Concerned Friends of Fernandina        

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                 Concerned Friends of Fernandina is a grassroots citizens group formed to inform and involve  residents wanting to

                 preserve the small town  identity of Fernandina Beach and its natural beauty.

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                     "With public sentiment, nothing can fail;  without it nothing can succeed." -- Abraham Lincoln

 

                 

   

      

 

 

       

 

 

 

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Click on photo to enlarge

The "Blighted" residential area north of Centre and east of  Front St

Looking north at 2nd & Broome

Corner 2nd & Broome looking south

Broome between 2nd & 3rd

Broome at 3rd St corner

Corner 3rd & Broome looking north

3rd walking north

3rd walking north

Old Church (just sold) 3rd & Calhoun

Old Church side view

Calhoun walking east from 3rd

4th & Calhoun

Brand new 'blight' at 5th & Calhoun

5th and Calhoun

6th St & Calhoun looking north

Looking west at corner 6th & Dade

looking south at corner 5th & Dade

Looking south at corner 4th & Dade

Looking south at corner 3rd & Dade

Sintes house on 3rd

3rd St

3rd St

"Blighted" definition per State Statue, Chapter 163.340

(8)  "Blighted area" means an area in which there are a substantial number of deteriorated, or deteriorating structures, in which conditions, as indicated by government-maintained statistics or other studies, are leading to economic distress or endanger life or property, and in which two or more of the following factors are present:

(a)  Predominance of defective or inadequate street layout, parking facilities, roadways, bridges, or public transportation facilities;

(b)  Aggregate assessed values of real property in the area for ad valorem tax purposes have failed to show any appreciable increase over the 5 years prior to the finding of such conditions;

(c)  Faulty lot layout in relation to size, adequacy, accessibility, or usefulness;

(d)  Unsanitary or unsafe conditions;

(e)  Deterioration of site or other improvements;

(f)  Inadequate and outdated building density patterns;

(g)  Falling lease rates per square foot of office, commercial, or industrial space compared to the remainder of the county or municipality;

(h)  Tax or special assessment delinquency exceeding the fair value of the land;

(i)  Residential and commercial vacancy rates higher in the area than in the remainder of the county or municipality;

(j)  Incidence of crime in the area higher than in the remainder of the county or municipality;

(k)  Fire and emergency medical service calls to the area proportionately higher than in the remainder of the county or municipality;

(l)  A greater number of violations of the Florida Building Code in the area than the number of violations recorded in the remainder of the county or municipality;

(m)  Diversity of ownership or defective or unusual conditions of title which prevent the free alienability of land within the deteriorated or hazardous area; or

(n)  Governmentally owned property with adverse environmental conditions caused by a public or private entity.

However, the term "blighted area" also means any area in which at least one of the factors identified in paragraphs (a) through (n) are present and all taxing authorities subject to s. 163.387(2)(a) agree, either by interlocal agreement or agreements with the agency or by resolution, that the area is blighted. Such agreement or resolution shall only determine that the area is blighted. For purposes of qualifying for the tax credits authorized in chapter 220, "blighted area" means an area as defined in this subsection.

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  • 01 Feb 06  Fraudulent "blight" exposed
 Local city's "blight" studies equally flawed.  The Shores managed to declare condos that weren't even finished yet "blighted".  Ormond Beach declared vacant, rural land "blighted".  Daytona Beach, too numerous to list.
 
''The definition of blight has been diluted to the point that it can apply to just about any piece of land in Florida,'' said Rep. Everett S. Rice, R-Indian Shores, who is calling for a constitutional amendment restricting eminent domain.  Miami Herald 1/27/06.
 

THE HEARTLAND INSTITUTE
19 South LaSalle Street #903
Chicago, IL 60603
phone 312/377-4000 · fax 312/377-5000
http://www.heartland.org



 

Florida City Plans to Drive 6,000 Citizens from Their Homes



Author: Matt Warner
Published: The Heartland Institute 02/01/2006

 

"It can't happen here" was the prevailing initial response of Florida's public officials after the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in June 2005 in Kelo v. City of New London. The state's attorney general even issued a statement evidently intended to calm Floridians' fears that their local governments suddenly had carte blanche authority to seize private property.

Floridians' initial complacency has been swept away, however, by events in the southeast Florida community of Riviera Beach, now the site of one of the country's biggest eminent domain disputes since the 1950s. If the city is allowed to carry out its plans, as many as 6,000 residents could be displaced.

Proponents of the $2.4 billion Riviera Beach redevelopment plan cite promised benefits of new jobs and a revitalized economy. Outraged residents whose homes are subject to condemnation under the plan have pointed out what they see as major flaws in the city's efforts to justify its use of eminent domain.


Critics Cite Bogus Blight

Homeowner Martha Babson was among those alarmed by the city's 2001 study declaring her neighborhood blighted. It's a designation that--under Florida law--gives local government the authority to use eminent domain. So Babson decided to conduct her own study. Walking the entire 400-acre area that is marked for redevelopment, she found numerous inconsistencies between the study's findings and the reality on the ground.

Babson's discovery garnered little attention for several years, until the Palm Beach Post reported some of her findings last November. Among them, Babson found homes where the city's study had listed vacant lots. She also found structures in good condition that the city's study had listed as dilapidated and beyond repair.

According to Dana Berliner of the Institute for Justice, which defended the homeowners in the Kelo case, such bogus blight studies are common. She told the Post for a December 11, 2005 article, "Everybody knows the purpose [of blight studies] is to find the area blighted. They assume no one will really go through the study itself with a fine-tooth comb."


Plan Grabs National Attention

When it became obvious Florida's property owners weren't immune to the impact of the Kelo ruling, the Florida House appointed a special committee on property rights three weeks after the ruling. In its early discussions the committee has focused on the issues surrounding blight criteria. This spring the committee is expected to recommend narrowing the criteria that allow for the use of eminent domain.

In the meantime, Babson and her fellow homeowners continue to fight Riviera Beach's redevelopment. One of the plan's principal advocates, Riviera Beach Mayor Michael D. Brown, warns that without redevelopment, his city will die. The case has received national attention.

"We're definitely in Tiananmen Square: one little guy in front of all those tanks," Babson told a Los Angeles Times reporter for a December 7 story. "We've slowed them down, but we haven't stopped them."


Matt Warner (matt@jamesmadison.org) is director of public affairs for The James Madison Institute, a nonpartisan policy center in Tallahassee, Florida.

 

 

 

 

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"cfof" are residents of Fernandina Beach, Florida.
 
Last updated: January 15, 2010.