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Will There Finally be Some Development on the Land Condemned in Kelo v. City of New London?
A new development project may finally build new housing on on property whose condemnation for purposes of "economic development" was upheld by the Supreme Court in a controversial 2005 decision.

The recent release of Justice John Paul Stevens' papers have attracted new attention to the Supreme Court's controversial 2005 ruling in Kelo v. City of New London, the 5-4 decision in which the justices ruled that the condemnation of homes for "private economic development" is permissible under the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment, which only allows takings that are for a "public use." Notoriously, the development project that supposedly justified the condemnations fell through, and nothing was actually built on the property where the dispossessed owners' homes previously stood. Since the last homeowners were forced out and their houses torn down, the only regular users of the condemned land were a colony of feral cats.

That may now be in the process of changing. While I missed the news at the time, in January the Renaissance City Development Association (the private nonprofit development firm formerly known as the New London Development Corporation, which took ownership of the property after it was taken by eminent domain) sold the condemned land to a developer, which may plan to build new housing on it. The New London Day reported some details on January 19:
[A]ll the properties on the Fort Trumbull peninsula are slated for development.
Parcels on the peninsula, which also is home to Fort Trumbull State Park, have been vacant for almost 20 years. The land was cleared for development in a move by the city that led to the landmark 2005 U.S. Supreme Court decision, Kelo v. New London, about the use of eminent domain….
The land is owned and marketed by the city's development arm, the Renaissance City Development Association.
According to a development agreement between RCDA and RJ Development, parcels labeled 1A and 3C were sold for $500,000 and parcel 4A was sold for $1. The developer agreed to pay a $30,000 deposit to show its commitment.
The agreement states the projects on the property will primarily consist of, but will not be limited to, "the construction of residential units to be offered for market rate sale or rent/lease," with the associated parking and other improvements.
Parcels 3C (formerly part of a larger unit called Parcel 3) and 4A are the former sites of the residential properties condemned in the Kelo litigation. Susette Kelo's famous "little pink house," which became a nationally known symbol of the case, was on 4A.
A later story, published on February 3, provides some additional information, including that the low price of Parcel 4A was because of the "cost of remediating the remaining contamination of soil and groundwater." That contamination apparently developed during the long period when the parcel lay empty.
I have not been able to find any further information on what exactly RJ Development plans to build and when construction will be completed. The project is not listed on their website, which does however describe in detail another project they are doing in the area. I have contacted RJ Development to see if they are willing to provide any details. If I learn anything of interest, I will post it right here at the Volokh Conspiracy blog!
Since 2005, several efforts to redevelop the condemned land have fallen through. Hopefully, this one will succeed. But even if it does, I don't think it will somehow vindicate the Kelo condemnations. The new development initiative is obviously different from the badly misconceived plan that led to the use of eminent domain over twenty years ago. Moreover, by the time any construction is completed, the land will have lain unused (except by feral cats!) for nearly twenty years. From the standpoint of promoting development, that's an enormous waste.
The region would almost certainly have been better off economically if the original owners had been allowed to keep living there, paying property taxes, and contributing to the local economy. And that doesn't even consider the enormous pain and suffering the original development project inflicted on those who lost their homes (including some who sold them "voluntarily" as a result of harassment and the threat of eminent domain). I describe the history of the condemnation process and the harm it inflicted in much more detail in The Grasping Hand: Kelo v. City of New London and the Limits of Eminent Domain, my book about the Kelo case and its aftermath.
As I have previously emphasized in the book and elsewhere, the flaws in the New London development project don't necessarily prove that the Court got the Kelo decision wrong. Plenty of unjust and ill-conceived government policies are still legal. But there are in fact compelling reasons to reject the Court's reasoning, from the standpoint of both originalism and living constitutionalism. At least four current Supreme Court justices have expressed interest in revisiting and possibly overruling Kelo, and I hope it will indeed eventually be overruled. In the meantime, I will do what I can to find out what, if anything, is going to be built on the two parcels.
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So a quick scan shows that Kelo resulted in the loss of their homes for long time, taxpaying residents and in the intervening 20 years the property became a home for feral cats and contaminated.
Sounds like a typical government outcome.
Remember when George W Bush used eminent domain and taxpayer dollars to build his ballpark…and it was obsolete after a few years?? And then dumbasses like you voted him president because he had the same name as the president 8 years before?? And now you hate Bush because you know he despises dumbasses like you??
