All The Eminent Domain Fit To Condemn
The Village Voice gleefully and snarkily notes that the new New York Times building on 40th Street seems rather restrictive on who or what constitutes an acceptable tenant, kind of strange for a building constructed on land supposedly taken for a “public purpose”:
When The New York Times and Forest City Ratner Companies open their grand new office building on Eighth Avenue, it won’t have a Taco Bell, McDonald’s, Wendy’s, or Nathan’s, because they are specifically forbidden under terms of a land deal with the state. But a Starbucks or Cosi would be just fine.
The lease, which is on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission, also bars renting space in the 52-story building for “a school or classroom or juvenile or adult day care or drop-in center.” It forbids “medical uses, including without limitation, hospital, medical, or dental offices, agencies, or clinics.” It gives the New York Times Company “the sole and absolute discretion” to reject United Nations or foreign-government offices, including any “considered controversial” or that are potentially the focus of demonstrations. It bans any “employment agency (other than executive-search firms) or job training center” and auction houses, “provided, however, the foregoing shall not apply to high-end auction houses specializing in art and historical artifacts.” Discount stores are forbidden. And the deal bars “a welfare or social-services office, homeless shelter or homeless assistance center, court or court-related facility.”
In fact, any government office is excluded from the building if it would attract people who arrive “without appointment.”
Lease restrictions that exclude the public may not be unusual in luxury office buildings, but there is an irony in this case. The Pataki administration, acting on behalf of the New York Times Company, condemned the property for a so-called “public purpose.” This is the standard the Fifth Amendment sets for the state to invoke the immense power of eminent domain.
No wonder the Times editorial board came out in favor of Kelo v. New London!
See also: Reason’s “Hail Seizers: The New York Times cheers on the land grabbers”.
Posted: August 17th, 2005 | Filed under: Tragicomic, Ironic, Obnoxious Or Absurd