Monday, June 4, 2012
Evans, GA
By Al Gray
Evans, GA
By Al Gray
In last weekend’s article, Overlay Somebody Else: My Battle With Columbia County Over Property Rights, the birth pangs of the ill-fated Evans Town Center Ordinance and the Evans Town Center Overlay District (aka ETCOD) in 2000 were revisited. This week, let’s look at what happened two years later, after the ‘rules’ had been in place long enough to judge how well they were applied.
It
is impossible to introduce into society a greater change and a greater evil
than this: the conversion of the law into an instrument of plunder….Sometimes
the law defends plunder and participates in it. Thus the beneficiaries are
spared the shame and danger that their acts would otherwise involve... But how
is this legal plunder to be identified? Quite simply. See if the law takes from
some persons what belongs to them and gives it to the other persons to whom it
doesn't belong. See if the law benefits one citizen at the expense of another
by doing what the citizen himself cannot do without committing a crime….Legal
plunder can be committed in an infinite number of ways.....
Augusta attorney Gail Duffie Stebbins might not know Frederic Bastiat but she knew that the Evans Town Center was legal plunder. In 2002 Ms. Stebbins sued to have the Evans Town Center Overlay Zoning Ordinance set aside for failure to give her and other property owners sufficient, defensible notice. A Superior Court Judge agreed with her. Columbia County responded by curing the technical defects, then reintroducing the same ordinance.
The As the Columbia County News-Times reported about the November, 2002 meeting: “It wasn't any more quiet the second time around, ” an obvious reference to the near-riot that broke out in 2000 in a Planning Commission meeting at which the original ordinance was advanced to the Columbia County Commission.
Brash statements? Not really. You see, there are concepts as old as society itself that found themselves into the Constitution of the United States of America and the Bill of Rights. Citizens cannot be deprived of EQUAL PROTECTION OF THE LAW under the 5th Amendment and cannot be deprived of property without DUE PROCESS OF LAW under the 14th Amendment. By these standards the ETCOD ordinance was doomed, because there had been scores of noncomplying structures and developments built with county approval. The proof was demonstrated in this presentation, made to the county commission that night.
**(See the ETCOD Nonconformity presentation below. Article continues after)ETCOD Nonconformity (1)
This is how one defeats an overly aggressive government. One can turn the planners own ordinances, actions, and lack of enforcement against them. A property owner cannot be singled out for not conforming when equal protection says he must be accorded the same leniency of those who came before. Yes, that night Columbia County fixed Ms. Stebbins' objections, only to run into decisive defeat before the meeting concluded.
The county never was able to subdue a patient determined landowner after that night, because they were armed with knowledge of their rights and how to successfully demand the same standards as those who came before them. Those standards had been gutted by the county's own hand. "Columbia County does not have the resources to manage 5-square-miles with the ordinance as it is written," said Richard Sorensen, a Northwoods subdivision resident. "What you are biting off is more than you can chew."
Indeed.
After all, equal protection has its roots in the Bible admonition “do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” Even politicians find themselves nodding in agreement with that.
The Town Center plan ended up being a collection of upgraded architectural finishes and landscaping, but the unenforceable parts died that night.
Today, Columbia County's Richard Harmon is putting the finishing touches on a comprehensive rewrite of the Evans Town Center ordinances, based upon these realities. Wise heads prevailed in the end. ***
AG
Related Stories:
Overlay Somebody Else; My Battle with Columbia County Over Property Rights
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***Do you have a story idea, a tip, or would you like to write for City Stink? Then please contact us at: citystink@gmail.com***
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