PDA

View Full Version : [Politics/news] SCOTUS chooses big developers over familes.


AZReDWiNG
06-23-2005, 12:35 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/23/AR2005062300783_pf.html


WASHINGTON -- A divided Supreme Court ruled Thursday that local governments may seize people's homes and businesses against their will for private development in a decision anxiously awaited in communities where economic growth often is at war with individual property rights.

The 5-4 ruling _ assailed by dissenting Justice Sanday Day O'Connor as handing "disproportionate influence and power" to the well-heeled in America _ was a defeat for some Connecticut residents whose homes are slated for destruction to make room for an office complex. They had argued that cities have no right to take their land except for projects with a clear public use, such as roads or schools, or to revitalize blighted areas.

As a result, cities now have wide power to bulldoze residences for projects such as shopping malls and hotel complexes in order to generate tax revenue.

Writing for the court, Justice John Paul Stevens said local officials, not federal judges, know best in deciding whether a development project will benefit the community. States are within their rights to pass additional laws restricting condemnations if residents are overly burdened, he said.

"The city has carefully formulated an economic development that it believes will provide appreciable benefits to the community, including _ but by no means limited to _ new jobs and increased tax revenue," Stevens wrote in an opinion joined by Justice Anthony Kennedy, David H. Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer.

"It is not for the courts to oversee the choice of the boundary line nor to sit in review on the size of a particular project area," he said.

O'Connor, who has often been a key swing vote at the court, issued a stinging dissent, arguing that cities should not have unlimited authority to uproot families, even if they are provided compensation, simply to accommodate wealthy developers.

"Any property may now be taken for the benefit of another private party, but the fallout from this decision will not be random," she wrote. "The beneficiaries are likely to be those citizens with disproportionate influence and power in the political process, including large corporations and development firms."


Even the conservatives on the other forum I attend agree that this is retarded.

FREEDOM IS ON TEH MARCH GUYZ!!!11oneone :loser:

stegmakk
06-23-2005, 12:55 PM
I posted a thread on this topic too...
I just can't believe this stuff going on right now...

AZReDWiNG
06-23-2005, 01:04 PM
Oh, just saw it. Lock this thread if you wish, then.

On another note, let me say that the day Justice Sandra Day O'Connor retires is the day America gets collectively screwed.