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New Article on "The Constitutional Case Against Exclusionary Zoning"
Coauthor Josh Braver and I argue exclusionary zoning violates the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment.

My new article, "The Constitutional Case Against Exclusionary Zoning" (coauthored with Josh Braver of the University of Wisconsin) is now available for free download on SSRN. It is also under submission to law reviews. The problem it addresses is, in my view, the most important constitutional property rights issue of our time, and one of the most significant constitutional issues of any kind, given the enormous harm zoning restrictions inflict. That's an admission against interest, as I have spent much of my career writing about public use and eminent domain.
Here is the abstract:
We argue that exclusionary zoning—the imposition of restrictions on the amount and types of housing that property owners are allowed to build— is unconstitutional because it violates the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Exclusionary zoning has emerged as a major political and legal issue. A broad cross-ideological array of economists and land-use scholars have concluded that it is responsible for massive housing shortages in many parts of the United States, thereby cutting off millions of people – particularly the poor and minorities - from economic and social opportunities. In the process, it also stymies economic growth and innovation, making the nation as a whole poorer.
Exclusionary zoning is permitted under Euclid v. Ambler Realty, the 1926 Supreme Court decision holding that exclusionary zoning is largely exempt from constitutional challenge under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and by extension also the Takings Clause. Despite the wave of academic and public concern about the issue, so far, no modern in-depth scholarly analysis has advocated overturning or severely limiting Euclid. Nor has any scholar argued that exclusionary zoning should be invalidated under the Takings Clause, more generally.
We contend Euclid should be reversed or strictly limited, and that exclusionary zoning restrictions should generally be considered takings requiring compensation. This conclusion follows from both originalism and a variety of leading living constitution theories. Under originalism, the key insight is that property rights protected by the Takings Clause include not only the right to exclude, but also the right to use property. Exclusionary zoning violates this right because it severely limits what owners can build on their land. Exclusionary zoning is also unconstitutional from the standpoint of a variety of progressive living constitution theories of interpretation, including Ronald Dworkin's "moral reading," representation-reinforcement theory, and the emerging "anti-oligarchy" constitutional theory. The article also considers different strategies for overruling or limiting Euclid, and potential synergies between constitutional litigation and political reform of zoning.
The paper is an example of cross-ideological collaboration. Josh Braver is a progressive and a living constitutionalist. I am a libertarian, generally sympathetic to originalism. We started discussing the issue of zoning after taking opposite sides of a debate over judicial review at the University of Wisconsin, sponsored by the Wisconsin chapters of the American Constitution Society and the Federalist Society. Although we differ on many other issues, we found that we agree on this one!
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"Trees have Standing" look up the law review article. Snail darter fish are also entitled to a Supreme Court hearing. All in the "progressive living constitution." George Washington did not tell a lie but he violated a cherry tree and the Constitution.
Please document his cutting down the cherry tree.
My best information is that it was fabricated in the 19th Century by schoolteachers trying to explain Washington's character.
Apologies, Paul Bunyon, might oak, with an axe.
"A five-times deported migrant is now in ICE custody after being charged with killing a 10-year-old boy in a hit-and-run incident in Texas."
Do you have any thoughts about zoning?
MY thought about zoning is that it is clear that a rather large fraction of the population like living at moderate population densities. But moderate population densities are not sustainably available unless individual property owners can be prevented from increasing the population density on their own properties, because they're not stable against individual property owners exploiting the value of being in one by building higher density housing on their property.
This makes "suburbs" a good which is only sustainable given zoning.
Now, this isn't to say that zoning can't be abused. It can and it is, but mostly due to agent/principal problems; The interests of inhabitants of an area and the interests of the people running the government are not the same, and the latter tend to change zoning rules to favor their own interests.
The same sort of agent/principal problem is responsible for immigration, mostly illegal, sustainably being considerably higher than voters want.
Ironically, rather than seeing this as a problem Somin views it as a way to defeat the actual people living in an area, and impose rules they don't like...
I think I've identified a unifying principle of Somin's work: He refuses to accept that there are valuable goods that can only exist so long as people can band together, agree to abide by mutual restrictions, and then exclude anyone who won't comply with them.
