By Emily Badgerjun | Atlantic Cities
The Supreme Court handed down a decision Tuesday morning that’s gotten considerably less attention than this term’s blockbuster battles over same-sex marriage and voting rights. But Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Management District will likely prove a historic property-rights ruling, with far-reaching implications for the leverage local land-use agencies may use to extract concessions from property owners and developers for the common and environmental good.
The question lurking behind the case – how much and what can the public ask for when a private property owner’s actions cause wider harm or societal burdens? – has the potential for much broader impact than the technical details of one Florida man’s property dispute would suggest. And the 5-4 ruling surprised court-watchers who felt the government made a convincing case at oral arguments in January. In a majority opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito, the court sided with the property owner.
“The decision has the potential to significantly expand property-owners’ ability to challenge local land use regulations and fees.”
“It’s a very important decision that seriously undermines the authority of local communities across the country,” says John Echeverria, a legal scholar at the University of Vermont Law School who has written extensively on “takings” law. The two factions of the Supreme Court, on the other hand, disagree over whether this ruling will “work a revolution in land-use law.”
Note: Rose Law Group Chairman of Family Law Department Kaine Fischer talks today to 92.3 FM KTAR and KFYI 550 AM about breaking U. S. Supreme Court decision on gay marriage
Related: Arizona initiative moves forward to legalize same-sex marriage