Eminent Domain Abuse Again! Willetts Point Threatened
Richard Musick has been writing eloquent op-eds lately, most recently a piece that appeared in The New York Sun on Friday, August 19, called Too Valuable? about the threat of the city's use of eminent domain hanging over Willets Point in Queens. This is a busy area full of automobile-related businesses, but an area that the city has neglected for decades. It does not have a sanitary sewer system, and there is no snow removal. Now the city has found something slick and, you'll pardon me, suburban to do with the area. As Musick says, "Now the city is using its own neglect of Willets Point as an excuse to redevelop the area." It will surprise no one that the
city has not consulted the people who own the businesses there, and who have "managed to pay taxes, employ thousands of people, pay off mortgages, and send their children to school." The city is engaging in damnation-by-neglect and is now primed and ready to abuse eminent domain by taking the property in Willets Point away from the owners and giving it to influential developers. Our present group of elected officials seem to be unaware that New York is a city of small businesses. They want to hand any area full of vibrant small local businesses over to any big developer representing any multinational corporation.
This is nothing new. Destruction in lower manhattan preceded the building of the World Trade Center. Here was the same indifference to vital local small businesses, in favor of giant corporations. Look at Danny Lyon's photographs of the active nineteenth-century commercial buildings that came before the Twin Towers. And Lyons doesn't even show you the Radio District or the residential areas or the Washington Market.
The abuse of eminent domain threatening Willets Point is exactly the sort that the plaintiffs complained of in Kelo v. New London. The government's justification is not a public use like a highway or a courthouse. Nor is it the removal of blight. The sole justification for taking people's homes and businesses is economic development. Whatever the city's neglect of Willets Point, the area is indisputably productive as it is. The Supreme Court must somehow have believed that developers and politicians are telling the truth when they talk about economic development as a justification for taking private property away from one set of private owners and handing it over to another set of private owners. As Jane Jacobs pointed out in her brief amica curiae, however, developers are under no obligation to deliver what they promise. People's homes and businesses are destroyed for economic development. But no one ever has to produce any development.
Big Cities Big Boxes wishes the best of success to Richard Musick and the Willets Point Business Association.
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