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In-Depth Information
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Fear
and Trembling- By Carol W. LaGrasse (Worth Commenting,
Reprinted from the New York Property Rights Clearinghouse, Vol.
10, No. 1, PRFA, Winter 2006)
Most property owners faced with the threatening experience
of dealing with DEC wetlands bureaucrats and APA officials are
so terrified that that they will not ask their elected representatives
for assistance. Anyway, representatives can not be counted on
to help property owners facing unjust environmental permit conditions
and enforcement, but, instead, are good at getting grants for
communities.
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- Visiting
Your RepresentativeHow To Be Heard - By Carol
W. LaGrasse (PRFA Position Brief, March 2006)
The most effective way to influence your representative is
to visit the official at the capitol or the district office,
either as an informed individual citizen, as part of a group
visit, or as a participant in a rally or lobbying day.
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- Write for
Property Rights Act Now, After Kelo, A Time of
Outrage and Opportunity - By Carol W. LaGrasse (PRFA,
January 2006)
The State Senate hearing at the Capitol left the impression
that delaying action on eminent domain could be used to diffuse
the outrage over the Kelo v. New London ruling. A revised
definition of blight might lull citizens into false security.
But Senator DeFrancisco has a bill to restore constitutional
limits to eminent domain and he and Assemblyman Brodsky have
proposed that condemnation by authorities be approved by elected
bodies.
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- Rules
of Engagement-By Carol W. LaGrasse, President, Property
Rights Foundation of America. Speech to the Ninth Annual National
Conference on Private Property Rights (PRFA, Albany, N.Y.,
October 22, 2005)
First of all, fight to win. Set your goals. Speak your
issue clearly to be heard by the government and by those who
can follow you, begins Carol LaGrasses
short, to-the-point summary of the basic, essential rules for
grassroots success in defending private property rights at every
level.
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National
Property Rights Ombudsman Legislation - By Craig M.
Call, Utah State Property Rights Ombudsman Speech to the Ninth
Annual National Conference on Private Property Rights (PRFA,
Albany, N.Y., October 22, 2005)
The Utah Property Rights Ombudsman has successfully acted
as a neutral third party to make sure that people have straight
answers to the questions that they face in land use and eminent
domain situations involving state and local government. I
try to make the law work better for individuals who call me,
said Mr. Call. U. S. Senator Orrin Hatch has proposed legislation
for a federal property rights ombudsman within the Department
of Transportation. (Note: The Ombudsman has been proposed as
eminent domain legislation in the New York State Assembly and
Senate - 2006)
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- PRFA
Holds Successful Ninth Annual National Property Rights Conference
- PRFA, October 2005
This report describes national leaders and local activists
addressing a rapt audience of individuals gathered October 22,
2005 at the Turf Holiday Inn, Albany, N.Y., about the theme Rules
of Engagement for Defending Our Private Property Rights.
Bill Moshofsky, Oregonians in Action, gave the Keynote on
Oregons Measure 37 referendum. Four of the prominent
speakers exclusively addressed how citizens can battle the Supreme
Courts destructive Kelo v. New London eminent
domain ruling.
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Organizing
Successfully Against the Sacandaga Reservoir Regulating District-By
Guy Poulin, Speech to the Ninth Annual National Conference
on Private Property Rights (PRFA, Albany, N.Y., October 22,
2005)
Guy Poulin, a resident of Northville in Saratoga County, rallied
the shoreline owners on the Great Sacandaga Lake when the Hudson
River Black River Regulating District Commission obscurely announced
that the access permit fees would go sky high. His researched
the law controlling the fees, exposed the new scheme, which was
illegal, and aroused the property owners to action.
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- Rise Up - A Call to Regain
Private Property Rights After Kelo v. New London
- By Carol W. LaGrasse, (PRFA, July 2005)
Each of us should take on the task of counteracting the U.
S. Supreme Courts Susette Kelo v. City of New
London decision. We must use our influence on local government
and the state legislature to prohibit eminent domain to take
property from one private owner to transfer it to another private
person for the purpose of economic development.
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- Grants Have
Agendas - By Carol W. LaGrasse, PRFA November 15, 2004
Government grants put never-ending streams of money toward
preservationist objectives that diminish private property rights.
Prime examples are National Heritage Areas, regional planning,
trails, and government land acquisition.
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- The Freedom
of Information Request (With Sample Letter) - By Carol
W. LaGrasse (PRFA Background Brief, December 2004)
Knowledge is the first key to success in defending private
property rights. Although based on New York and federal freedom
of information law, this article has important information applicable
anywhere in the United States.
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The
Proposed Rondout Creek Canalway Trail-Defending Property Owners
- By Joseph Havranek, Rondout Landowners Alliance, Seventh Annual
New York Conference on Private Property Rights (PRFA, October
18, 2003)
A classic of successful activism. FOIL Requests revealed that
the true intent of the local project in Rosendale and Marbletown
was a 108-mile trail linking the Hudson and Delaware Rivers.
The Rondout Landowners Alliance got the information to the people
and went on the offensive.
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A
Property Rights Primer How to Educate Yourself
By Susan Allen, Keene Valley, N.Y. (PRFA, December 10, 2002)
Dont rely on others. If you have been hit with
a property rights issue, you need to become very
knowledgeable in a very great hurry. This primer
by an expert tells you how to gather information about government
programs and land ownership without any prior background.
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Cutting
Edge Litigation for the Future - Madeline Sheila Galvin,
Galvin and Morgan, Delmar, N. Y., Speech, Sixth Annual New York
Conference on Private Property Rights (PRFA, November 16, 2002)
Property owners must stand up again and again to bureaucrats
in the court room. Gather documents from bureaucrats by doing
Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) requests long before going
to court.
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- A Wake-Up
CallOrganizing for Success, Proceedings of the
Fifth Annual New York Conference on Private Property Rights,
edited by Carol W. LaGrasse, Property Rights Foundation of America,
Inc.
National leaders and experts reveal essentials about reaching
your representative, exposing government to the light of day,
effective media work, web outreach, cable television, the successful
newsletter, keeping a group together, building coalitions, and
fund-raisingall in the context of defending freedom.
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- Defeating
Land Designations - Carol W. LaGrasse, PRFA, October
16, 2000
Using National Park Service proposal as an example, outlines
essential strategies applicable to all national land designations,
including Demanding to Know Bounds, Publicity, Washington Trips,
Letters to the Editor, Letters to Congress, Notices to Property
Owners, The Rally, and more.
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Organizing
Against Excessive Zoning - Thomas A. Miller,
Founding Member, Allegany Citizens Rights Committee, Allegany,
N.Y., from Proceedings of the Third Annual N.Y. Conf. on Private
Property Rights (1998)
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