The Blight Stops Here?
Why New York's highest court should stand up against Columbia University's eminent domain abuse.
In its notorious 2009 decision upholding the use of eminent domain on behalf of a professional basketball stadium in Brooklyn, New York's highest court acknowledged that "there remains a hypothetical case in which we might intervene to prevent an urban redevelopment condemnation on public use grounds—where 'the physical conditions of an area might be such that it would be irrational and baseless to call it substandard and insanitary.'"
That case is no longer hypothetical.
On June 1, New York's Court of Appeals will hear oral arguments in Kaur v. Urban Development Corporation. At issue is the state's controversial use of eminent domain on behalf of Columbia University, which wants free rein to build a sweeping new 17-acre research campus in the West Harlem neighborhood of Manhattanville. To that end, Columbia joined forces with the Empire State Development Corporation (ESDC), the powerful yet little-known state agency authorized to bypass zoning laws and seize private property via eminent domain. In July 2008 the ESDC declared Manhattanville to be "blighted," the state of severe economic disrepair required to trigger an eminent domain taking under state law.
But Columbia's schemes came to a halt last December when a state appellate court struck down the ESDC's actions. Writing for a majority of the Supreme Court Appellate Division, First Department, Justice James Catterson denounced the ESDC for being "biased in Columbia's favor" and condemned the agency's blight determination as "mere sophistry." It's now up to the Court of Appeals to decide whether Justice Catterson got it right.
He did. As lead attorney and former New York Civil Liberties Union executive director Norman Siegel has been able to prove thanks to reams of documents retrieved via the state's Freedom of Information Law, Columbia and the ESDC actively colluded in order to produce the very conditions of blight that would then allow the ESDC to seize property on the university's behalf. This documentary record, which Siegel carefully details in the legal brief he submitted to the Court of Appeals, offers a convincing and damning portrait of government malfeasance on behalf of an elite private institution.
In 2006, for instance, the ESDC hired the planning firm Allee King Rosen & Fleming, Inc. (AKRF) to perform an "impartial" blight study of Manhattanville. Yet as internal documents later revealed, the study was explicitly designed to rubber stamp the Columbia-ESDC agenda. In its initial outline, AKRF promised to "focus on characteristics that demonstrate blight conditions" and to emphasize "highlighting any physical blight that may be present." In other words, the purpose of the report wasn't to objectively determine if blight conditions were present, it was to "focus" on a pre-ordained conclusion that benefitted Columbia.
And AKRF was hardly a neutral party. Not only was the firm on Columbia's payroll at that point, but at least six different AKRF employees were working on both the blight study and the redevelopment plan—a flagrant conflict of interests. Indeed, as New York's Appellate Division, First Department concluded in an earlier decision related to the Manhattanville expansion plan, AKRF served an "advocacy function for Columbia" and suffered an "inherent conflict in serving two masters."
AKRF's "impartial" study was even worse. For starters, AKRF failed to mention that Columbia owned 76 percent of the property in the neighborhood and was therefore directly responsible for the overwhelming majority of blight conditions that it found. Of the five buildings cited as being hazardous to the public, for example, four turned out to be under Columbia's control. Similarly, all seven buildings cited for hazardous garbage or debris are Columbia-owned and all 12 examples of vermin occurred in Columbia buildings. Yet despite Columbia's destructive and illegal behavior, the ESDC still plans to reward the university by seizing the last holdout properties on its behalf.
Equally disturbing is the fact that Columbia owns 17 of the 18 vacant buildings cited in the AKRF study. As numerous tenants from those properties have now reported, Columbia refused to perform basic and necessary repairs, which both pushed tenants out and manufactured the ugly conditions that later advanced the university's long-term agenda. As Nick Sprayregen, one of the embattled property owners involved in the case, observed in a 2008 Wall Street Journal article, "Only a few years ago, this area was undergoing a resurgence. Virtually all property was occupied, many by long-standing family operations such as my own. Now most of those businesses are gone—forced out by the university."
Indeed, AKRF openly acknowledged Columbia's blight-making role in the preliminary findings it delivered to the ESDC, where the firm identified "Open violations in CU Buildings" and "History of CU repairs to properties" among its "issues of concern." To make matters worse, Columbia bullied local property owners with the threat of government abuse. As Ramon Diaz, owner of the popular Manhattanville restaurant La Floridita, told student journalist Armin Rosen, "Columbia was using the threat of eminent domain before they even had it approved." According to Diaz, "When people were being difficult, they would always insinuate that they were going to get a lot less if [the ESDC] could exercise eminent domain."
Thanks to those threats and to some aggressive land buying, Columbia now owns 76 percent of the neighborhood. Combine that with the 15 percent of Manhattanville controlled by either New York City or by the Metropolitan Transit Authority, and Columbia effectively controls 91 percent. That's more than enough land to build a swanky new campus without the forcible government seizure of anybody's private property.
In sum, a powerful state agency secretly colluded with a powerful private university in order to trample constitutional rights, violate the letter and spirit of the law, and force law-abiding tenants out of their homes and businesses in order to manufacture self-serving blight conditions that disfigured an otherwise livable and commercially viable neighborhood. If there was ever a case where New York's highest court should intervene against eminent domain abuse, this is it.
