[faithandlife] government can't take church land and give it to a business

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From: "Charles Scott" <crscott@...>
Date: Fri, 20 Sep 2002 11:37:51 +0000
Christianity Today, October 7, 2002

Costco denied
Judge rules that government can't take church land and give it to a
business.
By Marshall Allen  posted 09/19/2002


A U.S. district judge, citing strong evidence of religious
discrimination, has stopped the city of Cypress, California, from taking
a church's land to allow Costco to build a retail outlet.

On August 6, Judge David O. Carter halted the city's use of eminent
domain to take the Cottonwood Christian Center's land. The 4,000-member
church, unaffiliated with any denomination, is developing a new complex
on 18 acres in Cypress. Governments use the power of eminent domain to
take land for public uses, such as installing power lines, when owners
refuse to sell.

"It's very uncommon for a city to actually try and take a church
property using the eminent domain power," said Anthony Pickarello,
general counsel for the Becket Fund, a nonprofit public interest law
firm representing the church.

Richard Hammar, editor of Church Law and Tax Report, agreed. "While
cities can use the power of eminent domain to acquire anyone's property,
they can only do so for a public purpose," Hammar told CT. "Exchanging
nontaxable church property for taxable commercial property simply does
not qualify."

Mike Wilson, Cottonwood's project manager, welcomed the ruling. "We've
been thrust into this constitutional battle through no choice of our
own."

After purchasing the property in 1999, Cottonwood filed a conditional
use permit application with the city in October 2000. But the city sent
back the application, saying it was incomplete.

While Cottonwood appealed the rejection of its application, the city
placed a moratorium on developing 300 acres that include the Cottonwood
property. Then it presented two consecutive plans for redevelopment. The
city's most recent proposal, presented late last year, was for a retail
center featuring a Costco store on the church's 18-acre parcel, even
though the other acreage was available.

The city offered to purchase Cottonwood's parcel, but the church
refused. Then the city attempted to seize the land through eminent
domain.

"There is significant circumstantial evidence of discriminatory intent,"
Judge Carter wrote. The Cottonwood property sat vacant for more than a
decade, but when the church purchased it, the "city became a bundle of
activity," he said. Preventing the church from building a new worship
site fundamentally inhibits its ability to practice religion, Carter
wrote.

Current zoning allows a church to be built on the property, but such use
is "way down the list of priorities," said Cypress City Councilman Tim
Keenan. The city needs the tax revenue, Keenan said.

He accuses the church of belligerence through the development process.
Church and city officials are negotiating a possible land swap to settle
the conflict.

Marshall Allen in Los Angeles

Copyright © 2002 Christianity Today



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