Town Reverses Decision
To Evict Pastor

( MCNS) -- The City of Mayetta, Kansas, agreed to settle a lawsuit brought by Pastor Terry Paine and the Prairie Band Baptist Church. The dispute arose when City officials ordered the Pastor and his family to vacate the church parsonage, because the parsonage is located on the ground floor of the church.

In December of 2001, Pastor Paine founded the Prairie Band Baptist Church in Mayetta, Kansas, as a ministry outreach to the Prairie Band Indian Tribe. The Church first encountered zoning problems when the Town refused to allow the Church to use its building as a church. After much debate and a threat of a lawsuit, the Town informally agreed to allow the Church to use its building on Main Street.

Immediately after the Church began operating, town officials informed Pastor Paine that he could not live in the parsonage, because it was located on the ground floor of the Church.

In his lawsuit, Pastor Paine contended that the town unconstitutionally applied the "first-floor residence" exclusion against the Church, as essentially all of the surrounding buildings contain first-floor residences. If Pastor Paine and his family were forced to vacate the Church parsonage, the suit maintained, the Pastor could not financially survive and the Church would cease to exist.

Mathew D. Staver, Paine's attorney and president of Liberty Counsel, said the church has less than 25 members and "pays" the Pastor by allowing him free use of the parsonage. The Pastor works for the Church full-time ministering to the Prairie Band Indian Tribe.

Staver noted, "Historically, churches have always provided housing for pastors. From the time of ancient Israel, to the Catholic monasteries, to the modern-day church, it has always been the church's religious practice to provide housing for its ministers. Mayetta's zoning regulations substantially burden the Church's long-standing religious belief and practice, which the Constitution and the Religious Land Use Law prohibit."

"The Town of Mayetta allows hotels, motels, motor-hotels, and personal residences on the first floor. Only church parsonages have been targeted for discrimination. The Constitution and the Religious Land Use Law prevent such discrimination."

Staver and the Pastor were very pleased with the settlement, which allows the Church to conduct worship services and to host the Pastor in the parsonage. As part of the settlement, the City was required to pay legal damages.


© 2003 Maranatha Christian News Service