Spotlight Report

The Map Act: The end of the road?

posted on in Economic Growth & Development, Property Rights, Transportation
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The Map Act empowers the North Carolina Department of Transportation (DOT) to create “transportation corridors” within which “no building permits shall be issued for any building or structure or part thereof…nor shall approval of a subdivision…be granted.” There are no time limits on these development moratoria, and the DOT has been using them to control large tracts of land for years, without initiating condemnation proceedings and without compensating the land’s owners.

The Map Act is economically inefficient, it is unfair, and it is unconstitutional.  And making piecemeal statutory changes cannot solve these problems. It is time to repeal the Map Act and develop a new approach to transportation planning in North Carolina—one that delivers the roads and other transportation infrastructure we need, while simultaneously protecting our rights and promoting our economic well being.

 

Spotlight 467 – Map Act: The end of the Road?

Jon Guze is Director of Legal Studies at the John Locke Foundation. Before joining the John Locke Foundation, Jon practiced law in Durham, North Carolina for over 20 years. He received a J.D., with honors, from Duke Law School in… ...

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We are North Carolina’s Most Trusted and Influential Source of Common Sense. The John Locke Foundation was created in 1990 as an independent, nonprofit think tank that would work “for truth, for freedom, and for the future of North Carolina.” The Foundation is named for John Locke (1632-1704), an English philosopher whose writings inspired Thomas Jefferson and the other Founders.

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