
Urgent Call to Action: Halt Bozeman City Commission's Overreach on County Property Rights!
Tomorrow night, Tuesday, October 7, 2025, at 6:00 PM, the Bozeman City Commission will vote on a blatant overstep that abuses your tax dollars and erodes private property rights. King Arthur Trailer Court and Mountain Meadows Estates lie outside city limits in Gallatin County, placing them squarely beyond the Commission's legal authority. Yet, commissioners are using public offices, staff time, and city platforms to lobby a private county landowner—pressuring them to sell at an unfair, below-market price to Tenants United, a partisan activist group working with the City of Bozeman. This isn't governance; it's taxpayer-funded interference in a private real estate deal, breaching local self-governance and risking legal liability for the city.
By drafting and promoting an official letter of support, the Commission is misusing public resources for political advocacy, blurring lines between impartial governance and activism. This intrudes on a private contractual relationship, undermining free exchange and due process that every property owner relies on. Bozeman voters didn't elect officials to champion external causes—especially while ignoring pressing city issues like rising property taxes, strained infrastructure, and housing affordability within our boundaries. Aligning with Tenants United compromises the city's neutrality, distracts from core duties like fiscal accountability and essential services, and sets a dangerous precedent for future meddling in county affairs.
Your voice can stop this now—demand restraint, neutrality, and a refocus on what matters: serving Bozeman's taxpayers.
What You Can Do—Right Now:
- Submit Written Comments TODAY: Urge the Commission to reject this overreach by emailing comments@bozeman.net (or submit via bozeman.net/public-comment. Keep it concise and cite the jurisdictional breach, taxpayer misuse, and property rights violation: (see talking points below)
- Call for rescinding any support for Tenants United.
- Demand reaffirmation of neutrality in private transactions.
- Insist on prohibiting city resources for activist lobbying.
- Push refocus on core responsibilities like infrastructure and fair representation.
- Show Up in Person: Pack the Commission Room at Bozeman City Hall at 6:00 PM. Arrive early to sign up for public comment (3 minutes max)—your presence will amplify the demand for accountability and restraint. Bring signs: "No Overreach—Protect Property Rights!"
The vote is tomorrow, so share this widely with neighbors, property owners, and networks. Public office isn't a platform for activism—it's time to remind the Commission of that.
Background: From City of Bozeman
The City of Bozeman has spent several years prioritizing affordable housing, using every tool available – from tax breaks to taxpayer revenue – to support projects throughout the city.
The 338 workforce homes within the King Arthur Park and Mountain Meadow Estates mobile home parks represent nearly 1/10th of the affordable mobile home stock within Gallatin County. Those homes, while outside city limits, house individuals and families who work and shop within city limits and/or go to school within the city.
The two mobile home parks offer important, dignified affordable housing within the region that require neither tax breaks nor public subsidies. With the owner of the land beneath those homes seeking to sell the properties, that housing stock is now in danger. Residents have unionized and are seeking to negotiate a purchase with the owner, Gary Oakland of Billings-based Oakland & Co., but so far have been rebuffed.
The attached resolution lays out a strategy to appeal to Mr. Oakland’s “better angel.” It contains a letter from the Commission asking Mr. Oakland to look at Montana’s long tradition of Montanans – particularly those graced with good fortune – helping each other. If the letter produces no response from Mr. Oakland within five business days, the Commission will submit the attached op-ed to the Billings Gazette and Bozeman Daily Chronicle for publication.
Talking Points:
Opposition to City Commission’s Letter Supporting Tenants United
- Government Overreach Outside City Jurisdiction
King Arthur Trailer Court and Mountain Meadows Estates are outside the Bozeman city limits and therefore beyond the City Commission’s legal authority.
By using their public offices to influence a private sale in the county, the commissioners are extending city influence into areas where they have no jurisdiction.
This is a breach of local self-governance and sets a troubling precedent for future interference in county and private matters. - Misuse of Public Office and Taxpayer Resources
City commission meetings, staff time, and public communication platforms were used to draft and promote a letter of support for Tenants United (TU) — a private activist group engaged in a real estate negotiation.
This amounts to taxpayer-funded political lobbying, not legitimate city business.
Bozeman citizens did not elect their commissioners to serve as advocates for private organizations or to interfere in housing disputes beyond city limits. - Intrusion on Private Property Rights
The letter and op-ed openly interfere with a private contractual relationship between a property owner and tenants.
Government has a duty to uphold private property rights, not to undermine them through public pressure campaigns.
Using the authority of elected office to sway a private sale violates the principle of free exchange and due process that property owners depend on. - Inequality of Representation
Bozeman residents — the taxpayers who fund city operations — receive no reciprocal representation in county affairs.
Yet their elected officials are taking positions on issues that affect non-city residents while ignoring equally urgent challenges within Bozeman’s boundaries: rising property taxes, infrastructure strain, and housing affordability.
Public officials owe their focus and allegiance to the people who elected them, not to external advocacy networks. - Partisan and Activist Alignment
By taking a formal stance alongside Tenants United, the City Commission has blurred the line between governance and activism.
Tenants United is an advocacy organization, not a neutral party.
When public officials align the city with activist causes, they compromise the City’s appearance of impartiality and erode public trust in fair, balanced governance. - Distraction from Core Municipal Duties
City commissions exist to govern — not to campaign.
Time spent on this action detracts from urgent city matters: infrastructure maintenance, fiscal accountability, water and sewer management, and transparent oversight of city departments. Citizens expect their commissioners to prioritize essential services, not to act as agents for special-interest campaigns. - Risk of Legal and Ethical Liability
City officials who involve themselves in private real estate negotiations risk exceeding their legal authority and creating exposure for the City.
Even well-intentioned advocacy can be viewed as interference or misuse of office, particularly when undertaken with the City’s name, letterhead, or official resources.
Once the City becomes a participant in private transactions, it assumes moral and potential legal liability for the outcomes. - A Call for Restraint and Refocus
Bozeman citizens should insist that the City Commission: - Rescind or retract any public statement supporting Tenants United;
- Reaffirm the City’s commitment to neutrality in private market transactions;
- Prohibit future use of city resources to lobby on behalf of non-governmental or activist organizations; and
- Refocus on the Commission’s core responsibilities — fiscal management, infrastructure, and fair representation for the residents who fund city operations.
- In Summary
Public office is not a platform for activism.
The Bozeman City Commission’s role is to serve its citizens — not to interfere in private property matters, not to spend taxpayer resources on political causes, and not to overreach into county affairs. This episode should remind us all that governance and advocacy are not the same thing — and that preserving that distinction protects both the integrity of our government and the rights of its citizens.
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