December 12, 2006
Someone with the unlikley name of “Paulo Freire” managed to get the first comment in on the P-I online discussion about yet-another eminent domain editorial, this one on the Burien case (which frankly, doesn’t sound like the wisest use of eminent domain around.)
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/soundoff/comment.asp?articleID=295500
Posted by paulofreire at 12/11/06 8:58 p.m.
What’s with the P-I’s recent obsession with eminent domain? Has the Institute for “Justice” kidnapped a member of the publisher’s family, demanding two letters and one editorial a week on eminent domain?
If your editorial board were dedicated to good urban planning with the same dedication you have to property rights, I’d have more sympathy. But come on already, enough with the eminent domain.
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Posted by Paulo Freire
November 27, 2006
The P-I on Sunday printed a letter by one Edwina Johnston, responding to my letter (which was responding to their editorial — this is getting a little meta, isn’t it) on eminent domain & community renewal. In this letter, it’s recommended to me that I “read the Constitution” (by which she actually means the Bill of Rights — a pedantic distinction, sure, but she started it). She goes on to make a distinction between eminent domain for “use” and for private benefit, which seems somewhat off-point, both in regard to my letter and the larger debate.
It gets better, though:
The Constitution was written to spell out the rights of citizens and to protect them from the power of the government. A government that elevates the “common good” above “individual rights” is a communist government. In our republic, the individual’s right is protected from the tyranny of the majority.
The tyranny of a communist majority?! Where, exactly, has this been a threat?
A quick google search reveals that Johnston is involved with reactionary property rights groups and even wrote a guest column in the Seattle Times in support of I-933 and her case was cited by John Carlson in the King County Journal. Her issue: she can’t fully exploit the imagined value of the 30 acres she purchased in Preston “to retire on.”
So real estate wasn’t a secure retirement investment for her? Shocker, that.
A good opponent to draw out, I think.
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eminent domain, p-i, property rights |
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Posted by Paulo Freire
November 20, 2006
Update (11/29): The Seattle P-I prints my letter and with only minor edits!
To the editors:
In your editorial opposing the use of eminent domain to keep Southeast Seattle affordable, you suggest there’s a need for community involvement, but don’t suggest how else to make this happen. A blue ribbon panel, perhaps? Or maybe a toothless neighborhood plan?
The basic principle of eminent domain is that the common good can take precedence over private interests. This is hard to object to – unless, I guess, you own blighted property and want to hold on to it. But even then, you’d receive fair compensation. So who loses?
Sure, area property owners may want to take another spin on the real estate roulette wheel, hoping to hit another jackpot. But they’re already benefiting greatly from public funds and attention to the area—from light rail to rezoning, and beyond. The rest of us deserve something in return: to help make sure there’s room for everyone in Southeast Seattle.
A community renewal agency with eminent domain powers is one of the few tools available with the teeth to give the public a real voice in the process, as equals with private developers and property owners. And I suspect that this is at the heart of the objections to the plan.
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Posted by Paulo Freire