He's the sort of crude libertarian anarchist that I'd reasoned myself out of being while still in my teens...
I also like zoning up to a point - you cannot trust the free market to make things logistically orderly.
However, it's become an entitlement. Look at all the people out and proud in their use of zoning as a way to add to their personal value to the determent of everyone else. That is agency capture at a small scale; it is not what zoning is for; it's selfish, and it's creating externalities that are going to bork the market at a scale zoning-as-planning does not.
You've got agency capture, and you've got agent/principal problem where the agency gets captured by itself. Every system has its failure modes. EVERY system. The government's failure modes can be pretty nasty, as they involve shooting people.
The free market's classic failure mode is that the actual business men don't LIKE free markets. As Adam Smith noted, you can hardly get two businessmen in the same industry together without them plotting a way to render the market unfree.
The free market is like weight loss by diet and exercise. It works, but it's unpleasant, everybody is looking for shortcuts.
And yet, the free market DOES need some degree of regulation to work. Mostly to avert cheating and cartels. But they're the first thing successful businesses target to take over.
In the end, no system works without continual scrutiny.
Except why is this not takings
BLM proposes to open 22 million acres in Western states to solar development
S-O: "you cannot trust the free market to make things logistically orderly"
Please drive around Houston sometime and see that you are wrong. There, the government builds the roads on 1 mile grid and the free market fills in the middle. Maybe your idea of "order" doesn't like having a strip mall with a church surrounded by a strip club and adult bookstore, near to a gun shop and Mexican restaurant, but it seems to work!
That actually sounds a lot like this area in SC.
You are so callous about things like death of a child it puzzles me that people even talk with you.
This is a farcical notion. There are literally no damages to trigger a taking's claim, unless there is a change in zoning from when the property was purchased. The property, as purchased, already was subject to exclusionary zoning. The diminution in value resulting from the zoning was already factored into the purchase price. QED, the person now holding the property has experienced no loss from the zoning.
Reason's war on zoning is almost as moronic as its insistence on open borders. Give it a rest.
This was my take (pun intended) on this as well. In fact, the exclusionary zoning can add value to the property since it restricts what types of uses are permitted.
Exactly. I'm not buying a lot to park my 2 million dollar house next to a potential garbage dump, for instance.
Certainly not at these mortgage rates!
If exclusionary zoning adds value, doesn't it follow that any relaxation of the zoning restrictions is a taking that needs to be compensated?
Repeal all zoning, shut down the office, lay off all the inspectors and staff, and send every property owner in the city a fat check to compensate. I'll take that deal.
I'll bet the "repeal zoning" crowd would move the first time someone built a section 8 high rise in their neighborhood. YIMBY on the streets, NIMBY in the sheets is my experience.
I agree that Prof Somin is arguing against a straw man.
If there were examples of localities changing zoning laws without warning to frustrate development efforts, I'd be sympathetic to takings claims.
But I don't see that happening often. If anything, I see the opposite -- changing zoning laws and granting variances to politically-favored entities in order to permit development.
As you and others have noted, none of this bears on zoning regs that have been in existence for a long time. Around here many of the codes date from the 1920s. Anybody buying property is well aware of those restrictions, and in most instances, is buying because of, rather than in spite of, such restrictions.
Way to miss the point.
Not far back in time, there were no zoning restrictions. Zoning restrictions were nevertheless passed and imposed on property which was currently owned yet no compensation was offered to the then-owners. The fact that the property was re-sold after does nothing to make the original imposition a compensated taking. Just like the new owner inherits any legal encumbrances on the property (such as hidden pollution), the new owner also inherits any unexploited legal rights. If the original taking was unconstitutional, the current owner may legally make such a challenge. (Whether and how much the new owner would have to share with the prior owner is an interesting question that will depend on the sale contract.)
More than that, however, zoning is generally bad in its own right. Regardless of compensation, it's government attempting through central planning to pick winners and losers in the market. Governments are notoriously bad at that. Reason is entirely right to lobby against such an insidious practice.
If the original taking was unconstitutional, the current owner may legally make such a challenge.
OK. But the challenge is nonsense from an economic point of view. The current owner knew what he was buying, and, if in fact the zoning lowered the value of the property he benefited by getting a lower price.