Damon W. Root is an associate editor at Reason magazine.
Bonus Reason.tv Video: Watch the staff and patrons of Freddy's Bar in Brooklyn discuss their fight against New York's eminent domain abuse.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
I assume Dan T will be along shortly to remind us that a powerful state agency colluding with the wicked rich is the fault of small government advocates.
Well, we're to blame for everything else, or so the media keeps telling me.
I appreciate Reason exposing all these cases of Eminent Domain abuse, but I really think it's easier to just skip to the end and write an article about how sad we were that property owners lost their case.
Chonybot sez:
How will these fabulous megaprojects ever get built if the visionaries (who merely want to improve the lives of the downtrodden proles, and bring joy and beauty into their lives) have to actually pay the grievously inflated prices asked by the moneygrubbing peasants who currently own and occupy those pathetic, blighted hovels?
It's for their own good!
what would Bill Ayers do?
I'd like to see the court recommend ESDC be stripped of its Eminent Domain powers for such blatant corruption.
Who makes these decisions at the ESDC? Is it the board of directors? These clowns:
ESDC Chairman Dennis M. Mullen
Board of Directors
Derrick D. Cephas
Kevin S. Corbett
Robert R. Dyson
Richard Neiman, NYS Superintendent of Banks (Ex Officio)
Does anyone still think that George Carlin's bitter description of what America really is and who it really belongs to is merely comic hyperbole? It isn't just colorful complaining to say that this is a rigged system designed specifically to massively benefit a tiny minority of elites at the expense of everyone else. Do we really have to be reduced to eating trash out of gutters for people to start to really grasp this?
if that is America, then it is the world. and remember, Columbia is a group of liberal elitists, a real hotbed (as they used to say) a anti american, anti Israeli, anti semitic, anti free enterprise radicals.
let me guess, your solution is communism, so you can make everything of what you complain (assuming it is true) about a million times worse.
add anti western, anti judeo christian, to that.
You forgot pro-Soviet (from the old days): http://historyhalf.com/columbi.....communism/
And pro Mogadisu-type killing of American soldiers: http://historyhalf.com/columbia-university-today/
The solutoin then is to destroy government power, so they can stop stealing from people.
that is the hilarious and sad truth of the Robber Barons: they never robbed anyone. The government robbed and handed over our property to them.
Do we really have to be reduced to eating trash out of gutters for people to start to really grasp this?
Do check out the post above on the new foraging movement, DW.
Yes, thanks for the tip.
BAAALLLLKKOOOO!!
oh wait..
DAAAAMMMOOONNN!!!
At least their valedictorians don't plagiarize comedians in their speeches.
At least their valedictorians don't plagiarize comedians in their speeches.
Thank you for share with us?I like Chanel,especially Chanel Necklace,it is good
Thank you for share with us?I like Chanel,especially Chanel Necklace,it is good.
Thank you for share with us?I like Wholesale Chanel,especially Wholesale Chanel jewelry,it is good.We have a link:www.chanelbags1.com
Thank you for share with us?I like Wholesale Chanel,especially Wholesale Chanel jewelry,it is good.
At least their valedictorians don't plagiarize comedians in their speeches.
Christian Louboutin
Christian Louboutin Shoes
christian louboutin sale
Christian Louboutin Boots
Christian Louboutin Pumps
Discount Christian Louboutin
asdasdad
http://www.luckyboot.com
http://www.luckyboot.com/chris.....-p-54.html
Supra sneakers
Mens Supra shoes
There are some classic Supra sneakers, and I am sure that everyone knows, the unstoppable Supra Skytop. This is easily the most popular Supra footwear per minute, simply go to the MTV and shows the cult by wearing them. Supra Thunder shoes becomes the most popular style of the Mens Supra shoeson 2010. You should know that Supra Suprano shoes are loving by the most young people who also like the skateboarding. In particular, Supra Indy should continue with the Skate scene in recent years their cause. Supra Strapped NSabove was recently that II of the above are the same love, said above Supra Skytop NS world tour. It is the prefect design that wearing the Supra Society shoes while you are playing the skateboarding. Supra Cruizer on the hot sale for you.
christian louboutin gold glitter pumps
Christian Louboutin Macarena 120 Wedges
which limited the actions of Congress and by extension had to be incorporated, the Second Amendment stated that RKBA was not to be infringed, and lacked detail as to by whom, and therefore applied to all government. By its very language it was already applicable to the states!
I really think it's easier to just skip to the end and write an article about how sad we were that property.
Thanks for the Great article you have posted i liked it very much,it was full of information and was very interesting to read i have also suggested my friends to have look on this website to have the information.
First of all let me tell you, you have got a great blog .I am interested in looking for more of such topics and would like to have further information.Hope to see the next blog soon.
Your post is really good providing good information.. I liked it and enjoyed reading it.Keep sharing such important posts.
The limited the actions of Congress and by extension had to be incorporated. | RAN ran ran ??? ??? ??? |
http://thesoftshops.com is a good website.
its very language it was already applicable to the states!
good
what would Bill Ayers do?
good