In reality, Prop 99 simply provides another level of reassurance to California homeowners who fear eminent domain. Laws already in California state that eminent domain for redevelopment can be used only to remove blight. And, frankly, that provision has rarely been used.
According to the Sacramento Bee:
"The federal Government Accountability Office studied the use of eminent domain. For that study the California Redevelopment Association commissioned researchers from the University of California, Davis to survey all 386 of the active redevelopment agencies in California. The researchers looked at property acquisitions from Jan. 1, 2000, through Dec. 31, 2004.
The findings: Out of 12.7 million land parcels on the tax rolls in California, these agencies reported that they acquired 2,798 parcels during the five-year period. Of those, 78 were acquired through eminent domain. The rest were negotiated purchases.
The researchers found that only three single-family, owner-occupied homes were taken through eminent domain. And two of those were due to clouded title problems in which a court needed to decide who rightfully owned the property.
Since that time, California has tightened the laws to increase state oversight and make it easier for people to challenge redevelopment decisions."
In reality, eminent domain abuse in California may be a non-issue. I always cringe at amendments that try to correct a non-problem. But because of my concern about the potential passage of the poorly conceived Prop 98, I will give Prop 99 my yes vote.VOTE: YES
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