By Bill Sizemore
February 12, 2007
NewsWithViews.com
One would think that of all people farmers, who make
their living off the land, would respect private property rights and
want to protect them. For many farmers that may be the case, but it
would be naive to think that it is true of the Oregon Farm Bureau.
In recent news stories, it has been reported that the
Farm Bureau supports efforts by Democrat Governor Ted Kulongoski and
Democrat leaders in the state legislature to suspend voter-approved
Measure 37, which is arguably the most important property rights
measure to pass in this country in decades. (Measure 37 requires
government to compensate property owners for any loss in value caused
by a government imposed restriction on the use of their land, or
remove the restriction. It passed with 61 percent of the vote.)
The Farm Bureau says it supports suspending
implementation of Measure 37, because it wants to limit development in
rural areas to make more land available for farming. Well, folks,
that’s only part of the story. In reality however, like with most
issues, the Farm Bureau’s position on Measure 37 is just about
money. In fact, they told me so.
When I was the Republican nominee for governor in
1998, I met with the Oregon Farm Bureau at their state headquarters in
Salem, hopelessly seeking their endorsement. In that meeting, I talked
to them about property rights and about changing Oregon’s land use
laws to allow people who own property in the country to build a house
on their land. The leaders of the Farm Bureau made it crystal clear to
me that day that they did not support such a move.
Frankly, I was shocked by their response. They
informed me that if someone owned 10 or 20 or 40 acres in the country,
and the laws were changed so they could build a home on their land,
that 10 or 20 or 40-acre parcel would instantly be worth a lot more
money than if no home could be built on it. Their expressed position
was: Farmers have a right to expand their business just like any other
businessman does. They told me that if people could not build a house
on their land, then farmers could buy it from them cheaper, because
there really isn’t much else the owners could do with it, except
sell it.
From a ruthless business perspective, I am sure the
Oregon Farm Bureau is exactly right. Morally, however, their position
is reprehensible.
Even to this day, I remember clearly how I responded
to their stated position. I asked them if I understood their position
correctly, that indeed what they wanted to do was to use the power of
government to stop other people from being able to use their land, so
farmers could buy it cheaper. Incredibly, they acknowledged that I had
correctly stated their position.
The Oregon Farm Bureau may claim they want to preserve
farmland, but what they mean by that is they don’t want people to be
able to build a house on their land, because then farmers can’t buy
it for an artificially low price. Pretty much everyone familiar with
real estate knows that a 10-acre parcel that you can build a house on
is worth probably two to five times as much as a 10-acre parcel that
you can’t.
It should be noted that Oregon has a Right to Farm law
that prohibits people, who choose to build a home in a farm zone, from
suing over such things as farm noise, too much dust, or the spraying
of pesticides. Therefore, avoiding such complaints cannot be the
primary reason why the Farm Bureau wants to keep people from building
a residence in the country.
In all fairness, it should also be noted that not all
farmers are working to undermine private property rights. In fact,
some of the county farm bureaus enthusiastically supported Measure 37
and unlike the state bureau continue to do so.
As the author of Measure Seven, the voter-approved
2000 measure that started the modern day property rights revival in
Oregon, I can say with conviction that the problem with Measure 37 is
not that it is all that ambiguous. The problem is this: The powers
that be, the governor, most of the Democrats in the legislature, most
of the judges on our appellate courts, and most of the cities and
counties in the state don’t like the measure and are throwing out
every red herring and setting off every smokescreen they can to stall
implementation of it until they can find a way to get rid of it.
The people spoke, twice in fact, and the politicians
are still saying they aren’t sure what the people intended. They
understand, alright. They just don’t like what they heard. You can
rest assured the powers that be wouldn’t be so “confused,” if
they liked what the people had said, when they passed Measure 37 by an
overwhelming margin.
© 2007 Bill Sizemore - All Rights Reserved
Bill Sizemore is a registered Independent who works as executive
director of the Oregon Taxpayers Union, a statewide taxpayer
organization. Bill was the Republican candidate for governor in 1998.
He and his wife Cindy have four children, ages eight to thirteen, and
live on 36 acres in Beavercreek, just southeast of Oregon City,
Oregon.
Bill Sizemore is considered one of the foremost experts on the
initiative process in the nation, having placed dozens of measures on
the statewide ballot. Bill was raised in the logging communities of
the Olympic Peninsula of Washington state, and moved to Portland in
1972. He is a graduate of Portland Bible College, where he taught for
two years. A regular contributing writer to www.NewsWithViews.com.
E-Mail: bill@otu.org
Bill's Web site: www.Billsizemore.net