Here’s the recently-published brochure with more details about the ALI-CLE Eminent Domain and Land Valuation LItigation conference, set for Austin in January 2016. 

In the coming days and weeks, we’ll be posting more details about the conference. Our co-planning chairs Joe Waldo, Jack Sperber, and Andrew Brigham have assembled a great agenda, taught by the usual stellar faculty. If eminent domain, appraisal, or land use is your thing, you really should attend. 

33d Annual ALI-CLE Eminent Domain and Land Valuation Litigation Conference, Jan. 28-30, 2016, Austin, TX

Continue Reading ALI-CLE Eminent Domain And Land Valuation Conference: Full Brochure

“Waikiki” means a lot of things to a lot of people. With its wall-to-wall high rises, it could be Las Vegas-by-the-Sea. Or the site of the most famous beach in Hawaii, if not the world. A place where impossibly tony shops and kitsch exist side-by-side. Where the “Hawaiian” bric-a-brac is imported from the Phillipines and China, and the beach sand is reputed to be Australian. A place to go, and a place to escape from

But whatever Waikiki might be, one thing is certain: it no longer has just two hotels as it once did, nor is it a sleepy agricultural backwater. It is the economic engine that drives Hawaii’s tourist economy, and the visitor destination, where one-third of our tourists end up. Even with these contradictions — or perhaps because of them — the ordinance which controls development within the Waikiki Special District requires consideration

Continue Reading What Does “Waikiki” Mean? – Variances, Safety Valves, And A “Hawaiian Sense Of Place”

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Here’s the full agenda for the 2016 Eminent Domain and Land Valuation Litigation / Condemnation 101 Conference, January 28-30, 2016, in Austin, Texas. 

Together with our friend and colleague Joe Waldo, we think we’re put together a pretty good program that covers a lot of ground. This is the first time the conference has been to Austin, and we’re starting off with a talk by Austin Mayor Steve Adler, who in his former life was an eminent domain lawyer. Other highlights:

  • Professor Ilya Somin will speak about his recently-published book in a segment entitled “The Impact of Kelo and the Limits of Eminent Domain.”
  • Pipelines and Energy Corridors: Valuation Perspectives of Condemnors and Condemnees” with the lawyers on the front lines of one of the hottest topics in eminent domain law nationwide.
  • Retired Minnesota Supreme Court Justice Paul H. Anderson will give us his tips


Continue Reading It’s Here – 2016 ALI-CLE Eminent Domain Conference: Complete Agenda, Faculty, Registration Information

Hawaii Business magazine has a new report about Honolulu rail. The headline asks, “How Much Will It Cost Us In The End?” 

There are questions of how much over original projections the rail project currently is. Or whether it is really over budget at all. Anywhere from zero (according to HART), to $1 billion. And, of course, whether there is an upper limit on how high the costs could go. Anyone with an interest in rail should read the story.

The only thing we have to add is that in our view (as we wrote here), the only honest answer is “as much as it takes.”

The project is already being built, and they aren’t going to simply stop now that they’ve started to pour concrete. In addition to having commenced construction, the legal machinery of the project is well underway, with properties being acquired and

Continue Reading Hawaii Business Magazine Asks: “How Much Will Rail Cost Us In the End?” Our Answer: As Much As It Takes

We’ve covered this topic before (see here, here, and here), but we haven’t heard much about it lately. But thanks to this new article by colleague Dwight H. Merriam, we can get back up to speed.

In “Eminent Domain for Underwater Mortgages: Already on the Way to the Bottom of the Sea of Bad Ideas,” from the Virginia State Bar’s Real Property Section’s journal, The Fee Simple (Spring 2015), Dwight discusses “the foreclosure crisis and how so many homeowners became victims of bad lending practices and a deep economic recession. Many are stuck in their homes, which are underwater with a value far below what was owed on them.” The article explores the question: can eminent domain bail out underwater mortgages?

Short answer: no.

To learn more, click here to view the article.

And what’s the latest that Richmond, California, which was leading the

Continue Reading New Article: “Eminent Domain for Underwater Mortgages: Already on the Way to the Bottom of the Sea of Bad Ideas”

Donald Trump is garnering a lot of press these days for things not related to eminent domain. And there’s a lot of awareness of the high-profile eminent domain battle in New Jersey, in which he was the “B” in an attempted “A to B” taking. But not everyone is as aware of a later, similar controversy. 

