School Land for Airport

Post Trib

School officials were waiting for their attorneys to review the decision.

"(The resolution) is an option they have threatened to exercise in the past," said School Board President Nellie Moore. "If that's what they choose to do instead of a more amicable resolution, then I have no problem with that."

School district attorney Ragen Hatcher was less diplomatic.

"I would think they would've at least invited a representative from the school district to the meeting," Hatcher said of the Board of Works decision.

According to the city's resolution, the impasse comes after three years of "extraordinary good faith efforts" by the city and the airport to reach a deal with the schools.

"The action avoids any more delays to the timetable for the (runway) expansion," Curry said, "and now a court of law will determine the appropriate value of the land."


Why would a school system expect any different treatment than any other owner?  Governments rarely truly provide notice to the owners of property when it decides to utilize the eminent domain process.  However, the process in most States does require some attempt to negotiate prior to the filing of a condemnation complaint.  Indiana, where this taking is to occur, has a process.

Tinicum

Delco Times

U.S. Rep. Joseph Sestak, D-7, Of Edgmont, said Sunday the real linchpin to halting the Federal Aviation Administration’s NY/NJ/PHL Metropolitan Airspace Redesign lies in Tinicum.

Philadelphia, as owner of Philadelphia International Airport, hopes to acquire some 72 homes and 10 businesses in the township as part of a proposed capacity enhancement plan.

Under an agreement that expired in 2007, the city required township approval before it could buy land in Tinicum, but no new agreement has been reached. Philadelphia does not have eminent domain outside its borders.

According to a Government Accountability Office report published last year, the FAA did not do a cost-benefit analysis before implementing the redesign, which Sestak said only reduces flight delays by less than a minute in its current form.

Delays could be further reduced were Philadelphia to acquire the Tinicum properties for the CEP, said Sestak, but the $5 billion price tag for that plan is prohibitive and the resulting delay reductions are minimal.

He is instead urging PHL to employ smaller regional airports for commuter flights, which would be far less costly and have a greater impact on delays.

Here, we have what all too many around airports are learning or have, unfortunately, learned. The potential for diminution of use in face of a contemplated future eminent domain act is substantial. Facing a future condemnation places a severe blight on the property, which should be disregarded at the time of the acquisition.

Condemnation of Land Leases

StlToday.com

Spirit of St. Louis Airport soon will start buying 345 acres that it uses but does not own.

The airport has received a $1.458 million federal grant for the first year of a three-year project to buy out the land owners. John Bales, the county's director of aviation, said the airport hoped to buy 100 acres this year, but the precise acreage won't be known until appraisals and negotiations are completed. Bales said that eminent domain will not be part of the process.

The purchases would start with critical parcels — those under runways, taxiways and key buildings, he said.

The county, the Federal Aviation Administration and state transportation officials agree that Spirit would avoid a financial crunch if it bought the parcels now rather than wait until leases are close to expiring, Bales said.


Haglin & Co., the private company that opened the 1,250-acre airport in 1964, obtained the ground in 1961 through 99-year leases, mainly from farmers.

The county, which bought the airport in 1980, pays a total of nearly $44,443 a year to the leaseholder

The County Council last week approved the hiring of O.R. Colan Associates of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., as a consultant to handle the purchases in all three years of the project. Colan will be paid $234,000 over the three years to take care of appraisals, title searches, land and environmental surveys and negotiations with the property owners.

The condemnation of land leases is not quite so simple. The leases were initiated when the airport desired the revenue from private parties (all to the detriment of potential competitors in the marketplace) after expropriation from private owners. Now after having the benefit of the income on land taken by eminent domain it will condemn the leases.

Land Taken for Road

Washington Post, November 23, 2007

Maryland highway officials and the philanthropic Eugene B. Casey Foundation are battling in court over the state's decision to seize 405 acres of the foundation's land for the intercounty connector, even though the land is seven miles from the highway's planned route.

The state has taken the wooded, rolling hills in Boyds, and has offered to pay the foundation $3.44 million, to replace some of the parkland and mature forests that will be bulldozed to build the six-lane toll highway between Gaithersburg and Laurel. The Montgomery County parcel is part of the Maryland State Highway Administration's "environmental mitigation" plan, which received federal approval.

Environmentalists say the Casey land is too far away to help the wildlife in the more than 900 acres of forests, wetlands and parkland that the 18.8-mile highway will destroy. The bigger issue: The foundation, its attorney said, doesn't want to sell and thinks the state has no right to the property.

The Casey Foundation is one of the Washington area's largest philanthropic organizations, with a net worth of $166 million, according to its 2005 federal tax filing. Eugene B. Casey, who died in 1986, was a developer and one of upper Montgomery's largest land owners. Betty B. Casey, 80, his widow, lives in Potomac, according to voter records.

The state took ownership of the foundation's property in May, after the trustees declined to negotiate a fair market price, said Melinda Peters, the intercounty connector's project director. Upon seizing the land, the state deposited its purchase offer of $3.44 million with the Montgomery Circuit Court and filed a condemnation case against Betty Casey and other trustees. A judge is expected to rule in spring on whether the state has the right to seize the land.

If the state wins the court case, the land would be turned over to the county's park system. But, Park said, the foundation might then appeal because Maryland has no case law on the state's rights to seize land far outside a project's right of way.

Full construction on the highway began last week, after a federal judge in Greenbelt rejected two lawsuits that alleged that the project violates federal environmental laws. The intercounty connector, estimated to cost $2.4 billion, is scheduled to fully open by 2012.

A ruling on the extent of the state's eminent domain powers could have far-reaching ramifications. Such "environmental mitigation" packages to replace wetlands, forests and other habitat have become commonplace, particularly on large, controversial projects.

However, as development grows denser near projects, highway officials said, they have had to find replacement land farther away. As part of rebuilding the Woodrow Wilson Bridge, for example, regional highway officials created or preserved 100 acres of wetlands in Stafford County and planted river grasses at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay to replace those lost to the larger bridge.

-This article deals with the issue of true intent in a taking by an acquiring agency.  Is the intent of the acquiring agency to find the easiest way out of a required mitigation project?  The acquiring agency may totally fail to repair the harm of a project or simply mitigate this situation by replacing the acquisition with something available elsewhere.  It is possible the statute, requiring mitigation for forestland taken for a roadway project, has no relationship to the project area affected. 

 

The Value of a Mile

Columus Dispatch, September 29, 2007

When Canal Winchester offered Richard "Pete" Stebelton $9,249 for a 1-mile strip of his property, Stebelton thought the payment was too low.

This month, a Franklin County Common Pleas jury decided the village should pay the farmer and used-car dealer $595,625. 

Canal Winchester wants the land to link a bike path between Rager Road and the village swimming pool. It used eminent domain to take a strip of Stebelton's 80-acre property and hired an appraiser who determined that the $9,249 would be enough compensation.

Stebelton was the only one of eight property owners who didn't agree to sell his land to the village for the path. Instead, he went to court to challenge the village's valuation.

The jury decided Sept. 20 that the land the village wants, along the northern edge of his property, is worth $37,000. But the jury also decided that by taking it, the village was closing off a back entrance to the property and damaging the value of the rest of Stebelton's land by $558,625.

-In many jurisdictions, even after the jury=s verdict, the condemning authority can withdraw from a condemnation.  This offers great risk to owners who may face a second condemnation, with not as decent results.

In this situation, it looks like Mr. Stebelton had the opportunity to face a community which may walk away, but at least pay his fees.  The process can be maddening indeed!