Still missing the point. The original taking (via zoning) was unjust and remains eligible for correction. You can't simply wave away that deficiency and pretend that the status quo is just.
No, if the original zoning change was unjust the loss is that owner's alone, everyone subsequent to that paid the correct price with that change baked in. In fact if the detrimental zoning were to he repealed the current owner would be enriched by the change, not the harmed party, if different.
Exactly this.
At SOME point, you have to let the past be the past.
Rossami, if Farmer Brown's place gets zoned for agricultural use, thus leaving him free to farm exactly as before, but with less risk of suffering from adjacent incompatible uses, what taking do you suppose has happened? Do you want to permit a speculative case, that Brown has been deprived of liberty to subdivide to serve a market which might coalesce decades hence?
What if the agricultural zoning conveniences farming, at the expense of subdivision residents on adjacent properties (commonplace, by the way)? Do you assert those subdivision residents have a takings case of their own, because the zoning forecloses nuisance claims against Brown's stinky manuring operations, and thus diminishes the value of the subdivision property? If the subdivision residents win, Brown loses. Does justice demand both sides win, and the government pay both?
Your staggering lack of understanding of standing is evident in your every word.
If you buy a piece of zoned property TODAY then you pay a lower price for it (if the author's point is to be believed) then you would have if it was unzoned. This means that you have ALL of the diminished value still in your pocket, by virtue of having paid less in the first place. You're the one that doesn't get it. Also "zoning is recent" might be true in relation to the age of the earth, but it predates the owners of pretty much every piece of property in America.
aaaah, but maybe you are both wrong.
Your take on his view means that NY's rent control is a fine thing.
And your own view doesn't see the the forest for the trees --no, change forest to galaxy
IS THIS NOT A GALACTIC TAKINGS
BLM proposes to open 22 million acres in Western states to solar development
OK Ilya — I argue that ALL zoning is unconstitutional, but that neighbors should be able to bring trespass suits under the old (17th Century) law for things such as blocking sunlight onto their property.
I’d really like to see your answer to this — which I doubt you have.
But answer this if you dare: EXACTLY what is the difference between me having a multi-family house on my property and me repairing cars on my property? Exactly how is the neighborhood less impacted by the vehicles of the five families living on my property than it would be by the patronage of my store? (And historically, store owners lived over their stores in the same building.)
(As an aside, my store would close at some hour of the evening, while my tenant can be having a loud fight with her boyfriend de jour at 2 AM....)
Why should zoning prohibit a MD or lawyer from having an office in their home (which most communities now prohibit)? And what no one’s talking about is telecommuting and the “home office” which is in violation of such ordinances.
If I drive a dump truck, why can’t I park it in my driveway? If I’m an owner/operator of a tractor/trailer, why can’t I park it in my driveway? (You can’t park a commercial vehicle in a residential area.)
What the hell is the difference between any of this and your “bury the US in your horde of immigrants” approach?
Your argument would have merit IF you applied it to ALL zoning. But you don’t…
A house renter on my street in a Florida resort community used the garage to do his auto body shop business while he looked for a place, car paint down the street gutters, 18 hour a day grinding and painting, he was a hard worker, drove the other 6 hours to pick up junks. Why have zomning or renting restrictions? Anti social, anti environmental, no common sense people.
"Why have zomning [sic] or renting restrictions?"
Because of this: "car paint down the street gutters, 18 hour a day grinding and painting"
His neighbors should not have to put up with that.
If it truly was car paint, that is not only a hazmat but restricted so that you need a special license to buy it now. A competent municipality could have dealt with this.
Heck, a competent fire department WOULD HAVE because that stuff is also quite flammable.
BTW, did you see what I wrote about trespass suits?
Town issued citation for night noise. Red stains in gutter insufficient to prove paint ??? He moved out. What type of person lets car paint wash down the street Destination Gulf of Mexico? A transient renter.
If they didn't prove it was paint, did they test for blood?
Maybe he just tried to collect from a customer.
Red stains in the street, depending on what they are, ARE insufficient to prove paint, particularly since auto paint is not water soluble! Do you have any idea how many GALLONS it would take to make it down the street -- and that stuff is EXPENSIVE.
