“Private property must be guarded as priceless freedom.
Land owners should reject the sustainable development idea that only government
can protect nature, air, soil, water, open spaces, and the poor.”
Humans have always desired to own a piece of land that could
be passed on to their heirs. Once they acquired property for homestead or
farming, men labored on their land under the assumption that it was theirs to
keep in perpetuity.
If you ask the government, land belongs to the proprietor
as long as the required taxes are paid in full each year and the government
does not confiscate the property through eminent domain or deem it environmentally
endangered and in need of protection. If you ask progressives, land
belongs equally to everyone and nobody should be allowed to “own” anything,
it should be communal property.
The painful lesson in communal property (communism) at
Jamestown has been forgotten or never learned. When people worked the land
together, some worked harder and some were lazier, yet everyone ate the same.
The entire settlement almost starved to death. The following year, when the
communal property was divided into individual parcels, everyone
prospered.
Humans understood then that individual freedom and cooperation
on smaller scale are much more successful than domination by a few in an
exclusively government-run society.
The idea of Sustainable Development that emerged in 1987
from a conference by the World Commission on Environment and Development,
chaired by Gro Harlem Brundtland, seemed innocuous. It was defined as “Development
that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of
future generations to meet their own needs.” It sounded lofty except for the
nagging questions: who decides what the needs are, how are they going to parcel
out the needs, how are they going to implement them, and who will police the
decision-makers?
This call to Sustainable Development became the blueprint
of a myriad of rules and regulations incorporated in the 1992 document
called Agenda 21 signed by 179 nations at the U.N. Conference on Environment
and Development in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. This 40-chapter document
addresses every aspect of human life, not the least of which is property.
According to Henry Lamb, Bill Clinton’s creation of the
President’s Council on Sustainable Development (Executive Order #12852,
June 29, 1993) “was responsible for instilling sustainable development
consciousness throughout every agency of the federal government,” using
enormous grant powers. These “vision” and “challenge” grants were given to
state and local governments, to NGOs such as the American Planning Association,
Sierra Club, and to HUD, DOE, and EPA to develop and implement community
plans around the nation.
County-wide or region-wide plans by the years 2020, 2025, or
2030, contain 129 “visions” included in eight categories. These visions were
developed at the first Glades County, Florida visioning meeting in February
2, 2006. They are eerily similar to the recommendations in the Agenda 21
document and in any sustainable development pamphlets. (Henry Lamb, Sustainable
Development or Sustainable Freedom? pp. 5–6)
· Preserve natural environment
· Save/improve the wetlands
· Restrict development in sensitive areas
· Sustainable agriculture and farming
· Comprehensive resource preservation
· Never compromise wetlands or wildlife
· Preservation of scenic views
· Designation of scenic highways
· Development should be clustered
· Rural village concept
· Smart growth planned developments
· Increase density, increase walkability
· Impact fees that limit mobile homes
· Zoning should encourage infill
· More codes to be enforced
· Conservation easements on agricultural land
· Sidewalks, bike paths, and walking paths
· Multi-use trails and corridors that are landscaped
· Save/improve the wetlands
· Restrict development in sensitive areas
· Sustainable agriculture and farming
· Comprehensive resource preservation
· Never compromise wetlands or wildlife
· Preservation of scenic views
· Designation of scenic highways
· Development should be clustered
· Rural village concept
· Smart growth planned developments
· Increase density, increase walkability
· Impact fees that limit mobile homes
· Zoning should encourage infill
· More codes to be enforced
· Conservation easements on agricultural land
· Sidewalks, bike paths, and walking paths
· Multi-use trails and corridors that are landscaped
Villages, towns, and cities developed as the result of the
wishes of the people in a free market. Then local zoning ordinances were
developed based on existing land use, initiated by the land owners who,
from time to time changed the zoning designations. Such changes were only
made by locally elected officials, balancing the wishes of the landowners
with the rights of other constituents.
