From Deseret News archives:
A bad court decision
Instead, today they take homes and businesses from hard-working taxpayers and give them to Wal-Mart or developers of trendy malls. And now, thanks to the court, that is as legal under the Constitution as taking property for a much-needed highway.
Fortunately, the court specifically acknowledged that its ruling still allows states to pass laws prohibiting the seizure of private property for economic development. Utah's lawmakers, who already have made good strides toward curtailing the power governments have over private property, should take this opportunity to expressly forbid the use of eminent domain except for genuine public uses, such as transportation needs.
We're guessing that few Americans, if faced with the raw facts of the case before the court, would have sided with the city of New London, Conn., the way the majority did. The city wanted to take advantage of a new Pfizer plant to create a modern retail, business and residential development along a waterfront. It succeeded in buying up much of the property in question, but a few property owners refused to sell.
At various times in Utah, property owners have held out against cities and counties and eventually won in state courts. But local governments continue to push for new and shinier developments to replace old ones, using the often dubious promise of economic development, which is supposed to help the entire municipality.
Private property rights long have been a bedrock of the U.S. system of government. Now, as Justice Sandra Day O'Connor put it in her scathing dissent, "Nothing is to prevent the state from replacing any Motel 6 with a Ritz-Carlton, any home with a shopping mall, or any farm with a factory."
Utah lawmakers now need to craft a firm law that makes sure property rights here are still pre-eminent.
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