Now latex house paint -- maybe (although I doubt it). But not auto paint. And if the municipality cited him for noise (which they can't prove), I'm sure they would have cited him for the red stain if they could have. QED it wasn't what you want to believe.
There's wild berries that make red stains -- I'm thinking northern species but honeysuckle, cherry (wild & domestic) and grapes all come to mind -- and birds are often nice enough to transport them and dump them in their feces.
But if you're getting rid of zoning there is zero reason to deny him the next level of permission slip.
Upon what do you base that conclusion?
The adjective "exclusionary."
If he writes an article about reducing forest fires, do you conclude he therefore doesn't care about house fires?
Are you really that stupid?
Worse, do you think the rest of us are?
For the record, I think you are far stupider than any human conception of "that stupid" could possibly be.
THis just confuses a word with a thing.
You don't want doctor parking in your residential area because you have children. Call it 'zoning' if you want but I like my kids to be safe.
Zoning has destroyed many areas but that is not to make all zoning wrong. Other vices are at work, like greed and cowardice.
"progressive and a living constitutionalist. I am a libertarian"
A modern Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact.
OK Bob.
That's funny.
Ilya is as much a Libertarian as Vaush.
How does "exclusionary zoning" differ from "zoning" here?
My interpretation was:
- exclusionary zoning = you can't build that here
- other zoning = you can build it but you have to comply with these safety codes, etc. Something like preventing you from putting up a 30 story building on a lot only 10' wide with sandy soil that can't safely handle the load. Or maybe 'your fence has to be set far enough back from the property line that you can cut your own grass and weeds without trespassing on your neighbors' land'.
But I could be wrong.
any law about property can be interpreted that way
Is the common sense fence law a case of exclusionary zoning
A fence on a boundary is presumed to be common unless there is proof to the contrary. When adjoining lands are enclosed, a landowner may compel his neighbors to contribute to the expense of making and repairing common fences by which the respective lands are separated.
But if your neighbor is poor or an illegal immigrant etc. where is the fence law?
“exclusionary zoning” – you can’t do what we want you to do. “zoning” – you can't do everything else…
Politically I think exclusionary zoning, in regards to homes, is a bad idea but I don't see the constitutional case.
1) I don't see why it would be constitutional to zone commercial vs residential, but not limit what type of residences. Both have the same effect on property use. So their is no proper limit on this argument only to exclusionary zoning vs any zoning and I don't think that is unconstitutional. Overused, and many instances bad policy? Yes. But not unconstitutional.
2) Calling it a taking also is hard to fit unless the government changed the zoning after land purchase otherwise they are getting what they purchased. Maybe Euclid can be limited so that such a change can be argued as a regulatory taking but that is about it.
What about cities that change the zoning based on whether the right or wrong person bought the property?
But zoning often increases the value of property.
How do I know this? Because owners of zoned residential property often fight against removing restrictions. Maybe there are cases where they wanted the restrictions removed, but which do you think is more common?
And who exactly enacted the zoning laws long ago? Wouldn't it often have been the owners themselves?
Owners of zoned residential property often fight against removing restrictions on other people's property, not on their own.
Well, they fight against removing restrictions on the neighborhood they live in, which includes their property as well as others'.
If the zoning restrictions actually increased property values generally, then who would be fighting to overturn them?
1) Developers who want to buy in and, uuuh, develop
2) Do-gooders/social engineers that want to "solve the housing crisis" on the backs of towns in which they do not live. Cf. Hochul, K.
3) misfits, malcontents, and contrarians
Aren't you a social engineer yourself, wanting to NOT address housing issues, in defense of the 'character' of towns in which you also do not live?
Huh?
I am not the one arguing that zoning is per se unconstitutional. Nor am I saying that towns should not be able to eliminate or revise their zoning rules. If Brookline MA wants to change their zoning to allow more multi-family dwellings, God bless 'em. If New Rochelle NY thinks a passel of new high-rise apartments will help revitalize revitalize its downtown, we'll see if it works.
What I am saying is that the fine folks in Brookline or New Rochelle should not be dictating to my town what we should do with zoning, and vice versa.
