P.O. Box 230637 Tigard OR
97281 (503) 620-0258
Oregonians In Action
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Brief Overview
LAND USE/PROPERTY RIGHTS
CONCERNS OF THE OREGONIANS IN ACTION ORGANIZATIONS
The basic concerns of Oregonians In
Action and the separate OIA organizations (OIA Education Center,
OIA Legal Center, and OIA Political Action Committee) are
excessive land use regulations that "take" private
property without compensation. Under court decisions, regulations
can take up to 95% of the use and value of private property
without compensation to the property owner.
Such over-regulation violates our most basic civil rights -- the
rights of individuals to own and use their property without undue
interference from government. Over-regulation also causes adverse
impacts that hurt everyone else, including loss of use and
mis-use of land and resources, job losses, artificial scarcity of
land, and reduction of tax revenues needed for schools and public
services.
Obviously, some land use regulations are needed, such as those
that protect the public interest in air, water and safety. But,
the power to regulate is being misused. Regulations are being
used to limit land uses and acquire interests in private land to
provide public benefits, as a substitute for buying such
interests.
Here are some examples of misuse of regulatory power:
* Mis-zoning of millions of acres of
rural land. Instead of zoning the "prime" farm
land as intended, LCDC, the state land use agency, zoned 97% of
all private rural land into highly restrictive farm and forest
zones, with little or no regard to productivity of the land.
Millions of acres of nonproductive and marginal land have been
miszoned, denying owners and the public the benefits of
alternative uses, such as rural living.
* Denying farmers the right to live on
their own land. LCDC imposed excessive gross farm income
requirements to qualify for a farm dwelling, denying many farmers
the right to live on their own land and make it productive.
* Forcing high density living in urban
areas. Over-regulation needlessly forces people into
cities, mandates higher densities, blocks needed street and
highway additions and improvements, and prohibits orderly
expansion of urban areas -- thereby increasing traffic congestion
and gridlock, making housing unaffordable and impairing quality
of life.
* Taking private land to provide public
benefits. Cities and counties (and state and federal
agencies) are imposing all sorts of land use restrictions on
private land to provide public benefits, such as habitat for
wildlife, open space, wetlands, and riparian areas -- without
compensating landowners for the loss of use and value. The
Endangered Species Act poses grave threats; it is being used to
impose land use controls without proof species are endangered, or
that the controls are needed.
* Using permitting authority for
"extortion" purposes. Cities and counties are
unfairly requiring applicants for building permits to give up
land, pay fees or make other concessions as a
"condition" to granting the permit. Even though OIA
Legal Center has secured a U.S. Supreme Court decision (the Dolan
case) outlawing conditions that are not roughly proportional to
the impact of the development, some cities and counties still
engage in extortion practices.
* Oregons land use regulatory
system is too top-down, too complex, too inflexible, and too
costly. There are too many state-imposed,
one-size-fits-all, inflexible regulations. The system was
intended to simplify and expedite land use decisions, but it has
become too complex, time-consuming and costly. Fees are
excessive. Procedures are too cumbersome and too easily used to
stop land uses of all kinds.