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Bulldozed:'Kelo,' Eminent Domain and the American Lust for Land

Bulldozed:'Kelo,' Eminent Domain and the American Lust for Land
By Carla Main

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No domestic policy issue more angers or galvanizes the public than the controversy over eminent domain-the taking of private property for public use. The stakes in this always controversial procedure have been dramatically raised in recent years as eminent domain has been used to fund private development. As the notorious Kelo case in New London, CT demonstrated last year. The practice of using eminent domain to enrich municipalities is an incendiary issue. Veteran journalist, Carla Main, takes a hard look at this practice and delivers an incisive expose that is sure to be widely read and hotly debated.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #383293 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-10-25
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 330 pages

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Editorial Reviews

Review
Kelo, Eminent Domain, & the Lust for Land By Heather Wilhelm

Bulldozed: "Kelo," Eminent Domain, and the American Lust for Land By Carla T. Main Encounter Books, October 2007

Since the dawn of humanity, there have been a few classic, sure-fire incentives to get people to do all sorts of crazy things. Love is one of them. Money is another. And if recent history is any indication, another age-old ingredient for unhinged behavior will loom especially large in the American psyche and public debate for years to come.

The ingredient in question, of course, is land.

Ever since the Supreme Court's infamous Kelo ruling in June of 2005, America has struggled with the case's grim implications: the seizure of private property, often from people who can't afford to fight back. For those who have followed the pre- and post-Kelo saga of eminent domain in the United States, two questions often surface. First: "How the heck did we get to this point?" And second, usually after reading about some little old lady getting kicked to the curb: "Who are these people? Who would do this sort of thing?"

As Carla Main's "Bulldozed" reveals, "these people" are often simply normal people: amped-up bureaucrats in communities gone mad. The book offers a clear-eyed assessment of eminent domain in America, focusing on the insanity that recently engulfed a Texas town over a strip of waterfront land. "Bulldozed" also addresses, through history and case law, how we got to this point - and, now that the bulldozer's out of the proverbial barn, where we go from here.

Situated on a "grimy old industrial river" and nestled next to one of the world's largest chemical plants, Freeport, Texas hardly had "glamorous marina town" written all over it. But that's exactly what Freeport's politicians saw when they cooked up a plan that would eventually tear the town apart. The ingredients were simple but incendiary: a town in dire straits; a family business on the river; a wealthy, marina-building oil scion; and a city council desperately attached to a harebrained scheme.

The Freeport story, played out from 2003-2006, verges on the tragicomic (picture a town with basic infrastructure woes lending $6 million, almost half of their annual budget, to a wealthy young man in a risky deal to build a marina close to a giant Dow chemical plant) but, as Main writes, the council pursued it with "religious zeal." Only one thing stood in their way: the Gore family, whose shrimp business sat next to the marina site. The Gores were pillars of the community, provided dozens of jobs, paid substantial taxes. They were also, however, in the way. They would have to go.

"Bulldozed" outlines in withering detail how, as the Kelo case played out in the Supreme Court, niceties quickly dissolved in Freeport. While the Gores attempted to reason with the city council, the book records, the city council proceeded to go ballistic, pulling stunts that would make Boss Hogg proud: sneaky legal moves, personal attacks on dissenters, taxpayer-funded PR campaigns, subtle assaults on free speech - all so that they can have the privilege of dunking the taxpayers into a questionable marina deal.

If it seems too bizarre to be true, it's happened in more places than Freeport. Main explains it with "the ugly duckling syndrome," in which a town with low self-esteem has a dream of beautification--the equivalent, say, of going to the prom with the homecoming king. The ugly duckling proceeds to lose its mind, alienating friends, racking up an astounding credit card debt, and bending over backwards to woo its hunky suitor. Then, after a whirl of alternating anxiety, euphoria, and chaos, the homecoming king either cancels or ditches Ugly at the dance.

The driving forces behind today's eminent domain horror stories, of course, are often darker than low self-esteem. Common culprits are greed, power, and ruthless ambition. The trail to today's mess, however, began as many messes do: with idealism run awry. "Bulldozed" traces the long and winding road of landmark property rights cases from the days of Daniel Webster, when erosions of property rights were intended to protect "the little guy," to 1954's Berman v. Parker, which cleared the way for hundreds of thousands of "little guys" to be displaced "for the good of the community." Kelo, of course, took such logic to the frightening next level, where no one, as Sandra Day O'Connor pointed out, is safe.

One would think that the spectacular failures of past government adventures in real estate - Main outlines fiascos in Poletown, Michigan, the folly of urban renewal, and other multi-million-dollar mishaps - would make everyone, including liberals on the Supreme Court, a bit gun-shy. Nope. It is especially interesting, as Main notes, that the five judges in the Kelo decision are known for a philosophy advertised for years as "standing up for the little guy." The Kelo decision, along with other current policy debates, makes it clear that this liberal philosophy has evolved, all too often, into "government knows best."

In the wake of Kelo, a backlash swept the country, with dozens of states passing various reforms. As to their impact, Main remains skeptical. With a few exceptions, most of the measures leave room for "blight" loopholes, which, as Main notes, "is in the eye of the beholder." The most obvious consequence is that future victims of eminent domain abuse, like many present victims, will likely be poor. And, unlike the Gores, whose business was soaked of $450,000 in legal fees, most will be unable to fight back.

