Gail and I are becoming
more and more concerned about what we believe to be judicial activism. I’m
certainly not a lawyer, and may not understand the intricacies of some of the
law, but recent court decisions at all levels have raised my concerns about
the preservation of the constitutionally reserved rights of our citizens. It
seems that with each passing week another judge at some level has made another
ruling that further restricts the freedoms protected by our constitutional.
Last Friday Marion County
District Court Judge Mary James invalidated Measure 37 in Marion
County
, ruling that the voter passed land use initiative is unconstitutional five
separate ways. Measure 37 requires government to either compensate a property
owner for reduced property value caused by land use regulations passed after
they acquired their property or allow the restricted property use. Although
Judge James’ ruling is only legally binding on the counties that were party
to the suit, I am concerned that most counties will stop processing Measure 37
claims until the Appellate Court rules on her decision.
The judge ruled that the measure:
1.)
Violates the equal protection clause of the
Oregon
and
United States
Constitution.
2.)
Violates the State Constitution ban on suspending laws.
3.)
Violates the separation of powers between branches of
government.
4.)
Intrudes on legislative authority.
5.)
And violates due process protections under the
U.S.
Constitution.
The judge essentially
agreed with every novel interpretation of the law proposed by the plaintiffs.
Does she believe that compensating selected individuals for government caused
loss of property value violates the constitution but that selectively taking
the value of their private property does not? Does she believe that our
constitutionally reserved right to create law by the initiative process is
unconstitutional? Measure 37 is
codified into
Oregon
Revised Statutes. The 73rd Legislature had full opportunity to
change the law and declined to take any action. Instead, one district court
judge has taken it upon herself to create law. In my opinion, that action is
what is unconstitutional.
Last month U.S. District
Court Judge James Singleton Jr. ruled in California that essentially all
activity allowed on Forest Service land is subject to congressional guarantee
of public notice, comment and appeal, except for activities like building
maintenance and lawn mowing. His ruling effectively eliminated public access
to
Forest
Service land for mushroom harvest, Christmas tree harvest, wood cutting, moss
gathering and any other activity that would remove anything from our public
forests. Unless the judge stays his ruling pending
Forest
Service appeal, a mushroom gathering industry worth tens of million dollars in
Oregon
, and some 65,000 Christmas tree permitees will be banned from those
activities immediately. This is starting to sound like the old English
King’s forests where the king controlled the forest and everything in it
under penalty of law. Only here
in the
United States
, Judge Singleton’s ruling essentially gave control of all use of our
National Forests to environmentalist groups like the
Western
Environmental
Law
Center
by virtue of their ability to appeal all forest use decisions.
Last week the
Oregon
Supreme Court ruled 4 to 3 that the
Portland
Public
School District
did not have authority to outsource it custodial work to private firms. Citing
a 1937 statute the Court said that only public employees may be paid with
funds allocated to public schools in
Oregon
. The ruling, that overturned decisions by the Employee Relations Board and
the Appellate Court, reversed a school board management decision that has
saved millions of dollars. The public employee unions that brought the suit
are ecstatic.
Oregon
’s highest court has essentially forbidden the state to pay for private
competition to the government school system monopoly.
Finally, last summer the
United States
Supreme Court ruled in the Kelo decision that government has the right to
transfer private property taken through eminent domain to another private
entity that the government believes is better qualified to use that property.
This decision turns more than two centuries of private property rights on its
head. Following that ruling, no private property in the
United States
is safe from forced government acquisition if another private entity with
enough wealth and political influence wants the property. In my opinion, this
is one of the worst Supreme Court decisions in our nation’s history. The
sanctity of private property is the cornerstone upon which all our other
freedoms are based.
I believe that we all must
start paying much closer attention to who are elected or appointed to
judgeships at all levels. We must examine each judicial candidate to determine
their legal ability, philosophy, and commitment to interpreting the law. Then,
we must elect judges that will interpret the law---not create law to fit their
personal opinion.
Above all remember that if
we do not stand up for rural
Oregon
no one will.