By
Tom DeWeese
November 19, 2006
NewsWithViews.com
Politics is a very cynical, sinister
business. As Government has gotten ever bigger and further removed
from the electorate, elected officials have become more and more
interested in image over actual substance in the issues and programs
they promote; their messages created for emotional appeal rather than
practical or even legal sense.
Such is the case concerning legislation
proposed in the Senate by Senator George Allen and in the House by
Representative Frank Wolf, both Republicans who claim limited
government as one of their major reasons to serve in public office.
Their actions in sponsoring the “Journey Through Hallowed Ground
National Heritage Area” speak otherwise.
This Heritage Area is designed to cover
a 175-mile corridor from Thomas Jefferson’s “Monticello” in
Charlottesville, Virginia to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Sponsors of the
Heritage Area claim the purpose is simply to honor the many historic
sites in the corridor and to help local communities promote tourism.
Senator Allen and Representative Wolf
vigorously deny the Heritage Area is a danger to property rights,
pointing to specific language in the bill that says they will be
protected. They claim the designation serves only to preserve valuable
historic sights. The designated area includes many of the locations
where the Civil War was fought, as well as the homes of six U.S.
presidents.
The reality of Heritage Areas, however,
is not so friendly. Heritage Areas are federal land use mandates with
specific boundaries foisted upon local communities. Those boundaries
have consequences for property owners caught inside.
It must be understood the Heritage Area
affects all the land in the designated area, not just recognized
historic sights. The federal designation, made up from Congressional
legislation, creating federal regulation and oversight through the
National Park Service, require a form of contract between state and
local governmental entities and the Secretary of the Interior to
manage the land-use of the region for preservation. That means federal
control and zoning, either directly, under the terms of the
“management pact” or indirectly.
Such “indirect” control is the real
danger. In spite of the specific language in the bill which states
property rights will be protected, the true damage to homeowners may
well come from outside private groups and preservation agencies which
receive public funds through the Park Service to implement the
policies of the Heritage Area.
The funds flowing from the Park Service
provide a seductive pork barrel system for private advocacy groups to
enforce their vision over the development of the Heritage Area. The
experience with more than twenty-four Heritage Areas nationwide
clearly shows such groups will convert this money into political
activism to encourage local community and county governments to pass
and enforce strict zoning laws. While the tactic makes it appear that
home rule is fully in force, removing blame from the federal
designation, the impact is fully the fault of the Heritage Area
designation. The result being private property owner’s rights are
diminished and much of the local land use brought to a standstill.
Zoning and land use policies are and
should be local decision to be made by locally elected officials who
are directly accountable to the citizens they represent. However,
National Heritage Areas corrupt this inherently local procedure by
adding federal dollars, federal oversight, and federal mandates to the
mix.
Specifically, when an area is
designated a National Heritage Area, the Park Service partners with an
environmental special interest group to restore, preserve, and manage
anything and everything that is naturally, culturally, historically
and recreationally significant to the Heritage Area. That is exactly
what legislation for Heritage Areas states. This sweeping mandate
ensures that every square inch of a Heritage Area is a prime target
for regulation or acquisition private property included.
But what of the promised tourism that
is supposed to help local economies? Many members of Congress admit
they support the concept of Heritage Areas for that very reason: jobs
created by people visiting their little part of the world to see why
it’s so special. Is it true?
As has been stated, those boundaries
have consequences - strict control over the use of the land. Certain
industries may prove to be too “dirty” to be allowed. Eventually
such existing industrial operations will find themselves regulated or
taxed to a point forcing them to leave or go out of business. Property
that is locked away for preservation is no longer productive and no
longer provides the community with tax dollars. Roads will be closed
(to protect the integrity of the historic area). That means the land
is locked away from private development, diminishing growth for the
community. It also means hunting and recreational use of the land will
be curtailed.
Eventually, such restrictions will take
away the community’s economic base. Communities with sagging
economies become run-down and uninviting. Preservation zoning and lack
of jobs force ordinary people to move away. Experience has shown
promised tourism rarely materializes as promised. And it’s never
enough to save a area economically.
These are the reasons why the specific
language in the Heritage Area legislation designed to protect private
property rights is meaningless to the actual outcome. While the land
is not specifically locked away in the name of the federal
designation, its very existence creates the pressure on local
government to act. The result is the same.
It is interesting to note that
proponents of Heritage Areas refuse to even consider a program to
officially notify land owners of pending Heritage Area designations.
When specifically asked to include such notification in their plans,
they shuffle their feet, say there is no way to do it and then drop
the subject. Of course the ability is there. The mail man delivers to
each of these homeowners every day. No matter how noble a project may
sound, alarm bells should go off when proponents want to enforce their
visions in secret.
The fact is, vital historic sights in
the Journey Through Hallowed Ground Heritage Area are preserved. Much
of it is already controlled by the National Park Service. Thomas
Jefferson’s Monticello, to the Manassas Battle Field, to the
Gettysburg Battle Field, and several other birthplaces and significant
historic sights are well preserved.
The boundaries of the Gettysburg
battlefield were specifically laid out by the men who fought there.
Most of the land was private and donated by the owners for the park.
While protecting private property and the farms across which the
battle raged, they preserved the most significant parts into what
today is a comprehensive memorial. Such a system of preservation may
not be perfect, but it’s superior to a process that uses the massive
power of the federal government to rip out the roots of property
owners unlucky enough to live near something that should be special
and precious.
In contrast, it is significant to note
that today, as coercive preservation policy is imposed in Gettysburg,
the community has seen the near destruction of its once vital downtown
area where private businesses are being forced out. Many parts of the
downtown now seem rundown and void of significant businesses like
clothing shops or hardware stores. Most businesses in the downtown
area today are restaurants and tee shirt shops designed for the
tourist industry.
True, some areas of battlefields have
been developed and lost to preservation. Given there way,
preservations would set out to turn the entire nation into a museum.
Some would simply be happier to live in the past and now seem to hide
behind historic preservation to try to achieve it.
Every step of land had something from
the past occur on it. But let us remember, those who fought on those
fields did so to protect our liberty, including the ownership or
private property. One must ask how they would react to huge government
restrictions over that land now, simply because they fought there. One
can envision them again taking up arms to free it from government
clutches.
Senator Allen and Congressman Wolf tell
us they simply want to honor history. If that is truly their goal then
legislation to honor the areas without establishing a flow of cash
through the Park Service would be enough. Then, local communities
would be free to do their own tourism efforts based on the honorary
designation.
In truth, Allen and Wolf are using our
great love of history as an emotional sledgehammer to impose a massive
federal pork barrel scheme that enriches the pockets of private
advocacy groups while helping to impose draconian controls over the
dreams of average Americans caught in the cynicism of their political
ambitions.
© 2006 Tom DeWeese - All Rights
Reserved
Tom DeWeese is president of the American Policy
Center and Editor of The DeWeese Report , 70 Main Street, Suite 23,
Warrenton Virginia.
(540) 342-8911
E-Mail: apcmail@americanpolicy.org
Website: www.americanpolicy.org
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