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Sunday, June 07, 2009
Paul Jacob :: Townhall.com Columnist
Preserving our history . . . of respect for property rights
by Paul Jacob
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As politics pits a property owner in Montgomery County, Maryland, and a county councilman against the county’s Historic Preservation Commission and other do-gooders, Washington Post reporter Ann E. Marimow asks, “Who should decide what is historic?

It’s the wrong question.

Still, the answer is simple: Americans are free to individually decide what they deem to be historic. So are committees and commissions and preservationist societies of all sorts. They just shouldn’t be able to control someone else’s property because of its historical significance.

The more important question: Whose property is it?

The plot of earth at the center of this conflict — the locus of the focus, if you will — belongs to Sherwood and Hazel Duvall. In 1933, at the tender age of 14, Sherwood’s father passed away and Sherwood took over running the farm. He worked the place for 60 years. Now, at 90, he rents tracts of land to local farmers to bring in income.

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For five years, Duvall has been fighting the Montgomery County Historic Preservation Commission’s determination that his farm should be a “protected” historic site. County regulators say the set of farm buildings on his property are historically and architecturally significant.

“There’s nothing historical about it,” Duvall counters. “It is just old.”

Duvall wants to tear down several dilapidated buildings on his property. The buildings are so old that to keep them standing requires repairs and maintenance costing thousands of dollars per year. Plus, Duvall planned to replace one two-story farmhouse with a newly built home for his grandson.

The county won’t let him.

Last year, it seemed that Duvall had won. The county council decided not to include his property on the list of parcels to be “protected” by the county for historical significance. But he later found his property on a new list of “potentially significant” sites. And still under the thumb of similar land-use regulations.

Montgomery County is chock full of historic places. More than 400 sites and 21 neighborhoods have been “taken over” by regulators due to the proclaimed uniqueness of the site’s history or architecture.

Currently, anyone can nominate a historic site or district for inclusion in the county’s Master Plan for Historic Preservation. The property must then meet only one of the following criteria:

  1. Character, interest or value as part of the development, heritage or culture of the county, state or country.
  2. Be of a significant historical event.
  3. Be identified with a person or group who influenced society.
  4. Exemplify the cultural, economic, social, political or historic heritage of the county and its communities.
  5. The architecture of the historic resource embodies the distinctive characteristic of a type, period or method of construction.
  6. The architecture represents the work of a master, possesses high artistic values or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction.
  7. The architecture represents an established and familiar visual feature of the neighborhood, community or county.

These criteria are open to very broad interpretation.

Landowners also complain that the county fails to inform them when their property is being considered for historic designation and that, once so designated, obtaining work permits from the Historic Preservation Commission in order to make alterations to their homes or businesses is both slow and expensive. Continued...

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About The Author
Paul Jacob is President of Citizens in Charge. His daily Common Sense commentary appears on the Web, via e-mail, and on radio stations across America.
 
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Individual property rights...
... in the face of government power have long been among our more troubling issues. One of the biggest violations is one nobody wants to hear about today. Almost a century and a half ago, the US government unilaterlly deprived slaveowners of what until then had been their legal property, and did so without any compensation. The feds after the Civil War passed a constitutional amendment to tidy this all up, but a wrong remains a wrong.
This is the most devastating argument against slavery reparations, BTW -- not only is there a constitutional amendment that technically forbids it, but the descendents of the slaveowners would need to be first in line.


more of the same
Yep, the folks in this county also denied bar and restaurant owners the right to allow smoking in THEIR businesses, so that the slaves, I mean willing people who knowingly took employment at these places, would not have to be exposed to smoke. It's also the same county where the great and wise decision makers want to make sure that no one eats something bad for them, so they've passed laws concerning transfats, and forcing people to post nutritional information.
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