"The question this book sets out to answer," Main writes in her introduction, "is what price American society pays for economic development takings." Economist Hernando de Soto, who made his name exploring the West's secret to success, might name one price: the erosion of property rights, a key ingredient of prosperity and stability. The Gore family, meanwhile, might say that the price is peace of mind. Other eminent domain victims might say it's nothing less than the American Dream. America's struggle over property rights has been a long, convoluted, and sometimes contradictory path. As for where we go after Kelo, Main argues, only time will tell.

Heather Wilhelm is a writer and communications consultant based in Chicago. -- RealClearPolitics.com, November 9th, 2007

From the Publisher
"When I was a very young attorney in New York City, I worked on condemnations for public authorities that were building public projects. I was moved by the plight of the business owners who came forward to testify at the public hearings. They explained how the takings were going to destroy everything they had worked for. These condemnations were taking place in extremely poor neighborhoods and most of the business owners were immigrants. Those hearings put a human face on the process of eminent domain and made clear the toll such policies take on the very communities they set out to help. I learned that lesson early and I have not forgotten it."

-Carla T. Main

"It is a rare issue, in an age of partisan polarization, that can unite libertarians and liberals. The governmental power of eminent domain, now employed for private profit, is one such issue. This spreading practice pits class against class, wealth against ordinary property-owning citizens, and government power against the powerless. Carla Main's vivid account of the history surrounding the Supreme Court's Kelo decision should frighten every property-owning American and make us all wonder where Tom Paine is when we need him."

--Gary Hart, United States Senator (ret.)

"Like a Greek tragedy unfolding, Carla Main's book chronicles the eminent domain struggles in Freeport, Texas, which pitted the Gore family, with its longtime shrimp business, against the machinations of an unholy alliance between city politicians and avaricious developers. If you have ever shared the Supreme Court's unquestioned deference to the public planning process that shaped its ill-fated Kelo decision, you'll surely change your mind as you follow this sordid saga to its bitter end. You'll never look at eminent domain in the same way again."

--Richard A. Epstein, Professor of Law, University of Chicago; Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution; and author of Takings: Private Property and the Power of Eminent Domain

"Bulldozed tells the people story behind the great eminent domain cases: Kelo v. New London, Poletown Neighborhood Council v. Detroit, and Western Seafood v. Freeport, Texas. To understand the impact of eminent domain on real people, read Bulldozed. A big bonus is that Carla Mains has written a page-turner."

--John Norquist, President and CEO of the Congress for the New Urbanism

About the Author
A practicing attorney for ten years, Carla Main litigated a wide variety of commercial cases involving real-estate-related disputes, the First Amendment, fraud, art law, and civil rights. Until 2005 Ms. Main was an Associate Editor of The National Law Journal, where she wrote a column on law and society. She writes frequently for The National Review, Policy Review, The American Lawyer, and The New York Post, among many other publications. Ms. Main resides in New Jersey.


Customer Reviews

Public use or government abuse?4
A terrific introduction to the eminent domain battle. The story of Freeport, Texas in the context of the pre and post "Kelo" world is both a fast yet intimate look at the issue that has sparked so much debate. I found the authors presentation of the "real life characters" in this drama compelling. Carla Main's narrative is direct and snappy and her historical analysis interesting without being overly theoretical. This is far from a comprehensive look at the legal underpinnings supporting the "Kelo" decision and will not satisfy the deeper constitutional scholar yearning for a "substantive due process" treatise or a "founding fathers' debate" on the true meaning of the fifth amendment. Everyone else will find it thought provoking and well worth a few nights of reading.

A fascinating read5
Legal and economic issues involve real people.

You will get more insight from reading this book about a heroic struggle among life-long friends in a small city, who are fighting for dignity, hope and the fruition of their dreams, than from a dozen legal tomes.

And it might not interest lawyers, but it raises the key question of whether local governments are even able to understand their own best economic interests. It is a microcosm of the conflict between top-down and bottom-up growth.

You Could Be Next5
Carla Main, an attorney who formerly represented condemning authorities in public domain cases and knows that side of the story, has done an about-face and zeros in on one family that has become a victim. Her caustically humorous commentary tells not only the facts of what happened to the Gore family of Freeport, Texas, but at the same time emphasizes the overtly self-serving nature and often ridiculous logic of most eminent domain takings.

She doesn't stop with the Gores, however, and presents case after case of similar situations around the country during the same time period. Putting all that in the light of history, she then outlines the origin of eminent domain and how it went from something for government use only with the assumption that civic conscience would be followed in giving just remuneration, to an economic free-for-all whereby one private party benefits from a property (or properties) being taken from another private party (or parties).

The book is a good basic primer for anyone with an interest in present eminent domain issues, written in a highly readable style. More importantly, it highlights the human cost of this practice.

Main puts forth the idea that in the past eminent domain was used mostly in relation to black or other ethnic communities, citing a case where a large black secton of Washington, DC was taken to build an upscale facility. While this has often been historically true, the takings have not been limited to ethnic groups. Those interested in past use of eminent domain would be interested in reading Stolen Fields: A Story of Eminent Domain and the Death of the American Dream by this author, a memoir of the effects of eminent domain on several generations of a family.

Note: A recent update on the case cited by Main in Long Branch, NJ -- the New Jersey Supreme Court upheld the case for the homeowners. A step forward.