The “comprehensive planning” required by sustainable
development in Agenda 21 is initiated by a coalition of international
organizations such as ICLEI (International Council on Local Environmental
Initiatives) who decide in their “visioning consensus” how and where everyone
should live.
ICLEI infiltrated over 600 county and local governments
in the U.S. who became members of this organization that recently changed
its name to ICLEI Local Governments for Sustainability USA to avoid the
stigma of an international organization meddling in American zoning
affairs.
The top-down unelected government develops comprehensive
master plans that form “urban boundary zones.” Municipal services such as
water, sewer, fire, and police protection are not provided beyond these
zones. The comprehensive master plan serves the purpose to create “sustainable
communities,” the vision of the globalists who created Agenda 21.
It is not a coincidence that “every county’s comprehensive
master plan contains the same elements, the same goals, the same processes,”
spelled out in Agenda 21. Citizens participate in local visioning meetings
and consensus-building stakeholder meetings under the false promise and understanding
that they do have input in their communities. In reality, the decisions
have been made for them in advance.
Henry Lamb said, “Such comprehensive land use plans
adopted by government gives the government, not the owner, the superior
right to decide how the land may be used.” Elected officials were convinced
by “the promoters of sustainable development that private property rights
are not as important as the proposed benefits of sustainable development,
individual freedom is not as important.” (p. 23)
The first
lawsuit filed on October 15, 2013 against
Agenda 21 promoters is the lawsuit against the comprehensive plan called
Plan Bay Area. The legal challenge was launched by the Post Sustainability
Institute/Democrats Against UN Agenda 21 and Freedom Advocates, spearheaded
by Michael Shaw and Rosa Koire.
Alleged violations include:
· Plan Bay Area violates voter-approved urban growth boundary
ordinances, “nullifying these boundaries by restricting development to
very small locations in just some cities”
· Plan Bay Area “violates the 5th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution by taking property rights without just compensation”
· Plan Bay Area “violates the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, the Equal Protection Clause” (Priority Development Areas land owners will receive permits 80 times more than owners outside of the PDA)
· Plan Bay Area “permanently strips all development rights from rural properties in the nine county Bay Area, effectively taking conservation easements on all rural lands without paying for them”
· Plan Bay Area “restricts development rights within the Priority Development Areas,” limiting construction to mixed-use, high density Smart Growth development.
· Plan Bay Area “violates the 5th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution by taking property rights without just compensation”
· Plan Bay Area “violates the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, the Equal Protection Clause” (Priority Development Areas land owners will receive permits 80 times more than owners outside of the PDA)
· Plan Bay Area “permanently strips all development rights from rural properties in the nine county Bay Area, effectively taking conservation easements on all rural lands without paying for them”
· Plan Bay Area “restricts development rights within the Priority Development Areas,” limiting construction to mixed-use, high density Smart Growth development.
“Plan Maryland” is a statewide blueprint of land use that
maintains 400,000 acres as agricultural or forest land and spares it from
development in the next 20 years. Governor O’Malley’s executive order
allows development only in “approved” growth areas along the Baltimore-Washington
corridor. Homes on two-acre plots with septic system were deemed urban
sprawl. Homes built within city limits on half-acre plots in range of sewer
hookups were not deemed urban sprawl. I discussed this comprehensive land
use plan in my best seller book, U.N.
Agenda 21: Environmental Piracy.
The comprehensive plan for Baldwin County, Alabama,
called Horizon 2025, was rejected by the Baldwin County Commission as a
“massive land grab.” Additionally, Gov. Robert Bentley signed a law forbidding
policies connected to Agenda 21, barring any private property confiscation
without due process. This decision drew strong criticism from the Smart
Growth proponents who used psychological “projection” to paint Americans
who are discovering the truth about Agenda 21 as right-wingers who see
“smart” environmental planning as an “Agenda of Fear.”
