Foreign the House with Eric G.
Speaker AYour go to source for everything home improvement.
Speaker AWhether you're a DIY enthusiast or just looking to make your space shine, Eric G.
Speaker AIs here to guide you through the latest tips, tricks and trends.
Speaker ASo grab your toolbox, put on your thinking cap, and let's get to work right here on around the House with.
Speaker BEric G.
Speaker BWelcome to the around the House show, the next generation of home improvement.
Speaker BI'm Eric G.
Speaker BThanks for joining today.
Speaker BThis is our midweek update.
Speaker BThis is that show that didn't fit into last weekend's show on the radio and podcast or this weekend show.
Speaker BAnd we got a barn burner today.
Speaker BWe're gonna have a little fun here on this one because when I get fired up on some of this stuff, when I see people being wronged, it reminds me that I'm in the middle of being wronged myself right now, which could be its own court battle.
Speaker BAnd we're going to talk about that today.
Speaker BOne of the big things that I saw again, this is something that I woke up to.
Speaker BI think I was watching Fox and Friends this morning, turning around, looking to see what was on in the news overnight.
Speaker BAnd I saw that a long time family farm in Cranberry, New Jersey is of risk of being seized by the town through imminent domain.
Speaker BSo this farm has been in the family for 175 years.
Speaker BAnd I guess they've been building warehouses and everything around it.
Speaker BThey've turned down offers.
Speaker BThey've done all this thing.
Speaker BThey have said, nope, not gonna sell it.
Speaker BThis is gonna be our farm.
Speaker BThis is our work.
Speaker BThis is our thing.
Speaker BThe Cranberry Township came in after a town committee meeting and signed off on a measure that would pay for the eminent domain seizure that would take their farm away.
Speaker BAnd of course, you know how this goes with the government.
Speaker BThey give you what they think is the fair value.
Speaker BNot if you put it on the market and went to sell it.
Speaker BSo the family farm, which is now leased out for cattle farming, has belonged to Christopher and Andy Henry for over a dozen years.
Speaker BThey've spent a couple hundred grand into the property and they've declined offers of up to $30 million from developers.
Speaker BNow the city wants to take it and make it affordable housing.
Speaker BGuess what?
Speaker BYeah, I got a problem with that.
Speaker BI hope these guys fight.
Speaker BAnd even the Trump administration is pushing back.
Speaker BSo they've got the usda.
Speaker BRollins is going to be taking a look at this to see if they can stop it.
Speaker BYeah, I've got a huge problem.
Speaker BWhen the city come in or county or state comes in and pays you partially for what's owned.
Speaker AI get it.
Speaker BIf you're putting a freeway in.
Speaker BI get it.
Speaker BIf you're doing stuff like that where you're up against it and that stuff happens, they wanna take part of your land.
Speaker BYeah, we all get screwed in that deal.
Speaker BBut it's absolutely crazy to see a whole farm going away because the Cranberry Township wants to build on it.
Speaker BSo I think they've got a big issue there.
Speaker BI think this one's gonna blow up in their faces.
Speaker BI have one here in my neck of the woods in Portland, Oregon, and specifically Lake Oswego, where I live.
Speaker BSo Lake Oswego was a little tiny lake 100 years ago.
Speaker BAnd I'm gonna give you the.
Speaker BThe.
Speaker BThe background of Lake Oswego real quick because most of you don't live in my area, so you don't know what I'm talking about.
Speaker BSo originally this was a iron town.
Speaker BWe had a small lake.
Speaker BWe had a foundry here, and it was really cool.
Speaker BSo back in the day, how this started is this was mostly in Clackamas County.
Speaker BWe have a couple different counties here, but most of it is in Clackamas County.
Speaker BA little bit of it is in Malone, Washington counties, which doesn't play a big part of this.
Speaker BBut this city was founded in 1847 and incorporated in 1910.
Speaker BSo it was the hub of our iron industry here in Oregon in the late 19th century.
Speaker BAnd we're considered a suburb of the.
Speaker BBasically a suburb of Portland.
Speaker BWe are south of there.
Speaker BThe early Clackamas people occupied the land that later became Lake Oswego.
Speaker BAnd most of the natives died because guess what?
Speaker BThe Oregon Trail pretty much ended within a dozen miles of here.
Speaker BSo what happened was, is we came in.
Speaker BThey founded the town of Lake Oswego in 1847, naming after Oswego, New York, by the way.
Speaker BHe built a sawmill on Oswego Creek, and basics started rolling here.
Speaker BThey put through the.
Speaker BThey started putting the rail out here.
Speaker BSo they needed the iron for that.
Speaker BAnd that's how that went.
Speaker BSo they figured out that there was iron ore in the valley and Oregon Iron Company was incorporated and the first blast furnace on the west coast was built.
Speaker BSo this is where this was started out as the Pittsburgh of the West.
Speaker BHere's what happened.
Speaker BThey built the lake bigger.
Speaker BPeople in Portland said, hey, let's go put up a cabin by the lake.
Speaker BAnd all of a sudden, this went from a blast furnace, railroad town into a nice, quiet, beautiful place.
Speaker BSo by 1890, the industry had produced 12,000 tons of pig iron, and its peak provided employment to about 300 men.
