Faith Under Fire......
Church that feeds needy faces court after neighbors complain
A crowd of homeless and needy people gather outside CrossRoads United
Methodist Church in Phoenix.
PHOENIX (AP) — On Saturday mornings, crowds of homeless gather with
other needy people at picnic tables outside a church in an upscale
Phoenix neighborhood, listen to sermons and settle in for sausage,
pancakes and scrambled eggs.
The pastor says it's the Lord's work. Neighbors say it should be done
elsewhere.
Residents say the homeless create blight and pose a danger to them,
pointing to the case of a homeless felon caught with child pornography
in the neighborhood. A complaint prompted city officials to order the
year-old breakfast halted, saying it violated zoning laws.
Now, the dispute is in federal court in Phoenix, with the church saying
the city is violating its treasured American rights to freedom of
religion, as well as a federal law passed in 2000 that protects
religious groups from city zoning rules.
"This is what it means to be a church," says the Rev. Dottie
Escobedo-Frank of the CrossRoads United Methodist Church. "We're just
trying to take care of some people who are hungry and trying to reach
out to our neighborhood."
City officials say they've never disagreed that the church is doing
good work, but that it's operating as a charity dining hall in
violation of zoning laws. The church is on a busy street, lined with
homes with well-manicured lawns.
"We're glad in the city that they're trying to help out," says Patrick
Ravenstein, the city's area manager for neighborhood preservation.
"However, the type of help they're giving can only be conducted in a
certain zoning district."
The attorney for the neighbors says his clients' complaints have
nothing to do with religion.
"This has never been about the First Amendment," Jason Morris says.
"It's about a law that applies to every property owner."
Charles Haynes, senior scholar at the Nashville-based First Amendment
Center, said such spats have become quite common across the country
since Congress passed the federal Religious Land Use and
Institutionalized Persons Act in 2000.
The law gives religious groups a high level of protection in zoning
cases and forces cities to show there's a compelling reason, such as
public safety, to restrict them.
And "churches are winning more than they're losing," Haynes said. "The
law has teeth. ... It's a big mistake for local officials to try to
limit the ministry of religious groups."
In San Diego, for example, the city's parks department sought to
require a group of ministries to stop serving food to the poor at a
popular bayside park and relocate to a fenced-in dirt lot.
The department scrapped that idea in March after receiving a letter
threatening suit from the Alliance Defense Fund, a Scottsdale,
Arizona-based legal group that takes on religious freedom cases on
behalf of Christians.
In Pensacola, Florida, the Alliance Defense Fund filed a lawsuit in
April against the city on behalf of a church after the police
department there ordered it to stop holding a picnic that included
homeless people at a popular historic park. The city soon after agreed
to allow the picnic.
Cities often target events that help the homeless because they don't
want them to be seen, says Kevin Theriot, ADF's senior counsel. The
group is not involved in the Phoenix case, but Theriot says the
church's freedom of religion is being violated.
"Feeding the homeless and feeding those who are hungry has been
recognized as an important religious belief for years," he says. "My
guess is if they were serving a pancake breakfast to local neighborhood
folks that aren't homeless, then nobody would have a problem."
The neighbors' attorney says his clients' main problem is the church
busing in homeless people from a poorer neighborhood nearby.
For the past year, a bus has given rides to the church to hundreds of
people from their spots among bushes, in alleyways and the barren
hillsides overlooking the city. The church says they get bused back
after the breakfast.
Morris says some have stuck around and have urinated in yards or broken
into cars.
One homeless man took up residence in an alley behind Kevin Swatich's
home. Police found that the homeless man was keeping child pornography
in an electrical box and was a convicted felon.
"What I do know is my family was put in present danger by a predator
who attended this breakfast," Swatich told the Phoenix Board of
Adjustment last month.
Escobedo-Frank says it was an isolated incident that happened months
ago. She says if any homeless are hanging around the neighborhood,
residents can't possibly know whether they attended the breakfast.
"It doesn't make sense that they would leave here, where there's a
bathroom, and go urinate on someone's yard," she says.
After receiving a complaint from neighbors, the city cited the church
in July and ordered it to stop the breakfast. The Board of Adjustment
denied the church's appeal last month. The first federal court hearing
is set for March 24.
In the meantime, the breakfasts continue and, several attendees say, so
do misunderstandings about homeless people.
"The neighborhood should come down and find out who we really are,"
said Robert Oswald, 53, who has been homeless for seven years and
chooses to live on a nearby mountain. He said the church has helped him
stay off drugs and alcohol.
Kenny Moe, 53, said church members helped get him off the streets and
kick his 30-year drug habit.
Now he attends the breakfasts to support people still in need.
"This ministry is not about food, it's about giving people hope," Moe
said.