Eminent Domain Reform a Must This Session

By Siebert Ickler For the Sun-News

Las Cruces Sun-News -January 20, 2007, 8A

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Things are finally looking up for New Mexico property owners. As most people are aware, in June of 2005, The United States Supreme Court further weakened the constitutional protection of personal property rights when it ruled in Kelo v. New London that any government could take a person’s property and transfer it to another, more connected private interest, in the name of economic development and greater tax revenue.

 

The Court left it up to the states or congress to enact legislation to restore the constitutional protection of property owners and New Mexico’s Legislature passed a bill unanimously last session, which Governor Richardson vetoed. Proponents of property rights, justifiably shocked and dismayed by the Governor’s veto, look for actions this year to result in stronger protections.

 

Legislation passed earlier this year was insufficient as it only protected owners from the taking of their property on behalf of another, presumably more well-connected private interest, for three years. Three years and one day later, the government could dispose of it as they wished.  To his credit, and with the understanding that a vast majority of New Mexicans want their property rights protected, Governor Richardson did not simply veto the bill.

 

Instead, he quickly formed a task force to study the eminent domain issue and make recommendations for the 2007 legislative session. More recently, Richardson has endorsed the task force’s recommendations and says that he plans to have them introduced as a package of reforms in the Legislature.

 

Those recommendations have been released and after careful analysis it is clear that the task force agreed with the Rio Grande Foundation and others that property rights must be protected. Recommendations made by the task force included:

 

 

 

 

 

These recommendations are an important contribution to the debate over eminent domain. Despite the overwhelming opposition to abuse of eminent domain as evidenced by the public outcry in the wake of Kelo, special interests – developers and representatives of local governments – have been effective in bottling up legislation in Congress and in some states. In fact, William Fulginiti, executive director of the New Mexico Municipal League, said that organization strongly opposed the task force’s recommendations and would work to prevent them from being implemented.

 

If Governor Richardson truly has national ambitions, he must ignore Fulginiti and others who want to weaken your property rights and act this year on eminent domain. The task force’s recommendations are sound; the time for action is now.

 

Siebert Ickler is an adjunct scholar with New Mexico’s Rio Grande Foundation. The Rio Grande Foundation is an independent, non-partisan, tax-exempt research and educational organization dedicated to promoting prosperity for New Mexico based on principles of limited government, economic freedom and individual responsibility.

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