Zoning Officials Tell New Hampshire Church It Can't Use Living Room To Host Prayer Meetings
Bedford's New Hope Christian Fellowship Church argues in a lawsuit that the town is applying uniquely restrictive rules to its religious gatherings.
In a zoning Catch-22, a small Christian congregation in Bedford, New Hampshire, is being told by local officials that because it got permission to add a meeting hall to a house it uses for church services, it has to stop using that house to host church services.
The church is now suing Bedford, arguing that municipal authorities are restricting its gatherings solely because of their religious nature.
"A determination that religious use is different and [that] you can't have people gather in a living room if its purpose is religious is clear overreach," says Michael Tierney, an attorney representing Bedford's New Hope Christian Fellowship. "It's unconscionable."
In March 2020, the New Hope Christian Fellowship purchased a 2,500-square-foot, three-bedroom home on a rural property along a state highway in Bedford. The plan had always been to use the building to host Sunday services, prayer meetings, and other church activities the congregation couldn't do at their prior meeting place—a martial arts studio.
After a pandemic-induced pause on in-person services, New Hope started hosting Sunday services in the home's living room. Their complaint states that there were never more than 20 people in attendance.
Hoping to grow their small congregation, the church also received approval from Bedford's Planning Board in October 2020 for a project that would convert and expand an existing garage on the property to be a new meeting hall and add a parking lot.
Soon enough, New Hope volunteers got to work adding the parking lot and renovating the garage.
Church services proceeded without incident until October 2021. That was when New Hope received a cease-and-desist order from the town of Bedford stating that the church was operating without a required certificate of occupancy and would need to acquire one before it could host meetings again.
Tierney says that this took the congregation by surprise, given that the house it had been meeting out of had a valid certificate of occupancy issued back in 1994 when it was first built.
In response, the church stopped hosting Sunday services. It also filed an appeal of the cease-and-desist letter with Bedford's Zoning Board of Adjustment.
At a December 2021 meeting, zoning board officials said that when the town approved the church's expansion plans, it changed the use of the property from residential to a church. That meant a new certificate of occupancy for a church couldn't be granted until New Hope finished its planned meeting hall and came into compliance with the conditions attached with the approval of that hall.
The upshot of all this red tape was that New Hope wasn't allowed to keep meeting in the home it owned, despite nothing changing about their meetings or the physical structure of the house itself.
Tierney argued at that December meeting that New Hope's prayer services were still just 10–20 people meeting in a living room—similar to a baby shower or Cub Scout meeting. A new certificate of occupancy would be required for use of the new meeting hall, but the use of the preexisting, unchanged single-family home shouldn't be affected, he said.
In a public comment period, New Hope members said that while they were willing "render onto Bedford what is Bedford's" they had also been good neighbors up to this point and wished to use the property as they always had.
"Have there been any complaints of a backup of traffic on [Route] 101? Have there been any complaints from any of our neighbors that we made too much noise when we were doing our construction?" said one congregant in a public comment. "I don't think that you're treating us equally. That's what the crux of this thing is about. We're not being treated equal."
These arguments proved unpersuasive. The zoning board rejected New Hope's appeal at the December meeting.
In March, the church sued the town in the local superior court. Its petition claims that Bedford's cease-and-desist letter violates both the New Hampshire and U.S. Constitution's protections of religious freedom as well as the federal Religious Land Use Institutionalized Persons' Act.
Town officials contend that they are treating New Hope no differently from any other institution that might want to set up shop in Bedford.
"All projects, whether it's a bank or retail site or religious institution, need site plan approval by the planning board. And then they would get a building permit, they would complete the improvements as shown on the building permits, and they would get inspections and be issued a certificate of occupancy," said Bedford Town Manager Rick Sawyer to the New Hampshire Bulletin, which first reported on the story in July.
Tierney tells Reason that New Hope and Bedford have a planned mediation meeting in September and that hopefully the zoning issue is resolved.
He stresses that town officials aren't attempting to correct for any supposed externality or nuisance the church or its members are causing, noting that they have no problem with potentially more disruptive construction activity.
"The town is OK with the church member volunteers going out there and doing construction but not okay with them going out there and reading the Bible together," Tierney says. "No town should be regulating based on the purpose of the gathering."
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Jesus, what happened to the live free or die state?
I have a friend from New Hampshire. Nearly 20 years ago, he told me that people were migrating from Massachusetts because of NH's lower taxes. However, they were also voting for the same rules and services that they had in MA and they would eventually kill what attracted them in the first place.
Bedford is only about 20 miles from the MA border. I'd love to know the residency history of the zoning board.
In Massachusetts towns can't regulate churches through zoning. This rule is unpopular with the kind of person who wants to be on a zoning board.
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That's been an ongoing phenomenon for like 60 years. NH is still a better place to be than MA by far. Possibly because Mass keeps getting worse too.
It died.
Massholes happened.
Maybe libertarians-who-favor-zoning-especially-when -it-keeps-poor-people-institutions-like-churches-out took over the Bedford Zoning Board?
Libertarians don't favor zoning.
Many here do
Then they're not libertarians. A "libertarian" that favors government control of private property is like a "Catholic" who worships Satan.
NH was dominated by liberals then. It's dominated by liberals now. But there's been a 180 degree reversal in the meaning of "liberal".
Meh.
They had a permit to hold church services in the house.
Then they changed that to a permit to hold services in a new building. But they don't have the new building.
Meanwhile they no longer have a permit to hold services in the old building.