You are not arguing mere legality, but morality. You are endorsing pulling up the ladder after you once you've made it into a nice neighborhood as your right, and a pretty cool deal as well.
I'm not sure that's legal, but I am sure that's selfish.
Sarcastr0, what do you think zoning is? I think it is properly regulation of styles of property use, to group uses with an eye to creating compatibilities, and reducing incompatibilities. What about that has anything to do with pulling up a ladder?
Sarcastr0 is tacitly assuming that the existing subdivision is the only place in the world to live, I suspect.
I am not pulling up any "ladders."
The "ladder" has been pulled up since 1920 or so, and everybody who bought in since was well aware of that fact.
3) Not particularly do-gooding local governments, who want to increase their property tax revenues at the expense of the existing population's standard of living.
#1 doesn't make sense. The developers can only make money via removing zoning restrictions if the zoning restrictions reduce the value of property.
What the zoning restrictions cost the individual property owner is the value of the first mover advantage in changing the character of the neighborhood. A value that can only be extracted by one or two property owners in an area.
What the zoning restrictions give the individual property owner is the value of knowing that the character of the neighborhood won't change. This value is available to everybody living in the neighborhood simultaneously.
Nieporent, the value of property to someone who wants to live on it gets weighed in a different scale than the value of property to someone who will not live there, but instead use it as a commodity to sell and profit from.
On what basis other than an ideological preference do you insist on dictating what scale to use? Why are losses inflicted on the resident scale negligible, but gains weighed in the commercial scale sacrosanct?
More generally, why should anyone suppose it is legitimate for one wealthy person to use wealth as a means to safeguard access to peace, safety, privacy, and beauty, but illegitimate for a host of the less wealthy to use access to government process to accomplish the same objectives?
Nope.
Because "using wealth" in the way we're discussing is voluntary, and using government process is coercive.
"Nope," is your libertarian fantasy at work.
Yup. Zoning is a legal manifestation of an alternative scale at work. You do not like that, but that does not mean two different means of measure are not simultaneously at work in American governance.
...who would be fighting to overturn them?
Those seeking greater return. A quarter acre lot may be worth more with a three story sixplex than a single family house. Zoning keeps those nasty apartment dwellers out of the McMansion neighborhood.
Yeah, so.
Deploying the power of government for your own, explicitly selfish, ends.
Part of small government and personal responsibility, folks!
Deploying the power of government for your own, explicitly selfish, ends.
How is that not an exact description of what a real estate developer does when he petitions for a zoning change contrary to the will of the zoned community?
Because they both are living off your earnings, one by taxes and the other by profits. This is that great abuse of "common good" that irks me so much. Every developer and every government official has to live somewhere and you can bet this is just like school choice. WHAT do the teachers in public schools do? How do politicians deal with public schools?
I will tell you:
"Across the country, roughly 10% of students attend a private school while American public school teachers enroll their children at nearly twice that rate, 21.5%. In some cities, it is nearly four times the average rate."
WORSE YET
40 percent of those in the U.S. House of Representatives who have school-aged children, and 49 percent of those in the Senate who have school-aged children, send or have sent at least one of their children to private school. Each attempt to pass a bill to give the rest of America's parents--especially low-income parents--this same right to practice school choice, however, has faced staunch opposition from many of these same Members of Congress.
====================
I disliked a lot of things about Buchanan but Public Choice Theory nails it here
“It is successful charter schools that are the real threat to the traditional unionized public schools. No charter school network examined here has been more successful educationally than the Success Academy charter schools in Harlem, Bedford-Stuyvesant, the South Bronx and other low-income minority neighborhoods in New York City—and none has been more often or more bitterly attacked in words and deeds.”
― Thomas Sowell, Charter Schools and Their Enemies
While Obama was attacking parents for wanting a voice and a choice in education he sent his 2 daughters to SIDWELL
Sidwell Friends costs about $40,000 a year. The school has also educated Chelsea Clinton
That is to change what is right and wrong into what is profitable.
I say again why is no one on either side talking about ultra-mega abuses like this
BLM proposes to open 22 million acres in Western states to solar development
There is exclusion, zoning, takings in a horror film size
"And who exactly enacted the zoning laws long ago? Wouldn’t it often have been the owners themselves?"
