[Vision2020] 07-10-04 Spokesman-Review: Board given partial story about [Christ] church, activists say

Art Deco aka W. Fox deco at moscow.com
Sat Jul 10 09:59:08 PDT 2004


Board given partial story about church, activists say
Latah officials urged to revoke tax-free status of college, Christ Church
Hannelore Sudermann [Spokesman-Review]
Staff writer
July 10, 2004

MOSCOW, Idaho - A controversial local church and the college founded by its
leaders heard two local women question their status as tax-exempt nonprofit
organizations at a special hearing Friday night.

Though the Latah County Board of Equalization decided to continue its
deliberation on whether to revoke the tax-free status until Monday morning, more
than 70 people at the hourlong meeting heard the women and their attorney detail
why Christ Church, which has about 300 adult members, and its auxiliary trust,
New Saint Andrews College, should have to pay property taxes.

The church and the small religious college inhabit three buildings downtown.

A portion of the buildings are rented for commercial purposes. One houses the
Zume bakery.

Because parts of the properties are used for commercial purposes, the rest of
the property cannot be considered tax-exempt under two state statutes for
churches and schools, said the board's legal counsel, Prosecutor Doug Whitney.

He said the properties must be used exclusively for religious or educational
purposes.

"These two are all-or-nothing statutes," Whitney said.

Anselm House, the church's headquarters on Fifth Street, was appraised at a
market value of $423,100 in 2000. New Saint Andrews College is in two connected
buildings on Main Street and West Fourth that it bought for $612,500 in 2002,
according to the county Assessor's Office. About 90 percent of the church and
college property is currently exempt from property taxes.

But when the Board of Equalization decided to exempt the buildings in May, it
was given incomplete and inaccurate information about the church, the school and
the nature of what they were doing in the buildings, said Rosemary Huskey and
Saundra Lund, who filed the tax-status protest in June.

This was the second hearing in what some in the community are calling a
culture-driven attack on a religious organization.

Huskey and Lund, who both work at home and consider themselves community
activists, say the church's and Pastor Doug Wilson's controversial positions on
issues including women's rights, spanking children at school, homosexuality and
slavery caused them to look more carefully at the organization.

But, they said, the real issue is whether a large entity that includes a
publishing company, a college and a college bookstore is hiding behind its
status as a church to avoid paying taxes.

First they addressed the school as a nonprofit. New Saint Andrews is not
recognized by the Internal Revenue Service as a tax-exempt organization, Lund
said.

"There are questions that should have been raised" during the Board of
Equalization meeting in May, she said.

"We believe there is no verifiable proof of the nonprofit status of NSA
college."

Though the school is registered with the state as a nonprofit religious
organization, "it really doesn't mean anything at all," she said, adding that
state registry is easily obtained and does not confer tax status or
accreditation.

The two women also questioned whether the church is in violation of its
tax-exempt status.

The board may have known that the church had a publishing arm, Canon Press,
housed in Anselm House, but it was likely unaware that it had $1 million in
sales in 2000, Huskey said. She offered as evidence what appeared to be an
e-mail sent from the church office to Christ Church members.

She pointed out that the press sells books that didn't appear central to the
mission of the church. One book listed on the press Web site is "Discovering
Wine: A refreshingly unfussy beginner's guide to finding, tasting, judging
wine."

Huskey said that out of the 108 books published by Canon Press, 30 percent are
written by Wilson. She said Wilson and another author sit on the Canon Press
board and earn royalties, as well. Her evidence was a photocopy of what appeared
to be a contract between Wilson and Canon Press in which Wilson is promised 10
percent of the gross sales on a particular book.

Finally, Huskey cited several occasions in which the church e-mail system was
used to solicit help for church members running for office. It is a violation of
tax-free status for a church to participate in a political race. Christ Church
members received messages urging various forms of support for former Moscow city
Councilman John Guyer and current county Commissioner Paul Kimmell.

The church didn't offer similar access to their opponents, Huskey said.

Kimmell, who normally is a voting member of the Board of Equalization, recused
himself Friday issuing a statement that he wanted to avoid the appearance of a
conflict of interest. He did vote on the church and the school's tax-exempt
status in May. He said he was not disqualified from voting by the prosecutor.

Although Wilson was out of town at a religious conference Friday, his family and
other members of the college and the church attended the hearing.

A few have said they think the church is being targeted because a small group in
the community doesn't like their beliefs or their pastor.

Wilson opposes feminism, preaches that homosexuality is a sin and has written a
book alleging that Southern slaves were not as oppressed as Americans have been
led to believe.

"This is not about money, it's about, 'Get Doug Wilson,' " said Dave Glasebrook,
a Christ Church member who says he frequently attends Board of Equalization
meetings.

"Where's religious freedom?"

After hearing from Huskey and Lund and from their attorney, Mike Curley, the
Board of Equalization members turned to Greg Dickison, the attorney for the
college and the church.

"There are answers to these questions, answers that show they qualify for
property tax exemption," Dickison said, adding that he was not prepared to
respond because he had only just heard the accusations. "We have not presented
anything inaccurate or incomplete to the board," he said.

As the hearing drew to a close, board member Tom Stroschein said issues were
brought up that might have some merit and he wanted to review them further.

"I have to admit it was my first go-round on the Board of Equalization," he said
of his decision in May.

His colleague, Jack Nelson, said that when he voted on the church and college's
tax status three months ago, he believed had the same amount of information he
normally gets from other religious organizations.

"I'm saying maybe I need to be more cautious of that," he said.

The board members agreed to take up the issue and may vote on whether to revoke
tax-exempt status for the church and school properties at 8 a.m. Monday.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailman.fsr.com/pipermail/vision2020/attachments/20040710/4007f139/attachment.htm


More information about the Vision2020 mailing list