In the fishing community of King Cove Alaska, an 11-mile
gravel trail connecting the Aleut community to a life-saving airport has
been denied by the Department of Interior Secretary Jewell because the
road would jeopardize the waterfowl. “The people of King Cove want a small
road through what was their backyard,” using less than 1 percent of the Izembek
National Wildlife Refuge. But giving up refuge land would be a bad precedent.
“I’ve listened to your stories, now I have to listen to the animals,” said
Sec. Jewell.
Residents of Riverton, Wyoming (pop. 10,000) found out in
horror one day that the EPA
had given their town to an Indian reservation. Their deeds of trust could be tossed unless the Indian
reservation recognized them. The EPA declared Riverton part of the Wind
River Indian Reservation, nullifying a 1905 law passed by Congress.
A WWII veteran in New York is fighting local government
attempts to confiscate his grocery store via eminent domain in order to
open a municipality-owned market.
Some local governments confiscated land under eminent
domain in order to preserve it. Most famous is the seizure of 572 acres in Telluride.
The owner wanted to develop the land along the San Miguel River. The town set
the land aside as open space. The confiscation by the state Supreme Court
was upheld on grounds that overcrowded mountain towns need to preserve their
recreational and natural assets.
Andy and Ceil Barrie may lose 10 acres near Breckenridge,
Colorado because they ride an ATV on a 1.2-mile mining road from their
3-bedroom home in a subdivision to the 10 acres they purchased surrounding
a hundred year old cabin in the middle of the White River National Forest.
Summit County is using eminent domain to preserve open space instead of the
usual economic development. (Becket Adams)
In 2012 the EPA threatened Lois Alt, a chicken farmer from
West Virginia, with a $37,500 fine every time it rained on or near her property.
The fine, mandated under the Clean Water Act, was levied because “storm water
near her farm would come in contact with dust, feathers, and manure before
entering a local waterway.” High levels of nitrogen were found in the
chicken waste which could also threaten the water supply.
Property rights can be taken away under the guise of protecting
the environment. The American Policy Center identified cases of
such abuse.
· Mud puddles become wetlands that must be protected
· Improving land by planting trees, bushes, filling a ditch with dirt, or building a fence can result in arrest and fine of the property owner under the Clean Water Act
· Building on one’s land can be blocked
· If the area is deemed wetland, the owner can no longer use it or sell it
· Improving land by planting trees, bushes, filling a ditch with dirt, or building a fence can result in arrest and fine of the property owner under the Clean Water Act
· Building on one’s land can be blocked
· If the area is deemed wetland, the owner can no longer use it or sell it
Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) introduced
a bill, the Defense of Environment and
Property Act of 2013 (S 890), which would attempt to reign in the EPA, Army
Corps of Engineers, U.S. Forest Service, National Park Service, and the
Fish and Wildlife Service, agencies of our federal government that
infringe on Americans’ private property. The bill is in the Committee on
Environment and Public Works.
In Virginia, the House passed SB 578 on February 26,
2014. The Senate bill, sponsored by Senator Obenshain, had already passed
unanimously, entitling landowners to compensatory damages and reasonable
attorney fees when successfully challenging a local land use decision
based on an “unconstitutional condition.”
“When property owners run up against City Hall, it doesn’t
always seem like a fair fight,” said Obenshain. “No matter what the merits
of a property rights challenge, any property owner at odds with local government
feels like David taking on Goliath.”
Once the governor signs it, SB 578 will discourage localities
from abusing their authority by imposing unconstitutional restrictions
on the property owner’s ability to use his/her land.
Private property must be guarded as priceless freedom.
Land owners should reject the sustainable development idea that only government
can protect nature, air, soil, water, open spaces, and the poor. All societies
run by totalitarian governments have severe environmental degradation,
little or no private property and misuse of resources, a chasm between the
haves and have-nots, and no hope for the future of individual citizens.
Related Posts
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http://agenda21news.com/2014/09/private-property-rights-attack-comprehensive-land-use-plans/
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