Full text: Click here: Now You Own It, Soon You Don't? - New York
Times
<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/29/nyregion/nyregionspecial2/29RDOMAIN.h\
tml?_r=1&oref=slogin&ref=nyregionspecial2&pagewanted=all>     Excerpts:
Last month, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that the Town of
Paulsboro had overreached in relying on a consultant's determination
that an undeveloped 63-acre parcel could be condemned because it was
"not fully productive."

A bill that would more narrowly define blight passed the New Jersey
State Assembly last year but has been tied up in a State Senate
committee since.

The New Jersey League of Municipalities opposes limiting the power of
municipalities in using eminent domain. Its opinion carries weight in a
state with 566 municipalities, a strong tradition of home rule, and one
in which many legislators are also mayors of their hometowns.

The state's public advocate, Ronald K. Chen, said a 1992 revision of
the state statute created the "not fully productive"
justification that "opened up the floodgates" for the improper
use of eminent domain.

Mr. Chen's office recently issued a report that listed the plan in
Long Branch, where Ms. Vendetti lives near the beach, under the heading
"Bogus Blight." It said the town based its conclusion on
"superficial" exterior inspections that noted deteriorating
paint or chipped masonry.

Nothing appears to be decrepit about the Vendettis' homes.

Carmen Vendetti, 80, had saved his money driving a truck to buy his
family, in 1960, a modest respite from the harsher environs of their
home in Newark. He and his wife, Josephine, moved there full time after
he retired. Ms. Vendetti saved her money from a job with Amtrak and
bought a house across the street from her parents in 1995. Two months
later, she attended a meeting where a developer's model of the
neighborhood showed luxury buildings all along the oceanfront.

"They had a house on my lot," she said. "I just laughed and
thought, `How are they going to do that?' No one ever used the
words `eminent domain.' "

But Adam Schneider, the mayor of Long Branch for 17 years, said some in
the area ignored the redevelopment plan, thinking it would fail, as had
many before. Some homeowners have accepted offers of units made
affordable to them in the new development, he said. He said that with
just 20 percent of the construction completed, the beachfront has been
transformed from a dangerous area of boarded-up storefronts to an
upscale, year-round destination that includes packed restaurants and a
popular park.

He said he thought the recent emotional backlash may dissuade officials
in other areas from even trying such a sweeping turnaround using eminent
domain.

"Politically it won't work anymore," he said. "I think
the time has come and gone."

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