Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Saturday, August 27, 2011
Justice Department and Georgia City Agree To Settle Mosque Zoning Dispute
Earlier this month, the city of Lilburn, Georgia approved a controversial rezoning request of a Muslim congregation to build a new worship center, and the Dar-E-Abbas Shia Islamic Center indicated it would drop its federal discrimination lawsuit against the city. (See prior posting.) However the Justice Department continued to examine whether it should bring a RLUIPA lawsuit against the city. A Department of Justice press release yesterday that it has been involved in pre-suit negotiations with the city and that a settlement has been reached. Pursuant to that agreement, the government yesterday filed a lawsuit along with a proposed consent decree. Under the decree, the city agrees not to impose different zoning or building requirements on any religious group. It agreed that various city leaders and employees will attend training sessions on the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, the city will clarify its complaint process, and will report periodically to the Justice Department.