Redevelopment Authorities (and Their Eminent Domain Abuses) Resurrected in California
Better hope your city doesn't think your property would look better as a Bed, Bath & Beyond


Chalk up a new win for municipal central planners and the cronies who benefit from them in California. Gov. Jerry Brown, who famously killed off California's corrupt, land-stealing redevelopment agencies a few years back, has signed into law AB 2, which resurrects them under new rules.
This means once again California cities will be able to seize private property to hand over to private developers, all in the name of "improving" their communities. And it deliberately targets poor communities. Among the thresholds for a city to designate an area to start meddling (further) via a special redevelopment authority: an annual median household income less than 80 percent annual median income; unemployment at least 3 percent higher than state unemployment; crime rate 5 percent higher than median crime rate statewide; deteriorating infrastructure; and deteriorating homes and or commercial buildings. The fact that a city can declare a section subject to redevelopment partly on the basis of the city itself failing to maintain its own infrastructure is one of those things that makes you shake your head.
Here's what the California Alliance to Protect Private Property Rights has to say about the new program:
While many states across the nation have imposed restrictions on government's use of eminent domain for economic gain, California has expanded its power, all in the name of redevelopment. Community Revitalization Investment Authorities introduce the worst form of corporate welfare. They allow taxpayer dollars to be used to forcibly seize private property from unwilling sellers to make way for private development. As in the past, the combination of eminent domain and the potential for profit will only lead to abuse, wasteful spending and public corruption. Today was a major setback for private property rights in California."
Despite state audits that concluded that redevelopment agencies wasted taxpayer dollars and had marginal economic benefit, the Governor's action will restore redevelopment-era practices that exploited the vulnerable. The legislation introduces new blight designations that allow private property to be forcibly seized depending on the local unemployment rate, criteria beyond the control of property owners.
AB 2 does not restore the redevelopment agencies exactly as they were back in the day. Steven Greenhut noted back in May that the new law doesn't let these new authorities siphon money away from other special districts like schools and fire departments (Brown didn't eliminate the redevelopment agencies because of a love of property rights or hatred of cronyist corruption; rather, he wanted to direct the money back to the school districts to fill budget gaps). Members of the community will also be on a panel overseeing these projects. That's slightly better than previous redevelopment agencies, though I think it underestimates the number of citizen busybodies who would be more than happy to pave over their poorer neighborhoods over the possiiblity of a new movie theater.
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There goes the neighborhood....
If they take everyone's property, who will need to buy anything at the new BBB?
They don't take everyone's property, though. They just take the property of the unconnected and/or icky people.
"They just take the property of the unconnected and/or icky people."
I'm registered as a 'libertarian' on the voter lists; you think my complaints get attention from my D city supervisor?
They'll start renting out bunk space in the "Beyond" section.
I don't know, that's a scary place.
Could we all just live in Bed, Bath & Beyonds? I'm OK with that.
Good idea. I can work with that!
All the people who will move into those city-built, city-planned condo-complexes in that great public/private partnership!
Seems like an effective way to increase the median income of your community.
The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the one.
Tough shit, Granny. Pack your bags.
The needs of the many (bourgeois) outweigh the needs of the one (proletariat).
Some animals are more equal than others.
Governor Moonbeam - Making California Less Inviting for...a Shitload of Years
I've already recounted this but it fits here: one of my academic friends posted the following on their FB page: "If we lived in a sane political world instead of the bizzaro one of today, Jerry Brown would be considered a serious candidate for president."
Stay away from that Facebook, man. It'll rot your brain.
One of your academic friends? God help us and, if he's a professor, his students.
all this does is create more expensive housing and more homelessness
And?
/coalition of property-owners and pub-sec unions
Seems like a job opportunity to me... agencies to deal with expensive housing and homelessness.
If you wanna make an omelette you gotta break a few legs.
+1 Nice little place ya got there....
Chalk up a new win for municipal central planners and the cronies who benefit from them in California. Gov. Jerry Brown, who famously killed off California's corrupt, land-stealing redevelopment agencies a few years back, has signed into law AB 2, which resurrects them under new rules.
Oh you thought these people (yeah, I said 'these people') were just gonna go away?
deteriorating infrastructure
So basically, city legislatures can hand-pick which areas they want to declare blighted just by messing with the road repair and utility funding. How much more ripe for abuse can something be?
all this does is create more expensive housing and more homelessness
And, in a completely unrelated and surprising news story, Los Angeles has pledged to spend 100 million dollars on "solving" the homeless problem.
an annual median household income less than 80 percent annual median income; unemployment at least 3 percent higher than state unemployment; crime rate 5 percent higher than median crime rate statewide; deteriorating infrastructure; and deteriorating homes and or commercial buildings.
Apparently this is the new definition of a slum. Slightly below average.
Imagine what this means in San Francisco. One couple decides that one of them makes enough to support their family of 4.3. But the neighbors with no kids have two incomes and decide to blow half of their money in Vegas twice a year. The household making 175K is 50% below the couple making 350K.
If you aren't keeping up with the Joneses, you are a blight on the neighborhood.
Do to property taxes,which I am against,you don't own your house.You pay yearly rent.Now when the powers that be belive they can get a better take,they send your ass down the road.My parents have lived in their house since 1960,been paid off since 1984,and they send in their rent every 6 months.
It's amazing how property taxes have become a perverse incentive for municipalities to cancel your lease so they can get better renters.
plus, California is even worse, because the taxes are almost like rent control. i knew a guy who lived there... kids grown... and when he did the math, it would have cost him the same amount of money (mortgage + Taxes) to move into a house that was worth half as much.
I wonder if those particular thresholds were selected with some particular municipality in mind....
Ah yes, steal poor people's shit, who can't afford lawyers BTW, and give it to the rich. It's a shame most of those targeted by this will still happily pull the lever for Brown and his ilk.