Posted on 06/11/2019 4:29:27 AM PDT by george76
John Diepersloot squinted under a bright Central Valley sun, pointing to the damage to his fruit orchard that came with the California bullet train.
He lost 70 acres of prime land. Rail contractors left mounds of rubble along his neat rows. Irrigation hoses are askew. A sophisticated canopy system for a kiwi field, supported by massive steel cables, was torn down.
But what really irritates Diepersloot is the $250,000 that he paid out of his own pocket for relocating wells, removing trees, building a road and other expenses.
I am out a quarter-million bucks on infrastructure, and they havent paid a dime for a year, he said. I dont have that kind of money.
Up and down the San Joaquin Valley, farmers have similar stories. The state can take land with a so-called order of possession by the Superior Court while it haggles over the price.
But farmers often face out-of-pocket costs for lost production, road replacement, repositioning of irrigation systems and other expenses, which the state agrees to pay before the final settlement.
Those payments and even some payments for land have stretched out to three years. State officials have offered endless excuses for not paying, the farmers say.
Eminent domain, the legal process by which government takes private land, is complicated enough, particularly in California with a maze of agencies involved. But the rail authoritys constantly changing plans, thin state staff and reliance on outside attorneys have made it more difficult,
...
Tos, the farmer who is waging a legal fight against the project, said that state agents during negotiations had shown a surprising lack of knowledge about agriculture.
(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...
yup
before this all ends there are going to be some major politicians going to jail for embezzlement of funds. the place to look for the embezzlement is going to be in the area of legal fees paid out to private law firms by the project and the padding that was done on the construction...
In the end, they'll all agree it's Trump's fault.
Easier to force people through checkpoints and then require them to show papers before proceeding.
Gonna be a long hot summer in California. The fight to win back California from the illegal horses begins this summer. No stop till Sacramento falls !
My sister and her husband who has onset dementia lost several acres of their vineyard to this cluster fudg just south of Fresno...
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