North Dakota holdout landowner refusing to sell rights for Sandpiper oil pipeline
So, aside from the fact that these people have an environmental agenda, which is ok in my view, I wonder how does the government of a state get the right to take private property just so they can give it to a private company? A couple other articles suggest this company is an LLC in Delaware that just happened to get permission to function in SD as an public entity, entitling it to use a law made for use on public projects (such as water, electricity etc). It seems that they should not have the right to take it from one to give to another for a purely business purpose. Am I wrong here?
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Gas pipelines could reasonably be considered public utilities, as individual citizens generally buy their natural gas from the public utility. Oil pipelines, by contrast, go to Cushing, Oklahoma, and then eventually to Houston, Texas, before they are sold by non-utilities to the consumers. It really is a fundamentally different case than natural gas pipelines, but it is not being treated as such.
http://www.hh-law.com/puc-decision-su...
An oil or natural gas pipeline should not be treated as a public utility. It is owned by the oil or natural gas company. This case should parallel the Keloe vs. New London case, but because of incorrectly established precedent, it won't be.
I think it is reasonable that a utilities commission should have some oversight authority via the permitting process, although definitely governments have generally taken this way too far.
He says he's still trying to stop the taking, but he can't. He can only argue in court over the amount he is paid: "My point is I don't want to go to court and argue over how much they should pay me and get that settled by the court because I don't want to be doing business with them. I don't want their money." But he has lost that: "The trial, scheduled to begin Tuesday in Grand Forks, is only to determine the company's compensation for the land west of Emerado".
Botsford does not oppose eminent domain, he is trying to use the courts as a circus to promote his viro ideology as an exception: "Botsford said Enbridge's actions represent an 'abuse' of eminent domain. His unwillingness to allow them to use the property also stems from his concerns about fossil fuels' effect on climate change."
According to the other article Bosford is a "retired Indian law attorney" and Indian activists will be at his trial. Here is the bottom line from these loons, and it's not about private property rights: "Unspent donations will go to environmental groups Plains Justice and Honor the Earth".
A typically misleading aspect of the article is the statement, “Using eminent domain is always a last resort... We strive to reach amicable [sic] agreements with all of the landowners along our pipelines” and the statement or implication that all the other landowners are expected to be willing sellers after "negotiation". Government agencies, including the National Park Service and US Fish and Wildlife Service, always claim that property not taken under direct court order is bought from "willing sellers".
In fact, the "negotiations" rely on holding a gun to the property owners' heads (or at least an obvious bulge under the coat stuck in their ribs). Ordinarily the only legal issue in a condemnation case is the amount to be paid, not whether the property can be taken, and the amount paid must legally be only "fair market value", not what it is worth to the owner even if he is willing to sell.
That is the kind of coercion the property owner is under in the "negotiation". Most owners give up under that threat and sell without the expensive futility of a court case to try to stop the taking and the costs of legal fees to try to get more compensation. Yet we are constantly told the former owners were "willing sellers" if they aren't ordered by a court to sell. Using eminent domain as a "last resort" is the threat to take the land; it is eminent domain. Calling it "amicable" adds insult to injury.
But offering a $250,000 donation to a viro organization would only compound the injustice. The Botsfords have already said they will not willingly sell at any price. There is no such thing as a fair price for something that is not for sale. The issue is property rights, not pandering to viros by paying them Indulgences for evil pipelines contrary to the viro 'morality' of human sacrifice to nature.
There is more than enough of that already, for example with "wetlands mitigation" in which property owners must pay off government agencies or NGOs like The Nature Conservancy in penance for using their own property contrary to the viro creed. Another big example is the "carbon credits" scam, in which Indulgences must be paid for the sin of producing energy. And Federal land acquisition for preservationism is claimed to be a repayment to Mother Earth for the sin of industrial civilization, drilling for oil in particular (this is one of their arguments pushing for a Federal annual entitlement of $1 billion/year for land acquisition bypassing limits of Congressional appropriations).
Paying off the Botsfords with a distorted amount to a viro organization would ignore the moral issue of eminent domain, transferring it to martyrdom for a phony viro "idealism", while paying an outrageous amount of money for them to do more damage somewhere else.
Rights are in no way conditioned on beliefs or actions (except tort). They all must be enforced in each and every case, or they're not rights any longer. It's the right that's being defended, not the people.
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