Don't you mean the Supreme Court "installed" him as President?
The alternative was Al "My Private Jet is Environmentally Friendly" Gore.
And I didn't have to wait for Trump to start despising Shrub.
Take your head out of your butt sometime. Your mom's basement isn't much, but the view will nonetheless be improved. Probably.
Show us on the doll where George Bush touched you.
7000 of our best and brightest sacrificed to slaughter hundreds of thousands of innocent Muslims…totes worth it!
You're even stupider than the actual Sam Bankman-Fried,
I'm Ass-suming, since you don't specify and expect the readers to know, that you're referring to "The Ballpark at Arlington" home field of the Texas Rangers from 2004-2019.
Of course it's had ("other" names) Globe Life Park in Arlington (2014–2021)
Rangers Ballpark in Arlington (2007–2013)
Ameriquest Field in Arlington (2005–2006)
The Ballpark in Arlington (1994–2004)
Today it's Choctaw Stadium, formerly Globe Life Park, is an American multi-purpose stadium in Arlington, Texas, between Dallas and Fort Worth. Originally built as a baseball stadium, it was home to the Texas Rangers of Major League Baseball and the Texas Rangers Baseball Hall of Fame from 1994 through 2019, when the team vacated the stadium for Globe Life Field. It was constructed as a replacement for nearby Arlington Stadium and opened in April 1994 as The Ballpark in Arlington.
In 2020, it was retrofitted for use as a football and soccer facility. The stadium is the home of the Arlington Renegades of the XFL, North Texas SC of MLS Next Pro (FC Dallas's reserve team), and the Dallas Jackals of Major League Rugby.[5] The venue also hosts the Six Flags Entertainment Corporation's world headquarters.[6]
On August 25, 2021, Choctaw Casinos & Resorts bought the naming rights to the stadium.[
Obsolete after a "few" years??
Senescent Joe's (been) obsolete for decades,
Frank
That ballpark was a hellhole in the summer…you know when the sport of baseball is played??? Duuuuuuuuuh. But it all worked out for you…you got your dick hard watching Bush slaughter hundreds of thousands of innocent Muslims. I bet when little Muslim kids got their legs blown off by our bombs made your dick the hardest??
Oh joy, another troll.
Love the old days when "Mainstream" Repubiclowns like Ford/Ronaldus Maximus/George Herbert appointed Surpremes like Stevens, Kennedy, and Souter (horrible fastball, unlike B. Sutter)
While a businessman with minimal political background appointed 3 Surpremes, who if not perfect, probably wouldn't have voted like the aforementioned,
Not sure how the newest Surpreme Ka-grungi Jackson Brown, who can't tell a Dick from a Pussy, would vote,
Frank "Never been slapped with a Pussy, wait a minute.... or a Dick either"
The RepooplicKKKunt backlash to Kelo is what led to Marlins Ballpark…the second worst building ever built in the history of the world after the Ballpark at Arlington which Bush built using eminent domain and taxpayer dollars and still somehow was obsolete after a few years!?! The Jesus Lover screws up everything he gropes!
(Partial) GOP opposition to eminent domain led to more GOP eminent domain? How?
Your brain is badly broken.
Rubio passed a law that made eminent domain illegal and so the Marlins panicked and went with the first and worst option.
Admit it faggot, you've never been to either,
talk about "Obselete" how much did NYC pay to "renovate" Yankee Stadium in 1974-1975?? Bascially tore it down and built a new stadium in the same spot, without the features that made the original so cool (Monuments/Flagpole in play, Grandstand "Frieze")
and hey, your "RepoolicKKKunt" is obviously based on my "DemoKKKrat" usage, prepare to be Served!!!!! (OK, I know you'll react to a theoretical "Serving" like I would)
You know a nice ballpark? after all these years?? Dodger Stadium
I know you can buy them locally in LA, but nothing like a "Dodger Dog" at the park,
Frank "why do Dodgers have to be "Blue"??"
If there is a reason this blog censors a commenter who uses a term such as “sl_ck-jaw_ed” or “p_ssy” to describe conservatives but does not censor a commenter who uses a vile racial slur or homophobic slur, I encourage the Volokh Conspiracy to identify that reason.
