GUEST COLUMN
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John Sisker
There is no doubt in my mind that the Huntington Beach City Council is
going to reinstate eminent domain procedures for residential property
that they simply want to take.
In spite of the overwhelming opposition to this procedure during the
public comment session at the last City Council meeting, I felt such
concerns were totally falling upon deaf ears. From my experience in the
planning field, I know very well that such decisions by some politicians
are made long before anyone even has the opportunity to utter the first
word at any public comment session.
The input allowed by the public, either written or verbal, is naturally a
legal requirement, but in many situations is totally useless. This was
certainly the impression I came away with when our City Council members
started to put their own spin on the matter to justify their end results.
The concerns actually brought some people to tears and naturally so. For
three minutes, a living, breathing human being must condense his or her
entire life, feelings, and concerns to convince a City Council that has
apparently made up their collective minds beforehand to do otherwise.
That is why I seldom will limit myself to a three-minute public hearing
session that falls upon deaf ears when I can express myself in written
form in far more detail.
Likewise, the City council did receive late (written) communications far
in excess of any I have ever seen before in opposition to eminent domain.
The concerns today regard the redevelopment of the Downtown area.
However, as one person aptly and wisely pointed out, once this eminent
domain procedure takes hold and gets started anywhere within our city,
the taking of the next property anywhere by the city is just that much
easier. It seems, for the most part, the vast majority of those concerned
about the city taking their property through eminent domain, were
actually more than willing to participate in the redevelopment process
and upgrade their own property themselves. However, it seemingly looks
like the city is more intent on the taking of one person’s property
simply to give it to their major developer of choice.
Yet, even with the tearful reaction by the public at such apparent
underhanded and possibly illegal actions, the city was totally cold and
calculating in their response: that they do not “take” property -- “You
will be paid the fair market value for it.” To me, this city no longer
cares or even understands the citizens. Compassion has gone to profits.
The trick word here is apparently “blight.” By the city claiming
everything and anything is blight, the procedures are set for eminent
domain. Yet, to me, “blight” is simply a legal catch phrase that this
city is now using to their advantage. In reality, the property doesn’t
have to be a real blight, in the sense of rundown or decaying slums, but
must simply be classified as an economic blight.
In other words, they can make more money with your piece of property than
you can, so therefore they take it. Of course this is all justified by
claiming such “taking” is in the best interest of all citizens. After
all, money talks!
After the public had their say about why the City Council should not
reinstate eminent domain procedures, I have never heard such a crock of
backsliding spins by our City Council to justify their intended actions.
However, after all their rhetoric, one not only felt justified by them
putting a gun to out heads, but we now supposedly looked forward to them
pulling the trigger.
This brings me back to a recent meeting I had with former mayor Shirley
Dettloff, in which those attending with me were told that the residents
of Huntington Beach don’t have to worry because the city does not take
residential property through eminent domain. Yet, even though she did a
total 180-degree switch on her former promise, her new promise
mysteriously seems to justify her new cause.
With a mismatched, out-of-scale Downtown that looks like Frank Lloyd
Wright threw up, I feel we’re now living under a roller coaster at Coney
Island. Maybe the time has finally come for the people of Huntington
Beach to take back what’s left of our city, before these “barkers” cause
any more damage than they already have.
JOHN SISKER is a Huntington Beach resident.
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