I think you'd see your logical error here more easily if "zoning laws" was replaced with "abortion laws" or "segregated housing laws".
Also, what Nieporent said.
By the same logic, if a brothel opens up next to my home and as a consequence reduces my home's value, then I can sue the brothel owner for theft.
Without exclusionary zoning laws, then the choice to live in a neighborhood that is exclusively residential--one absent supermarkets, brothels, bars, weed stores, and crack houses--is taken from property owners. Who do they get to sue?
You don't have some right to "choose" how other people use their own property. If you want such a right, then pay for it.
But the zoning laws are already in place and were when my neighbors and I bought our properties. They were part of the bargain, and we did pay for them. That is the disconnect I was trying to point out between libertarian theories about zoning, and the actual way real property markets work.
They were not part of the bargain; you knew when you bought the property that the applicable laws could be changed at any time. You didn't have any enforceable right to maintain those particular requirements.
Contrast that with a contractual system in which you actually bought the development rights to neighboring properties; then you would have the right to those restrictions.
Of course I know there is a theoretical risk that the laws will change.
I also know that I have agency and can and will likely contest any attempt to change those laws.
In addition, I know that most of my neighbors feel the same way, so the chances of my town changing the zoning rules are negligible.
If I buy lakefront property, I know that there is a possibility that global warming could cause the lake to dry up, or an earthquake could cause it to drain, or an industrial accident could cause if to become horribly polluted. But I still pay a premium for that property, because I judge those contingencies to be sufficiently remote to justify the premium. Moreover, if I bought that lakefront property, and IG Farben, errrr, BASF later came in seeking a variance to build a giant chemical plant on that same lake, you can bet I would contest that too.
But aren't you both arguing that someone other than real people, ordinary families, represents the 'common good' that you both invoke
WHo are we wrecking my quality of living for? Can you point to them
That idea opens a terrific opportunity for shakedowns. Fix yourself up with a portable rendering plant, buy into a vacant lot in a residential neighborhood, and just stink up the whole neighborhood until they give in and pay you to go away.
Or pick any other public nuisance you please. The mildest version might be a dog kennel for nicely behaved pit bulls.
I think I saw your rendering plant example, (Or maybe it was a stockyard?) in an old, old libertarian discussion of zoning.
To the extent Somin IS a libertarian, he's a very crude one. He's constantly running into problems libertarian theorists were discussing seriously and trying to find answers to half a century ago.
Bellmore, during the 1940s and early 50s there was a rendering plant on the waterfront in Georgetown, Washington, DC. It had capacity to spread noxious stink for at least a mile in any direction.
As long as it operated, that plant kept almost the entire neighborhood a slum so unpromising that no one bothered to upgrade the ante-bellum architecture. As a result, it became a neighborhood which included black property owners, who could not afford most neighborhoods, but thought Georgetown a bargain.
They found themselves surprisingly wealthy after the plant finally got closed down in the late 50s. The antique buildings became newly desirable. Georgetown became the preferred neighborhood for senior members of the Kennedy administration. By the late 60s, Georgetown was one of the most exclusive and desirable urban locations on the planet.
If there is a land use less compatible than a rendering plant for a residential neighborhood, I do not know what it is. I would choose to live hard by an international airport, or a nuclear waste disposal site, before I would consider any location within a mile of a rendering plant.
I've never been down wind of a rendering plant, but if it's anything like a stockyard, I know where you're coming from.
I live in the flight path of a nearby airport, and it's noisy at times. A nuclear waste disposal site? You'd never know it was there if not for the signage. It's purely a psychological thing.
what about your chances with a Biden piece-of-shit legislation like this (imagine you live in one of these states) I could be wrong but saw zero on Reason about it
"The U.S. Bureau of Land Management on Jan. 17, 2024, proposed opening 22 million acres for solar development in 11 Western states. "
Ronald Coase is pointing and laughing at you. Well, he's dead, so probably not.
Yes, Nieporent, I grasped immediately that Coase was laughing at me. I did not care for it.
Fans of Coase are fans of unprincipled government. That is why his work has such great appeal among economists.
