Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Sunday, July 16, 2006
Church Files RLUIPA Challenge In Southfield Michigan
Today's Detroit Free Press reports that Lighthouse Community Church of God is suing the City of Southfield, Michigan in federal court for the right to use an office building it bought in 2004 for church services. Two churches had previously used the same space. The city cited the Church for using the building without an occupancy permit, and that citation was upheld by a state court judge. The Church says that the city has prevented it from adding parking so it can comply with occupancy requirements. Jury selection in the case begins August 7. The case may be the first jury trial in Michigan of a case under RLUIPA. The city has moved to dismiss the case, arguing that RLUIPA was not intended to permit churches to bypass city zoning laws. Church attorney Daniel Dalton says the city wants to let a development firm take over the disputed site in order to build housing.