So we dusted off our review of the 2011 documentary You’ve Been Trumped, and post it below. The film focuses on the property owners whose land is in the shadow of Trump’s golf course and luxury residential project in Aberdeenshire, on the west coast of Scotland. Compulsory Purchase Orders were threatened (but ultimately not issued), but the scenario presented the film will be familiar to anyone who follows eminent domain and property rights issues.

The film is available on DVD and streaming from a variety of sources. Definitely worth your time. Especially if

Continue Reading If You Are Even Thinking About Voting For Trump …

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The Land Use Institute, a program that for many years has been planned by co-chairs Frank Schnidman and Gideon Kanner, has found a new home with the American Bar Association’s Section of State and Local Government Law as the main sponsor. It also has a new Planning co-chair, Dean Patty Salkin of Touro Law School, who has stepped in for Professor Kanner.

This program is designed for attorneys, professional planners, and government officials involved in land use planning, zoning, permitting, property development, conservation and environmental protection, and related litigation. It not only addresses and analyzes the state-of-the-art efforts by government to manage land use and development, but also presents the key issues faced by property owners and developers in obtaining necessary governmental approvals.

This year, the one-day program is being held in conjunction with the ABA Annual Meeting in Chicago. It will be held on Thursday, July 30, 2015

Continue Reading Land Use Institute: Planning, Regulation, Litigation, Eminent Domain, and Compensation – 31st Annual Conference, Chicago, July 30, 2015

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On Wednesday, July 1, 2015, the American Planning Association is putting on the 2015 Planning Law Review, a program highlighting the most important and topical cases decided by the courts recently. Here’s the program description:

Planning feels the impact of decisions from the U.S. Supreme Court, federal district courts, and state courts. How will their rulings affect you? Get a briefing on the year’s legal developments, from First Amendment issues to environmental actions, housing, and equal access. Presenters also will discuss major legislative initiatives and APA’s amicus filings. Join in a lively, informative program you and your staff, colleagues, and officials won’t want to miss. This program is also suitable for planning commissioners.

Joining me on the faculty are Jason Jordan, Director, Policy and Communications, American Planning Association (Moderator); Nancy Ellen Stroud, Lewis, Stroud & Deutsch; John M. Baker, Greene Espel; and John Echeverria, Professor of

Continue Reading Upcoming APA Webinar: 2015 Planning Law Review

A few years ago, in Gallenthin Realty Development, Inc. v Borough of Paulsboro, 191 N.J. 344 (2007), the New Jersey Supreme Court held that in order to target property for redevelopment as “blighted,” the government must show that it is in such condition that it “negatively affects surrounding areas” by promoting conditions that can develop into blight. In that case, the targeted property was mostly undeveloped wetlands, and the “blight” of which it stood accused was the owner’s failure to put it to a more intensive economic use. But that was not sufficient to support a blight finding, and the court held that the government must have done more than simply recited the standards for blight redevelopment, and declare they were met. 

We were going to do a complete write-up of the New Jersey court’s latest foray into blight and redevelopment, 62-64 Main Street LLC v. City of Hackensack

Continue Reading New Jersey: When Designating Blight, Baby Can Be Tossed Without First Showing The Bathwater’s Dirty

A couple of noteworthy conferences upcoming, one in-person, the other a “webinar” format:

  • The first is “Kelo: A Decade Later” at the U. Connecticut Law School, Friday, March 20, 2015, from 8:30 am – 4:30 pm. The conference promises to “look back at the decision and its repercussions,” and includes the lawyers for Ms. Kelo and the City of New London. “The conference will then explore the role of eminent domain in government planning generally. What role does and should eminent domain play in economic development?  What is the impact of post-Kelo changes to state law?  Does eminent domain have distinctive impacts on low income communities?  Leading scholars and practitioners in law, planning, sociology, and economics will explore these questions.” We note that our Connecticut Owners’ Counsel colleague Dwight Merriam is one of those “leading practitioners,” and will be moderating a panel entitled “Eminent Domain and Economic Development”


Continue Reading Upcoming Conferences – Kelo In Connecticut, APA And The ESA