Speaker BSo that, of course, blew up, like all things like that do.
Speaker BAnd they went through and cleaned everything up, and now it is a huge park where that area is.
Speaker BAnd they've closed up the iron mines and that kind of stuff for the iron ore, and it's good to go.
Speaker BThis lake, the entire time has been a private lake.
Speaker BSo when I bought my property, it's not lakefront, it's nothing special, but when I bought my property, it has on my deed that there is.
Speaker BI own a portion of the lake.
Speaker BSo the people around the lake actually own the lake.
Speaker BIt's on our deed to our property, and it's lake rights.
Speaker BNow there is the Lake Corps, which is the corporation that was founded to maintain and operate the lake.
Speaker BWe are partners in that.
Speaker BWe own part of Lake core, so we are part of that whole group.
Speaker BSo the people around the lake own the lake.
Speaker BWe paid taxes on it because it's been on our property values.
Speaker BWhen I go bought by house, I had lake rights, which means I paid a premium because I had the ability to go swimming.
Speaker BI had the ability to put a lake on there.
Speaker BIf I had lived 16 blocks another direction, I wouldn't.
Speaker BSome people that wanted access to the lake, of course, that don't live close enough to the lake, decided to sue.
Speaker BAbout a dozen years ago, the state of Oregon, saying that all Oregon waterways are supposed to be public.
Speaker BYeah, they are, except this one was always private.
Speaker BThey went into a Clackamas county court and that judge said, yeah, the state law says that has to be it.
Speaker BAnd now they have a small public access area because they won that court battle.
Speaker BHere's the problem.
Speaker BI'm losing my rights that I've been paying taxes for that I paid for when I bought my house.
Speaker BI am not being compensated one ounce for that.
Speaker BSo my opinion is the state and the county needs to compensate me for what my lake rights are worth and what they would be worth down the road, because it's an investment.
Speaker BThey should make all of us people whole.
Speaker BThey're taking something without.
Speaker BWithout us being compensated.
Speaker BSo I reached out this morning to the Institute for Justice.
Speaker BI'm going to see if I j.
Speaker BCan tackle this one.
Speaker BI'm looking to see if I can take on the State of Oregon and of course, the county to see if I can get either my rights back or.
Speaker BBecause they haven't said that I don't own it, but we have the exclusivity that was part of that.
Speaker BSo now we're gonna have to take a look and see how are they gonna maintain that?
Speaker BAre they gonna take care of doing the lake?
Speaker BAnd where are my rights?
Speaker BI have lake rights, so you need to purchase those from me and compensate me.
Speaker BThat could be worth six figures.
Speaker BAnd that's something that I think we all need to stand up for when we have these imminent domain type things.
Speaker BWhen we have, as Americans have invested in our futures, we've invested in our homes, and somebody comes by and takes it without proper compensation.
Speaker BYeah, I got a problem with that.
Speaker BAnd yes, I understand that in urban renewal growth that things need to happen.
Speaker BWe can't paint ourselves in a corner.
Speaker BSo I get that there needs to be that, but there needs to be fair compensation for the people that are being victims of this.
Speaker BWhether you're in a farm in New Jersey or if you own a lake house or a house here on the lake, if someone takes something from you, from the government, you should be compensated.
Speaker BAnd I think we need to stand up as citizens for this type of stuff.
Speaker BIt's happening to me right now and I decided this morning I'm gonna put a fight up for it.
Speaker BSo stay tuned for more information on that.
Speaker BOne other thing I wanted to touch.
Speaker BWe've talked about it in this midweek special a little bit.
Speaker BThis is our swan song.
Speaker BThis is our last week of around the house Northwest.
Speaker BBut stay tuned.
Speaker BThis is our television show here in Portland, Oregon on Fox 12 plus that we do each week.
Speaker BThis is our last episode.
Speaker BThere will be not another episode on Fox 12 + or KPTV here in Portland.
Speaker BThat is over.
Speaker BThis is the last one.
Speaker BSo I'm going to be working on this radio show, this podcast, our streaming, as well as I'm going to be working on putting another show together, coming up with even a better show.
Speaker BAnd we'll talk about it here next week a little bit more after my contract runs out.
Speaker BWe'll talk a little bit more about what happened, how these things go, about how does TV work.
Speaker BIt's a grind out there and it's an incredible journey that I've gone so far.
Speaker BAnd I'll share that up next week after we get through my contract because I want to make it through the rest of the week without them escorting me out of the building.
Speaker BAll right, guys, have a great rest of the week.
Speaker BEnjoy yourself.
Speaker BI will be looking forward to vacation coming up here.
Speaker BI'm going to take some time off, even though I got to get this house ready for sale here in July.
Speaker BI got to get this thing done.
Speaker BSo I'm going to have some work parties over here and we're going to be rocking out this house and getting some content done, getting all those little projects finished up, my own personal honeydew list so I can move on to my next project.
Speaker BI'm Eric G.
Speaker BThanks for tuning into around the House.
Speaker BWe'll see you Saturday.
Speaker AMake sure to follow us on social media.
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Speaker AJust type in at around the House with Eric G.
Speaker AAnd click subscribe and ring the bell for updates.
Speaker AWe will see you next time.