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![]() This, by the way, is a STATE law. Who to hell is the governor of that hell hole anyway? Oh, yeah, Jeb Bush! Florida: Some see disdain in move to use eminent domain Florida officials want to relocate 6,000 in blue-collar Riviera Beach to build a waterfront complex across from high-dollar Palm Beach. John-Thor Dahlburg, Los Angeles Times Last update: December 6, 2005 at 10:44 PM Printer friendly E-mail this story Nation Twin Cities flights to eastern cities delayed Wisconsin schools facing lawsuits over 'holiday' programs 'Doozy of a snowstorm' descends on Northeast Gold coins among surprises showing up in Salvation Army kettles Storms bring snow, freezing cold to middle of country Page: 1 2 RIVIERA BEACH, FLA. - It's across the inlet from Palm Beach, but this town -- mostly black and blue-collar, with a large industrial and warehouse district -- could be a continent away from the Fortune 500 and Rolls-Royce set. But Riviera Beach's fortunes may soon change. In what has been called the largest eminent-domain case in the nation, the mayor and other elected leaders want to move about 6,000 residents, tear down their houses and use the emptied 400-acre site to build a waterfront yachting and residential complex for the well-to-do. The goal, Mayor Michael D. Brown said during a public meeting in September, is to "forever change the landscape" in this municipality of about 32,500. The $1 billion plan should generate jobs and move Riviera Beach's economy out of the doldrums, local leaders have said. Opponents call the plan a government-sanctioned land grab that benefits private developers and the wealthy. "What they mean is that the view I have is too good for me and should go to some millionaire," said Martha Babson, 60, a house painter who lives near the Intracoastal Waterway. "This is a reverse Robin Hood," said state Rep. Ronald L. Greenstein, a Coconut Creek Democrat who serves on a state legislative committee making recommendations on how to strengthen safeguards on private property. With many Americans sensitized to eminent-domain cases after a much-discussed ruling by the Supreme Court in June, property-rights organizations have been pointing to redevelopment plans in this Palm Beach County town as proof that laws must be changed to protect homeowners and businesses from the schemes of politicians. "Unfortunately, taking poorer folks' homes and turning them into higher-end development projects is all too routine in Florida and throughout the country," said Scott G. Bullock, a senior attorney for the Institute for Justice, based in Washington, D.C. "What distinguishes Riviera Beach is the sheer scope of the project, and the number of people it displaces." In June, a divided U.S. Supreme Court approved the plan of New London, Conn., to force some homeowners to sell their properties for a private development that was supposed to generate more jobs and tax revenue. That ruling has led to moves in Congress and at least 35 states, including Florida, to restrict the use of eminent-domain seizures of private property. 'Blighted' land may be seized In Florida, the law allows local officials to take private land for redevelopment if they deem it "blighted." In May 2001, a study conducted for the city found that "slum and blighted conditions" existed in about a third of Riviera Beach and that redevelopment was necessary "in the interest of public health, safety, morals and welfare." A skeptical Babson, who lives in a single-story, concrete-block home painted aqua that she shares with parrots and a dog, did her own survey. For three months, she walked the streets of Riviera Beach photographing houses classified as "dilapidated" or "deteriorated" by specialists hired by the city. The official study, she said, was riddled with errors and misclassifications. Lots inventoried as "vacant" (one of 14 criteria that allow Florida cities or counties to declare a neighborhood blighted) actually had homes on them built in 1997, she said. One house deemed "dilapidated," she found, was two years old. Mayor Brown and Floyd T. Johnson, executive director of the Riviera Beach Community Redevelopment Agency, did not respond to repeated requests from the Los Angeles Times for an interview. The redevelopment agency's website says the plan will "create a city respected for its community pride and purpose, and reshape it into a most desirable urban [place] to live, work, shop and relax for its residents, business and visitors." In past media interviews, Brown has said that his city was in dire need of jobs and that if officials weren't allowed to resort to eminent domain to spur growth, Riviera Beach could perish |
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