Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, November 24, 2006
D.C. Officials Say Religious Group Needs Fraternity House Zoning
Just before Thanksgiving, Washington, D.C.'s Zoning Administrator found himself in the midst of a dispute with nine college students over the line between a religious organization and a fraternity house. Yesterday's Washington Post reports that in August, student Brian O'Neill Jr. and eight friends moved into an elegant house in Georgetown where zoning rules restrict occupancy to six unrelated people. The students, however, filed to incorporate as the Apostles of Peace and Unity, a non-profit religious organization-- a move that some of their parents described as "ingenious". Religious groups are exempt from the six-person limitation. However, at the instance of unhappy neighbors, D.C. zoning officials have issued a cease-and-desist order against the students, saying they fit the definition of a fraternity house and therefore require a zoning variance and additional designated parking spaces.