The Dark Side of Housing Bipartisanship
Plus: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is fooled by TikTok housing falsehoods, Austin building boom cuts prices, and Sacramento does the socialist version of "homeless homesteading."
Plus: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is fooled by TikTok housing falsehoods, Austin building boom cuts prices, and Sacramento does the socialist version of "homeless homesteading."
The New York Times and the Atlantic report on how the movement to curb exclusionary zoning and build more housing has managed to cut across ideological lines.
They are to be commended. But other property owners should also be freed of exclusionary zoning.
The Institute for Justice says its data show that a century-old Supreme Court doctrine created a huge exception to the Fourth Amendment.
The Colorado governor talks about live housing reforms in the state legislature, the federal role in housing policy, and whether we should abolish zoning completely.
Prominent political commentator and zoning reform advocate comments on my work on this topic (with Joshua Braver).
A lawsuit from the Institute for Justice claims the law violates the Louisiana Constitution.
Plus: Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs dithers over whether to veto bipartisan Starter Homes bill, Biden says "build, build, build," and Massachusetts sues anti-apartment suburb.
Kristy Kay Money and Rolf Jacob Sraubhaar are now suing the city of San Marcos, Texas, saying they're being forced to keep a Klan-linked symbol on the front of their house is a physical taking.
Plus: The man who would build an ADU, the zoning theory of child care, and tiny home red tape in Hawaii.
Amid fear of rising crime, let's take a careful and deliberate approach—lest innocent people lose their rights and property.
Thomas agreed with the Court's decision to not take up two challenges to New York's rent stabilization law but said the constitutionality of rent control "is an important and pressing question."
Plus: Voters in Massachusetts reject state-mandated upzonings, Florida localities rebel against a surprisingly effective YIMBY reform, and lawsuits target missing middle housing in Virginia.
Coauthor Josh Braver and I argue exclusionary zoning violates the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
The new libertarian president believes in free markets and the rule of law. When people have those things, prosperity happens.
In some cases, the city is also requiring homeowners to pay to replace trees that squashed their houses.
His speech in Davos challenged the growing worldwide trend of increased government involvement in economic affairs.
Peter and Annica Quakenbush are suing Brooks Township for the right to operate an environmentally friendly cemetery.
Both conservative and liberal justices seem to oppose letting states get away with violating the Takings Clause merely because Congress hasn't enacted a specific law enforcing it against them.
That's bad news for Americans.
That's the big takeaway from yesterday's oral argument in Sheetz v. County of El Dorado. But it's not clear whether the Court will resolve any additional issues, and if so how.
Hackers are helping tractor owners “jailbreak” their equipment in order to repair it.
The panel covered many cases and featured views many would not expect at a Fed Soc event.
They should take this wise and just step sooner rather than later.
Claims of the Act's success at recovering imperiled species are vastly overstated, especially on private land.
I focus on the Washington Supreme Court's flawed decision holding an eviction moratorium is not a taking of private property.
Plus: Austin's newly passed zoning reforms could be in legal jeopardy, HUD releases its latest census of the homeless population, and a little-discussed Florida reform is spurring a wave of home construction.
After public backlash, Hanover County Commission has decided to pursue a voluntary purchase of the Cheetah Premier Gentlemen's Club next door.
Plus: Austin and Salt Lake City pass very different "middle housing" reforms, Democrats in Congress want to ban hedge fund–owned rental housing, and a look at GOP presidential candidate's housing policy positions.
The brief urges the Supreme Court to reverse its badly misguided precedent in Pruneyard v. Robins.
The late Supreme Court justice eloquently defended property rights and state autonomy.
She was the first woman Supreme Court justice, and played a key role in changing the Court's jurisprudence for the better on several issues.
The political push behind the law was well-meaning. But it will backfire on many prospective renters.
When everyone owns something, no one does.
Economist Brian Greaney may have found serious methodological errors in a much-cited 2019 article by Enrico Moretti and Chang-Tai Hsieh.
Why have so few species been taken off the endangered species list?
The Cato Institute recently published the latest edition of its ranking of personal, economic, and overall freedom in the states.
Owners of Wilmington, North Carolina's Cheetah Premier Gentlemen's Club say they were blindsided by the seizure.
The amicus brief is on behalf of the Cato Institute and myself.
The $300 billion in frozen Russian state assets in Western nations could fund a large part of Ukraine's defense.
Los Angeles voters will decide in March whether to force hotels to report empty rooms to the city and accept vouchers from homeless people.
Why have so few species been taken off the endangered species list?
Pro-zoning candidates in Caroline, New York, won the elections for town supervisor and three seats on the town board.
The U.S. Supreme Court keeps putting off deciding whether to take up a challenge to New York's rent control scheme.
Without a prompt post-seizure hearing, people can lose their property for months or years even when they ultimately get it back.
The state housing officials who performed the audit describe San Francisco's approval process as a "notoriously complex and cumbersome" mess.
A masterful epic from one of Hollywood's most important, most ambitious filmmakers.