They wanted to build affordable housing. The town took their land.
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| Johnston, R.I.
Ralph Santoro and Salvatore Compagnone found out their land had been seized through social media.
The 31-acre plot, where they had planned to build an affordable housing complex, lies on the edge of Johnston, a suburb of Providence.
The seizure was announced on March 14. Johnston Mayor Joseph Polisena Jr., a vocal opponent of the housing project, on Facebook and X that the town had taken the land by eminent domain. The plan was to build a new government complex there.
Why We Wrote This
Can eminent domain be used to halt development in the name of public good? A Rhode Island case could set precedent in governments鈥 power over private development.
Mr. Santoro and Mr. Compagnone received orders to vacate the plot in one week, or be cited for trespassing. They and their relatives immediately took the matter to court.
鈥淚t felt like I was physically assaulted,鈥 says Mr. Santoro, whose family purchased the land in the 1980s. 鈥淥ur properties are a passion for us.鈥
For his part, the mayor says that he is acting to provide the police and fire departments with needed facilities. What is more, he says, such a large complex would be out of place in his small town.
The case touches on two hot-button issues: eminent domain 鈥 which allows governments to seize private land for public benefit, such as a highway 鈥 and affordable housing. The latter has become a rallying cry as home prices have soared, but as they do in Johnston, people typically want it built somewhere else. Both sides in the Johnston case also offer competing definitions of what the American dream looks like for the children of immigrants.
While a court temporarily returned the land to its previous owners, the ongoing federal case could set a precedent in governments鈥 power over private developments, legal and housing experts say. Can eminent domain be used to halt development in the name of public good?
If the landowners win, 鈥淚t would make it harder to use eminent domain for ... NIMBY purposes,鈥 says Ilya Somin, a professor at George Mason University who studies property law, referring to the 鈥渘ot in my backyard鈥 acronym. 鈥淚f the town wins, then it would make it easier.鈥
鈥淧retextual taking鈥?
In practice, eminent domain has sparked much controversy.
Landowners typically get many opportunities to challenge a seizure before it is finalized, and must receive 鈥渏ust compensation鈥 if their property is taken, says David Schleicher, a professor of property and urban law at Yale Law School.
The 鈥渦rban renewal鈥 movement in the mid-20th century often used eminent domain to displace of people 鈥 disproportionately Black and low-income 鈥 as homes and businesses were razed to make space for highways, commercial development, and municipal buildings.
In a controversial 2005 decision, the Supreme Court expanded the use of eminent domain. It deemed it legal for cities to seize residential properties to sell to private developers, when the new owner will advance public interest.
The case, Kelo v. New London, allowed the Connecticut city to seize properties and sell them to a development corporation to build a facility for Pfizer. The planned development fell through. As of 2023, the houses had been razed but nothing had been built on the land.
But the Kelo decision also set limits on government power, Professor Somin says. Most notably, 鈥減retextual taking鈥 鈥 a seizure whose official rationale is not the true motive 鈥 can still be illegal.
That鈥檚 what the Johnston landowners accuse the town of doing.
鈥淭hey took this property because they wanted to stop an affordable housing project,鈥 says Kelley Morris Salvatore, one of Mr. Santoro and Mr. Compagnone鈥檚 lawyers. She calls the seizure 鈥渕unicipal thuggery鈥 and says that under state law, the town lacks the authority to take property for a municipal building.
The lawyers point to a posted by Mayor Polisena in December 2024, three months before the seizure. In the letter, the mayor wrote he would 鈥渦se all the power of government that I have鈥 to stop the housing project.
鈥淚 ... have zero care of who I may offend in the process,鈥 he wrote.
The mayor also said that the town would welcome single-family homes built on Mr. Santoro and Mr. Compagnone鈥檚 land, instead of multiunit affordable housing. There was no mention in the letter of building a new municipal complex.
The needs of the town
Mr. Polisena says the seizure was conducted lawfully and that it is the opposing side鈥檚 lawyers who do not understand state law.
He has been looking for land for a new municipal complex since 2023, he says, as the Town Hall, fire station, and police station are in poor condition.
The fire station does not have a bathroom or shower for female firefighters, and Johnston Police staff has doubled since the police station was built decades ago, he explains.
After some potential locations fell through, he found the 鈥減erfect鈥 spot in November 2024, when he received Mr. Santoro and Mr. Compagnone鈥檚 proposal to build 252 units of affordable housing on their 31-acre plot.
鈥淚 just put two and two together,鈥 Mr. Polisena says in an interview in Town Hall.
He believes a 252-unit affordable complex would overwhelm the finances and infrastructure of a suburban town of 30,000.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know any other apartment complex anywhere else in the state ... where 2% of a municipality鈥檚 population would come from one apartment complex,鈥 he says.
Professor Somin compares the Johnston seizure to a 2024 case, Brinkmann, et al. v. Town of Southold, New York.
After making several attempts to block the construction of a hardware store, the town moved to seize the land, proposing to make it a 鈥減assive park.鈥 The space, now public, was left as it was, with no park facilities added.
The court ruled in favor of the town.
Differing ideas of the American dream
Mayor Polisena, who hopes to see more single-family homes built in Johnston, says they represent 鈥渢he American dream.鈥
His ancestors, who came from Italy, first settled in Providence, and moved to suburban and rural areas after building up wealth, Mr. Polisena says. He sees his family鈥檚 trajectory as a typical immigrant story.
鈥淚 think that single-family homes are the predominant way that people 鈥 I think not just in my community, but throughout the country ... strive for,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think people are going to leave their single-family homes and move into low-income apartment complexes.鈥
Mr. Santoro and Mr. Compagnone are also the children of Italian immigrants.
Mr. Santoro says he grew up in Providence, and lived in Johnston for 鈥渁 brief period.鈥 His parents ran a plastering business and often worked in Johnston. His partner, Mr. Compagnone, is a fourth-generation homebuilder whose ancestors 鈥渂uilt many of the homes in Johnston,鈥 Mr. Santoro adds.
The two currently manage 鈥70 to 100鈥 rental units with affordable rent, Mr. Santoro says.
鈥淲hen you think about affordable housing, these are just young professionals who are starting off on their career,鈥 Mr. Santoro says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a policeman; it鈥檚 a teacher who might be making $45,000 to $60,000 a year. ... It鈥檚 so astronomical to come up with a down deposit鈥 for a single-family home.
A Rhode Island housing law requires communities to maintain 10% or more of their year-round housing stock as affordable housing. If they are below that percentage, the law limits local governments鈥 ability to block affordable housing projects.
In Johnston, about of year-round housing qualifies as low- and moderate-income housing.
When Mr. Santoro attended a planning board meeting last year, he says some of the responses shocked him. Some board members made 鈥渧ery derogatory statements鈥 about a public housing project in Providence and compared it to his proposed complex.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 grow up too far from that public housing project,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd my father was an immigrant, OK?鈥
鈥淲e were just taught to work hard all the time. And hard work would pay off,鈥 he continues. 鈥淎nd we鈥檙e just trying to give back a little bit right now.鈥