Tulare County Contemplating More Eminent Domain

We have previously reported on Tulare County's efforts to acquire right of way for its Road 108 widening and its Road 80 widening.  Now, the County is considering condemning four additional parcels for the Road 108 project. 

In a February 1 article in the Visalia Times Delta, Eminent domain on county board's agenda, Valerie Gibbons reports that the County will decide tomorrow whether to file four more eminent domain actions, which would bring the recent total to 25.  Ms. Gibbons reports that the County's apparent rush to proceed has "had residents up in arms in past meetings."

But the County may have good reason for proceeding quickly, and it likely isn't because the traffic is so bad that the County cannot wait another 90 days to negotiate and, hopefully, appease angry residents.  The problem lies in the combination of the post-Kelo changes to California's prejudgment possession rules and the requirement that federal stimulus dollars be applied to "shovel ready" projects.  This combination squeezes the County's time line, requiring that it file the eminent domain lawsuits quickly or risk losing critical stimulus-dollars funding.  As Ms. Gibbons explains:

Planners say they must move forward quickly, otherwise the funding will be jeopardized. Rules for stimulus-funded projects require the proposal be "shovel ready" before the money is approved and it must be used within a certain length of time.

Back when agencies could acquire possession on short notice (occasionally, as little as three days), the "shovel ready" requirement would be challenging enough, but with possession now taking six to eight months -- or more -- the push to proceed quickly is exacerbated.  

In other words, one of the unintended side effects of the new possession rules (designed to protect property and business owners) is that agencies sometimes must proceed faster than they probably should, thereby harming property owners by forcing owners into litigation even in situations in which a reasonable negotiation period is likely to yield a settlement.  

This problem can be solved, but the solution is not returning to the old, "immediate possession" days.  Rather, funding sources should recognize the changes in the law, and should tie the date upon which the funding is secured to something other than possession and being "shovel ready." 

For now, however, agencies are stuck either pushing ahead regardless of community opposition or risking the very funding that makes the project possible.  My guess is that in Tulare County, residents will show up tomorrow to express outrage over the fact that the County has not completed good faith negotiations and should not condemn now -- and that the County will vote to proceed anyway to protect its funding. 

Tulare County Considering New Eminent Domain Actions for Road 108 Widening

Just a few weeks ago, we reported on Tulare County's plans to condemn a number of properties to facilitate the widening of Road 80.  Now, Visalia Times-Delta reporter Valerie Gibbons reports that Tulare County is considereing condemnation for four additional parcels, this time to facilitate the widening of Road 108 (or Demaree Street) between Visalia and Tulare. 

The November 11 article, "Board of Supervisors moves to seize land for Road 108 project while still in property negotiations," explains that both the Road 80 and Road 108 projects raise the same concerns from property owners:

In both cases, the widening projects will be affecting farmers who say the county isn't offering enough money to stem losses from lost product, moving fences or taking out equipment.

With these new cases, Tulare County will have filed 21 eminent domain actions for the projects, which are being funded -- at least in part -- by government stimulus dollars.