At some level this is bullshit, but on another level this is basic rule of law. Does the town enforce zoning permits or not? Is this use of the property consistent with the current permit or not?
It might have been "basic rule of law" if that laws allowed a solution. This didn't. They were required to change the permit before they could begin construction yet are being required to comply as if construction took zero time and cost.
Let's stick with your first level. It's bullshit and the zoning board shouldn't have a role here at all.
if that laws allowed a solution. This didn't.
Kafka to Heller, literature is chock full of no win situations created and enforced by bureaucracies.
That's what government does. That's what government IS.
ok, so are you telling me that if you get a permit to add a rec room to your house, you can't live in the existing house until construction is complete on the addition and you get a new occupancy permit for the addition?
If you run a convenience store and you decide to add a new storeroom on the back, they are going to make you close the store until the storeroom is done because your occupancy for the store is revoked until you get a new one that includes the storeroom.
This is most certainly NOT how the regulations are enforced ANYWHERE.
This. Is. Bullshit.
zoning permits for church? Live free or die my ass
"...allowed to keep meeting..."
Really, "allowed"? How about "fuck off, I'm going to get together with some of my friends."
"We're not being treated equal."
Oh silly Christian, yes you are. The government steps on the necks of everyone equally hard; your just upset that it's your turn.
This is fuck up but it's the same fucked up that anyone who has ever pulled a permit or dealt with a county inspector has experienced.
I wonder how much of this is the town wanting property taxes.
4:15 pm
Reason has 10 articles posted today.
A former president, and possible candidate, having his home raided by a FBI swat team is not the subject of any of them, merely one topic in the roundup...
An FBI raid on a Florida home is local news.
Threadwinner.
What do I win???
5 seconds of respect.
That's pretty generous by this forum's standards.
"An FBI raid on a Florida home is local news."
But reason doesn't cover "local news," even if it's the relative of one of the frequent posters getting beaten by the local gestapo.
That's what made the joke funny.
The Church stipulates it needs a CO to conduct meetings but can't produce one until the new building is built. Then stop wasting time on lawsuits and appeals and finish the building and get a CO. Hold your prayer meetings on Zoom. '....We can do construction but not have a meeting to read the Bible....' That's right stupid. You probably have a construction permit but don't have a valid CO to hold Bible meetings. I think (a) they didn't consult an attorney who would have fixed the CO 'gap problem; or (b) they did hire an attorney and he didn't know what he was doing.
Who's stipulating that???
or (c) they shouldn't need an attorney because nobody needs a CO to hold a small meeting and the entire zoning board is an unjust attempt by bored busybodies to harass their neighbors.
It's funny how the government forgets all that "right to peaceably assemble" stuff.
They're violating 3/5ths of the 1A (possibly 4/5ths if the Bible covers freedom of the press).
3/5ths of the 1A
Racist.
At a December 2021 meeting, zoning board officials said that when the town approved the church's expansion plans, it changed the use of the property from residential to a church. That meant a new certificate of occupancy for a church couldn't be granted until New Hope finished its planned meeting hall and came into compliance with the conditions attached with the approval of that hall.
What if the meetings were not for "church" purposes but something secular, like who will win this year's World Series? If secular meetings would not need a new CO, then there's a free speech issue.
The entire congregation should show up at every public government meeting and pray silently throughout the entire meeting.
They should get together in whatever public spaces like parks and the like are available and discuss the apparent conflict between Matthew 26:50-52
(50 “Friend,” Jesus asked him, “why have you come?” Then they came up, took hold of Jesus, and arrested Him. 51 At that moment one of those with Jesus reached out his hand and drew his sword. He struck the high priest’s slave and cut off his ear. 52 Then Jesus told him, “Put your sword back in its place because all who take up a sword will perish by a sword. )
And Luke 22: 36-38
(36 Then He said to them, “But now, whoever has a money-bag should take it, and also a traveling bag. And whoever doesn’t have a sword should sell his robe and buy one. 37 For I tell you, what is written must be fulfilled in Me: And He was counted among the outlaws.[j] Yes, what is written about Me is coming to its fulfillment.” 38 “Lord,” they said, “look, here are two swords.”)
Does this fall under the abortion principle, where we have to uphold the law at all costs, or the Trump principle, where law doesn't apply to people I like?
"house" or "home"?
One is a structure, generally build to house people. The other is a place where people live. Different rights and obligations pertain to each.
Words matter!
Words are violence. Are you saying violence matters?
I guess I am, particularly the threat of state-sponsored violence.
Here's a crazy idea. Maybe you shouldn't need permission to use your property in whatever way you see fit as long as it doesn't impose unreasonably on your neighbors. The whole idea of an occupancy permit bothers me a lot. If insurers want to require some kind of standard be met, that makes sense. But why is it the town's fucking business if I want to have people on my property to do something? Or if I choose to live in an unfinished house?
When the floor collapses during prayer, caused by a construction mistake, officials will rightly say “We told them not to use that space while waiting for construction to finish. It hadn’t been inspected yet.”
Construction causes weight to shift, both in building materials and the ground underneath.
That is preposterous. It started as a residential house. They are renovating the garage.
1. Under no jurisdiction that I'm aware of is there a requirement that you move entirely out of your house when you're having one room renovated.
2. The parishioners are doing the work themselves. The odds that they are using any kind of heavy equipment, much less anything that will cause the ground to shift, seems quite implausible.
3. It's the garage. That means it's on a slab. I'm curious how you think it's even possible for the floor to collapse.
It should be impervious to collapse, but you’re making the assumption that it was built right at first. Until an inspection, don’t assume.