- #36
honestrosewater
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I don't know how much they paid him (they did pay him something), but I don't remember him complaining about it.learningphysics said:Did he receive reasonable compensation?
So, it may be a rare situation, but what if there is no available location?BobG said:I would use a higher criteria for using eminent domain. The key is essential services. You've got a point about the location of police and fire stations. The remainder, libraries, parks, etc, should be the best available location. Using eminent domain to obtain a desired location, even for things everyone in the community pays to build or use, falls in the same category as using eminent domain for commercial purposes in my opinion.
I think you should start with all acceptable locations, an acceptable budget, and keep eminent domain as a 'last resort'. For instance, building an elementary school in an industrial area along a busy highway at the edge of the county (so that most of the kids need to be bussed there) for a tenth of the city's annual operating budget is unacceptable IMO. In such a situation, I think seizing property- with just compensation- is acceptable.
I don't know how to prevent abuse though. If any politician doesn't know that people don't like being kicked out of their homes, they'll discover this as soon as they propose it. But I guess it's asking too much for everyone to be reasonable and cooperative, and the majority can still pick on the minority. I'd have to think about if or how that could be prevented.