It is not that economists want government unprincipled, exactly; it is just that principled government gets in the way of free play for economists' numbers. And free play for numbers comes first and last with most economists.
Economists are mostly smarter than politicians; economists learned early on what too many politicians have yet to grasp—that it is a fool's bargain when the economist tells the politician, "Here is your optimal policy. That completes my job. It is your job to square the outcomes with the principles and practicalities."
My earliest inkling of dismay with Obama came when I realized he had fallen for that one. He had talked such a good game that I expected better.
What economists like best is a premise that numbers behave like people would behave if people were numbers. They like that one so much they made their own ideology out of it, thus Coase.
OR pay billionaires more money to relocate their Amazon distribution center to your neighborhood.
Amazon HQ2: $3 billion in state, city tax breaks draws company to New York
Your comment begs the question. When my neighbor opens up a brothel next door to my home–where my children, my wife, and I live–his choice changes how I can use my property in the future. It’s value depreciates, I have to protect my children from the influence of those practicing vice next door, and I am forced to consider security measures because of all the strangers–who don’t give two hoots about my neighborhood’s standard of living–with disordered libidos visiting my neighbor.
The idea that my neighbor’s use of his property can be antiseptically divorced from how it organically shapes others is pure fantasy-land libertarianism. You can’t jerry-rig reality to fit your inhumane theory.
You do have a right, that was the basis of the franchise , citizens who own and have a home and a stake in a community care most about the community.
My illegal immigrant renters (whom I have respect for and want them handled in a way that leads to citizenship) care not a fig
exclusionary zoning—the imposition of restrictions on the amount and types of housing that property owners are allowed to build
Is there any other kind of zoning? Is non-exclusionary zoning practiced anywhere?
Most large cities doing forced mixed use.
People want zoning on other people's property, but not their own
The only thing worse than zoning is no zoning
All those stories your read about restrictions are voted in neighborhood associations and restrictive covenants
IT can be argued that zoning increased the value of old farmland by creating subdivisions[as logically as the reverse anyway]
yes some zoning is out of control
When you want a lead smelting plant across the street, outlaw zoning.
But you don't do you?
'Existing non conforming' and increasing restrictions on existing developed property should be outlawed, but finding some mythical taking in 100 year old zoning regs is foolishness
Wasn't arbitrary
speculation is not a valid claim for takings
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
The Supreme Court agreed with the lower court's denial of the dismissal motion, but overturned the outcome of the case and sided with the Village of Euclid. The Court held that the zoning ordinance was not an unreasonable extension of the village's police power and did not have the character of arbitrary fiat, and thus it was not unconstitutional.
Further, the Court found that Ambler Realty had offered no evidence that the ordinance had any effect on the value of the property in question, but based their assertions of depreciation on speculation only. The court ruled that speculation was not a valid basis for a claim of takings.
Ambler Realty had argued their case on the basis of the 14th Amendment's due process clause. The Court noted that the challenger in a due process case would have to show that the law in question is discriminatory and has no rational basis. The Court found that Euclid's zoning ordinance in fact did have a rational basis.
Yeah but this is unconstitutional and an outrage, you silly environmentalists , you've been had
"BLM proposes to open 22 million acres in Western states to solar development"
Professor Somin has legitimate policy arguments against restrictive zoning laws. But not every policy one doesn’t like is unconstitutional.
Yeah. To a libertarian, every regulation becomes a taking.
It ends up proving too much, though. The money to compensate victims of a taking does not come out of nowhere -- it comes from the taxpayers themselves, who are also the putative victims. So they would end up paying themselves, at least in theory. In practice, we know that the proceeds would end up getting redistributed to the politically connected, or those best at gaming the system.
Wow, your views remind me of school choice...the teachers who are against it send their kids to private schools at twice the rate of the general populace while Congressional folks do so at 4X the rate.
YOu will be able to exclude, both of you, by the high price neighborhood you live in,one where those who are excluded just can't afforid it, and I have to take your offscourings because my modest community has "restrictive covenants" that you deem illegal
I remember in my youth NJ making the case for casinos as a way to raise money to help the aged. Look it up: Atlantic city tax assessments on property in the area (many were aged) forced aged out of their homes and the casino folks came in and LEVELED their property.