
See Also

Additional Helpful
Organizations
Civil Property Rights Associates, Inc.
(This
organization is in court defending the rights of the small property
owners in the Long Island Pines preserve who have received no
compensation even though their land has been declared off limits
to development.)
address
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In-Depth Information
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The Eminent
Domain Crisis - By James E. Morgan, Esq., Principal,
Galvin & Morgan, Counselors at Law, Delmar, N.Y., Tenth Annual
National Conference on Private Property Rights (PRFA, Albany,
N.Y., October 14, 2006)
Eminent domain is being abused by circumventing New Yorks
Enabling Act. The Fifth Amendment right to compensation for a
taking of private property is being denied with the governments
imposition of transferable development rights for valuable property
in the Long Island Pine Barrens, and with the use of zoning and
smart growth regulation.
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- One-Two Punch-Long
Island Pine Barrens Owners Sue in Both State and Federal Courts
-By Carol W. LaGrasse, reprinted from New York Property Rights
Clearinghouse, Vol. 5, No. 1 (PRFA, Summer 2001)
Led by Walter H. Olsen, Sr., and Gladys Gherardi, with other
members of the Civil Property Rights Associates, Inc., small
property owners trapped in the Long Island Pine Barrens Core
Area brought their complaints in two new lawsuits in state and
federal court in June. The lawsuits divulge an unsavory history
of how stakeholders involved in politics,
real estate, and well-connected environmental organizations created
legislation and drew zoning map boundaries for the Core Area
for zero development to suit their own interests, while disregarding
laws requiring considerations for groundwater protection.
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- Its Court
After All for Small Property Owners-the Long Island Pine Barrens
Lesson,-by Carol W. LaGrasse, reprinted from New
York Property Rights Clearinghouse (Vol. 3, No. 2, April
- July 1996)
Its easy to pass laws to restrict property owners,
a lot more difficult to come up with hard cash to compensate
them. After waiting three years, paying full taxes on their land
while others lost their land to tax foreclosure, about 600 small
property owners formed the Civil Property Rights Associates,
Inc. In 1996, 125 of these property owners went to court for
takings compensation and redress of
other infringements on their rights.
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- Sullying
TitleAn editorial about transferable development
rights by Carol W. LaGrasse, reprinted from Worth
Commenting, New York Property Rights Clearinghouse
(Vol. 3., No. 2, April - July 1996)
Calling to mind the impossibility of filing a deed in present-day
Russia, Carol LaGrasse discusses the muddying of title inherent
to transferable development rights, or TDRs.
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