Feds Probe Zoning Case It is one of 25 investigations the Justice Department has mounted.
By PAULA SAHA Religion News Service
In a nationally watched case about a church's freedom to build where it pleases, the U.S. Justice Department has invoked the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act to investigate the way a New Jersey township has treated a 5,000-member megachurch.
The probe of Rockaway Township's treatment of Christ Church is one of 25 such investigations the Justice Department has mounted in the last four years as religious organizations clash with local governments over zoning issues.
Of those, according to Justice Department spokesman Eric Holland, there have been five instances when the Civil Rights Division decided there was no basis for taking things further. And 12 investigations, Holland said, have resulted in "favorable settlements."
In three cases, the Justice Department went the additional step of filing civil rights lawsuits.
Justice Department involvement in a land-use case can make a town "wake up," said Derek Gaubatz, director of litigation for the Washington-based Becket Fund, a law firm that represents houses of worship in religious discrimination cases.
"It gives them the view of an objective outsider," Gaubatz said. "Zoning officials are used to running their fiefdoms and having the final say, exercising discretionary criteria in a discretionary way that hurts religious houses of worship."
But others, like Rockaway Township Mayor Louis Sceusi, view Justice Department involvement differently.
"I believe they are infringing upon a local government's ability to govern its own growth," he said. "Clearly they do not have a firsthand knowledge of the area that they're dealing with. I do believe it's an issue of states' rights."
Rockaway Township was notified by letter in September that the federal government was investigating the township's handling of Christ Church's plans to build there.
The 5,000-member Montclair church has been before the township planning board for a year and a half seeking site plan approval. They want to build a complex that would include a sanctuary for more than 2,500 people, a K-5 school and other amenities.
The church's plans have come under fire by some in town who cite concerns about the plan's scope and environmental impact. The church, in the meantime, has filed a federal lawsuit alleging the township has put up "discriminatory and improper barriers" to the church's religious mission.
Both the church's lawsuit and the Justice Department's investigation invoke the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, a federal law that protects churches from governments making zoning decisions that restrict religious freedom.
The law was signed by President Clinton in September 2000 after it unanimously passed both houses of Congress. Most of its enforcement has come during the Bush administration. Three years ago, the Department of Justice even created a special position to oversee religious discrimination issues.
Detractors of the law point out that the man appointed as the Justice Department's special counsel for religious discrimination, Eric Treene, used to work for the Becket Fund.
"In my experience, the Becket Fund is never far from any of these investigations," said Marci Hamilton, an attorney who specializes in land-use religious discrimination cases and author of "God vs. the Gavel: Religion and the Rule of Law."
Gaubatz denied having asked the Justice Department for an investigation of Rockaway Township. Christ Church officials also have said they did not ask for the investigation.
"We don't really know who instigated this investigation, but we certainly welcome it," said Marc Weinstein, a Christ Church spokesman.
Holland, the Justice Department spokesman, said, "DOJ officials first heard about (the Christ Church application) through the news."
Holland said religious land-use investigations have run the gamut of the religious spectrum. The Justice Department has gone as far as filing lawsuits related to RLUIPA in three instances, Holland said.
One is in Florida, where the city of Hollywood ordered a halt to Orthodox Jewish services being conducted in two homes. Another is against the village of Airmont, in Rockland County, N.Y., where the Justice Department alleges that the village's zoning code discriminated against a Hasidic Jewish boarding school.
The Justice Department also filed a lawsuit in Hawaii, where the Hale O Kaula Church needed a special permit to build on agricultural property. In that case, the county's insurance company settled the case with a $700,000 payment to the church.
The county of Maui was in settlement negotiations when the Justice Department filed suit, said Madelyn D'Enbeau, one of the Maui deputy corporation counsels who handled the case.
The main effect of the Justice Department's intervention, D'Enbeau said, was expense. "There was a lot more procedural expense involved with dealing with the two different parties," she said.
D'Enbeau also raised questions about the transparency of the process.
"If they really truly felt that Maui County had improper procedures that didn't protect religious rights, we want to know what it is that you think we're doing wrong," she said.