long-term public service, Owens firmly engaged in the private sector and Ritter still in the public arena, now working at CSU and serving on boards of environmental groups. Their disagreement on several important issues revealed why their political fortunes were also so different.

Bill Owens, although the only Republican Governor Coloradans have elected in 50 years, became one of the State’s most popular. He was elected in 1998 in one of Colorado’s closest-ever elections but re-elected four years later by the largest margin of any Republican in state history. He left office as one of the most popular figures in Colorado, following an ambitious and highly successful agenda of educational accountability, transportation improvements, and the largest tax cuts in state history.

Bill Ritter, by contrast, scored a solid victory in the 2006 election to replace term-limited Owens, but by the end of his term polls showed only 33 percent of voters supported his re-election. He presided over a worsening economy and angered many by imposing higher fees on vehicle registrations and other services. He alienated traditional supporters by instituting furloughs for state employees, and vetoing legislation labor unions wanted. His re-election was called “in doubt” by the Cook Political Report and other media observers, and he opted not to run again.

Owens and Ritter remain very different despite their friendship and civility. Owens continues to talk about fixing major issues facing the state, addressing the crime wave, immigration mess, highway infrastructure, and educational failings. Ritter talks about climate change, global warming, and the importance of Coloradans “doing our part.” He brags that by 2030, 80 percent of Colorado’s electricity will come from renewable energy and, by 2050, achieving 100 percent net-zero greenhouse gas emissions, presumably by following California’s lead in banning internal combustion engines, eliminating gas stoves and furnaces, and driving consumers’ electric bills through the ceiling. Owens predicted, correctly, that it will not happen and explained the economics that motivate power companies in thoughtful and measured terms that enthralled even the academics in that CMU audience.

Full disclosure: I served in Governor Owens’ cabinet and have considered him a friend most of my adult life, so I make no claim to objectivity here. This is an opinion column, not a news article. 

Owens was right on target in pointing out the futility of destroying Colorado’s prosperous economy for no noticeable global improvement, while emissions spike in China and India. He and Ritter will never agree on that and many other issues. But the ability to come together and debate them calmly and dispassionately is what makes the American system of self-government work. We need that now more than ever.

{ 0 comments }

Who Decides What’s a Public Road?

October 22, 2024

Several years ago, Utah filed a suit insisting that the federal government turn over to the State 12,000 roads that cross federal lands within Utah. Few officials noticed, as disputes over who controls public roads on federal lands are nothing new. But the federal judge hearing this case just sent shock waves through Washington with […]

Read the full article →

Climate Protocols – the Ultimate Entangling Alliances

October 18, 2024

The “doctrine of unstable alliances” in George Washington’s “Farewell Address” underpinned U.S. foreign policy for decades and is still considered wise, though mostly ignored. “The great rule of conduct for us, in regard to foreign nations, is in extending our commercial relations, to have with them as little political connection as possible,” Washington wrote. “It […]

Read the full article →

Nature is Cruel – Voters Shouldn’t Be

October 11, 2024

One of the most popular speakers at Club 20 in the 1990s was a Montana logger named Bruce Vincent, founder of a PR firm called Environomics, Inc. He was, and is, one of the country’s most inspiring and entertaining speakers on natural resources and conservation issues. I still remember his description of “the Walt Disney […]

Read the full article →

Corridors of National Interest – or Special Interest?

October 4, 2024

Obama Chief of Staff Rahm Emanual famously advised, “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste,” he explained, “What I mean by that [is] it’s an opportunity to do things that you think you could not do before.” He was talking about the financial crisis of 2008, which Congress was so desperate to […]

Read the full article →

Animal Cruelty on This Year’s Ballot

September 27, 2024

Wolves yelp, bark, and howl at night to commmunicate, establish territories, and even to show affection. They do not actually howl at the moon, although that romanticized vision was cited by many voters who thought returning wolves to Colorado would somehow enhance their lives. Artworks showing silhouettes of wolves howling at the moon are very […]

Read the full article →

A New National Sacrifice Zone

September 20, 2024

A couple years ago a little-noticed report called, “Beyond Carbon-Free: A Framework for Purpose-Led Renewable Energy Procurement and Development” was published by an energy company in Seattle, together with the Nature Conservancy and the National Audubon Society. It suggested that the goal of net-zero carbon emissions would require “massive areas of land for development,” perhaps […]

Read the full article →

Easements on Water – An Idea Whose Time…

September 13, 2024

French novelist Emile Souvestre famously wrote in 1848 that “There is something more powerful than strength, than courage, than genius itself: it is the idea whose time has come.” It was later paraphrased by Victor Hugo, often quoted as, “More powerful than the tread of an army is an idea whose time has come.” It […]

Read the full article →

“Cumulative Impact” Should Work Both Ways

September 10, 2024

They’re getting old now, but I still know people who lament the urban sprawl they think ruined Denver. They miss sleepy little towns that used to be miles away from Denver and have completely separate identities – places like Parker, Golden, and Louisville. Today it’s one giant “metroplex,” as the Census Bureau calls it, and […]

Read the full article →