A New York town’s actions to seize a private golf club should have club members
and non-golfing taxpayers in cities and states across America very concerned.
Mike Hughes
CEO, the National Golf Course Owners Association
It’s not often the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution enters the world of golf, but it did so recently in the Village of North Hills, New York. That’s where city officials are moving to claim eminent domain over a private golf club. While disturbing in this instance, the possibility that similar actions could spread to courses in other parts of the U.S. is what should have golf club members and non-golfing taxpayers alike very concerned.
The Village of North Hills is home to the Deepdale Golf Club, a highly regarded private club approximately 20 miles from Manhattan. The mayor of North Hills claims converting Deepdale to a municipal facility in the name of “economic development” would provide an amenity to village residents. It is also likely the conversion would boost property values, and in turn, property taxes, although mayor Marvin Natiss isn’t talking about this downstream benefit just yet.
We believe the mayor is loosely interpreting the “Takings” clause of the Fifth Amendment, which allows taking private property for “public use” as long as just compensation is made to the private party. However, our quarrel is not with the Constitution or even the concept of eminent domain – it’s with this interpretation of economic development.
We saw the eminent domain issue coming even before the U.S. Supreme Court’s controversial Kelo v. City of New London, Conn. ruling in June 2005 that confirmed the use of eminent domain in the name of “economic development.” A pre-Kelo example occurred in Coatesville, Penn., where an attempt failed to condemn a family farm in order to construct a recreational complex that would have included an 18-hole golf course.
Leadership at the National Golf Course Owners Association believes this is a slippery slope. If government starts to condemn private property in order to build upscale municipal courses, or scout for “blighted” privately owned golf courses ripe for multi-million dollar renovations subsidized by taxpayers, where might it lead? That’s why this is not only an issue for golfers. Undoubtedly, that’s also why lawmakers in Washington and in more than 30 states have introduced legislation to curtail or require greater scrutiny of eminent domain in the name of economic development.
We believe local authorities need to ask whether their constituents are really clamoring for more high-end, public golf courses. (The golf industry’s participation statistics over the past several years certainly don’t support that.) What’s more, there are currently some 70 public-access golf courses within a 25-mile drive of North Hills. Isn’t the hue and cry much louder for investment in better schools, healthcare and roads?
The question that must be asked now in North Hills – and maybe soon in towns across America – is whether the need for further economic development justifies seizing some of the least-blighted property in the area. Is it more compelling than the Deepdale members’ right to their private club? Further, might the property values enjoyed by North Hills – already among the highest in the nation – be due in part to the gem of a private golf club that already calls North Hills home?
Media Contact:
Bill Bryant
bbryant@bryantmarcomm.com
678-366-3232