Otherwise, people could get the wrong idea, and conclude that the Volokh Conspiracy is operated by a bunch of cowards, hypocrites, and bigots.
Cowards.
Hypocrites.
Bigots.
Please do what you can to dispel those impressions, Volokh Conspirators.
Or, instead, feel free to continue to generate them.
Cowards.
Hypocrites.
Bigots.
If governments were seizing private property to build housing for illegal immigrants, Traitor Somin would be cheering it on.
"But there are in fact compelling reasons to reject the Court's reasoning, from the standpoint of both originalism and living constitutionalism."
Yes, originalism and living constitutionanlism are the only two options.
And this is *not* a case of better late than never. More like, better never than late.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JylbxFYc83k
And even if they took her property to build a free hospital, it would still be unjust.
“Plenty of unjust and ill-conceived government policies are still legal.”
Maybe so, but this one leans in the unconstitutional direction. It’s one thing to regulate property for the common good, another thing to take property and give it to someone else deemed more worthy (as determined by a pure and unsullied-by-hidden-agendas local government).
"Yes, originalism and living constitutionanlism are the only two options."
Reading the text the way you would any document you wanted to understand, and pulling it out of your ass, DO seem to cover the field. What's the third option, a Magic 8 ball?
Not even the many flavors of originalism are reading the text as you would any other document.
“we must never forget that it is a constitution we are expounding.”
Intentionalism. Purposivism. Original meaning. Precedent. Structuralism. Historical practice. Modern language.
All of these are directive in some way other than pulling it out of your ass. You can have your preferred method, but your habit of saying all the non-Brett methods are false and all policy preferences is your own pride and nothing else.
Amendment 5 "... nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation."
Benefiting private land devlopers at the expense of private homeowners is a real stretch of private property "taken for public use". Taking private property for public uses (canals, dams, roads, bridges which benefit the general public and which are difficut to do without using imminent domain) is one thing. Government taking neighborhoods for private projects of private developers too lazy to negotiate with the home owners is not clearly "taken for public use" even if the lure to government is increased business taxes. In my not so humble opinion, the benefit of such use of eminent domain is to allow private developers to deny just compensation to private property owners for the seizure of their property by private developers for private use, aided and abetted in such land grabs by the government.
If the City of New London allowed the private home owners to stay in their homes in Parcel 3C and 4A, the benefit to the City of New London would have been the property taxes paid to the city by the home owners. Apparently somebody immediately benefited from seizure of the property by New London Development Corp. and condemnation and destruction of the homes. In the long run, the main beneficiaries have been "a colony of feral cats". Another beneficary will be who ever cleans up the contamination that built up after the land at the demolished home sites sat unused for decades.
I find it easer to condemn Kelo than to defend it.
” … ; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.”
The amendments pack in so much in so few words. It is done with peculiar, by modern standards, punctuation of clauses. Liberal use of semi-colons to join ideas which seem little related. In this instance, witness against one’s self is the immediate preceding clause to confiscation of property.
What if the clause had said “nor shall private property be taken
for public use, without just compensation.” Would that have been more clear or less clear for intent? As it stands, one could read the original clause to imply either: 1. the amendment is moot on whether compensation is required should the property be taken for any purpose other than for public use. Hence, no compensation is constitutionally required to rob peter to give to paul, so to speak. 2. one concludes that private use is not addressed within the text because contemplation of such was assumed to be impermissible, and so obviously so that it need not warrant mention. 3. or the grey zone where courts are permitted/encouraged to stretch ‘public’ to mean almost anything they want it to mean.But for brevity's sake, the BoR was written more as guidelines, than an actual script that could be followed. That many states followed Kelo with legislation circumscribing this practice shows what really need be done in so many things for clarity. The court's judgement should be the last bulwark of defense against tyranny against the machinations of the executive, with the legislative branch showing some strength.
I figure that they didn't bother writing some things into the Constitution or Bill of Rights, on the theory that nobody who needed them written down would CARE that they were written down.
That there's no point in specifically addressing points which would only be raised by somebody approaching the document in bad faith, because if people approaching the document in bad faith were in charge, addressing those points would be futile.
So, yes, of course 2 is the correct choice.
Ironically, use of eminent domain to establish a colony for feral cats would probably be consistent with the dissent's view of eminent domain.