
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE: December
29, 2011
California’s
Redevelopment Nightmare Coming To An End
California Supreme Court Upholds Law
Abolishing Redevelopment Agencies
Arlington, Va.—In a
landmark victory for private property owners in the Golden State,
the California Supreme Court today upheld
a statute abolishing the nearly 400 redevelopment agencies across the
state. The court also struck down a law that would have allowed these
agencies to buy their way back into existence. The final outcome of the
case is that, in 2012, California’s
decades-long redevelopment nightmare will finally come to an end.
California redevelopment agencies have been
some of the worst abusers of eminent domain for decades, violating the private
property rights of tens of thousands of home, business, church and farm owners.
The Institute
for Justice has catalogued more than 200 abuses of eminent domain across California during the
past ten years alone. In California Scheming: What Every Californian Should
Know About Eminent Domain Abuse, the
Institute for Justice exposed the enormous amounts of taxpayer money used to
fund these illegitimate land grabs. In fiscal year 2005-2006 alone,
redevelopment agencies’ revenues were an astonishing $8.7 billion. In
other words, 12 percent of all property taxes in California that year were sent to these
bureaucrats.
As part of the state’s
response to its fiscal emergency and to stop this drain on the state’s
resources, the legislature passed, and Governor Jerry Brown signed, two laws:
Assembly Bill 1X 26, which dissolves redevelopment agencies, and Assembly
Bill 1X 27, which exempted agencies that agreed to make payments into funds
benefiting the state’s schools and special districts. The California
Redevelopment Association and the League of California Cities, among others,
challenged both laws, arguing that they violated the California Constitution.
The court held that AB 1X
26, the law barring the agencies from engaging in new business and providing
for their windup and dissolution, was “a proper exercise of the legislative
power vested in the Legislature by the state Constitution.” The
court concluded that the Legislature has both the power to create such agencies
“and the corollary power to dissolve those same entities when the Legislature
deems it necessary and proper.” In contrast, the court concluded that AB
1X 27, which allowed the agencies to continue to exist if they made certain
payments, violated a provision of the California Constitution that prohibits
the Legislature from requiring payments from redevelopment agencies to the
state.
“This decision represents
the worst of all worlds for California
redevelopment agencies—and the best of all worlds for California property owners and renters,”
said Dana Berliner, a senior attorney with the Institute for Justice.
“The agencies managed to achieve a decision that upholds their dissolution
while striking down a law that gave these agencies a way to stay in
existence. The agencies’ arrogance, so often employed against property
owners, finally proved their undoing.” The Institute for Justice is a
public interest law firm that is the nation’s leading defender of victims of
eminent domain abuse—when the government seizes perfectly fine property not for
public use, but for private development—across the country, including in
California.
While the decision focused
on specific provisions of the California Constitution, its practical effect
represents a significant victory for California
property owners. “Redevelopment in California
has been a billion-dollar, state-subsidized boondoggle that has completely
eroded private property rights through the abuse of eminent domain for private
gain,” said Christina Walsh, the Institute’s director of activism and
coalitions. “With the court’s decision, redevelopment has finally met its
long-overdue end, and property owners who have been living in terror across the
state can finally rest safe in what they’ve worked so hard to own.”
IJ attorney Bill Maurer
said, “Today’s decision reaffirms the common-sense conclusion that state
agencies do not have a constitutional right to perpetual existence. More importantly,
it means that California
is no longer lagging behind the rest of the country in respecting private
property. Rather than interfering with California’s recovery, this
decision should encourage it, as people considering moving to or staying in California
now know that their property cannot be seized and transferred to a private
entity by out-of-control, unaccountable redevelopment agencies.”