Proposal considers taxes, fees, restrictions on numbers, sizes
By Bob Unruh
A regulatory plan being considered by a Toronto suburb would put
churches in the crosshairs of an assault that would include
dramatically higher taxes and fees as well as restrictions on the sizes
and numbers of worship centers.
A series of reports by the No Apologies website featuring WND columnist
Tristan Emmanuel has revealed the stunning proposals in Brampton that
one source confirmed would be used in multiple cities should the
Brampton effort prove successful.
WND already has reported how many Biblical standards of behavior are
under attack by the "bastardized courts" of Canada, where activists who
claim they have "hurt feelings" are demanding – and getting – penalties
imposed against those who oppose the homosexual lifestyle.
That description of the courts, also known as the provincial and
national Human Rights Commissions, comes from the Canada Family Action
Coalition, which is warning that the United States is not far from
having similar assaults on traditional family values.
Now comes the report from the site launched by Emmanuel, the founder
and president of the ECP Centre – Equipping Christians for the
Public-Square as well as the host of "No Apologies," a weekly web-radio
show "dedicated to illustrating the absurdity of political
correctness."
"One person who's involved … has told us at NoApologies.ca that
Brampton is considered a test scenario for dozens of other
municipalities in Canada, and that if the tax changes can be pushed
through there, other cities are almost sure to follow," the report
said.
Among the changes being reviewed:
A plan to subject all "non-worship" space owned by religious groups to
property taxes. This "non-worship" space would include offices,
kitchens, nurseries, fellowship halls, parking lots, restrooms, etc.
Not even the sanctuary would all be exempt: only the area "where the
congregation sits/stands/gathers for actual worship."
A new definition of "places of worship" to eliminate current provisions
allowing church properties to be used for day care centers or soup
kitchens.
New limits for start-up churches, who would be allowed to rent only
3,000 square feet of industrial space for a maximum of three years
before being required to buy property.
A limit allowing only one "place of worship" for every 10,000
residents.
A stratospheric rise in fees for things like zoning and variance
issues. One church reportedly had to pay Brampton $400,000 for the
paperwork required to build a new sanctuary.
Ban religious meetings in homes if they involve more than 20 people,
children included.
No Apologies reports that churches and other religious organizations
are assembling a response to the proposals outlined in a city study,
and a city council vote is scheduled later in January.
Brampton
A spokeswoman for the city told WND that the study has been launched
into a "development charge bylaw," but it isn't yet completed, and
doesn't even have a schedule for completion. "No recommendations have
been made," she said.
Al Siebring, the editor for the website, wrote in a commentary when he
first heard of the plan, he thought it had to be an urban legend.
But he said someone "with a bit of sympathy for the churches" leaked a
copy of the still-unreleased plan that includes parts "that read like
they could have been written in Stalinist Russia."
"There are some really egregious rights violations potentially going on
here, " he said, listing freedom of association, freedom of conscience,
and "that little thing" called freedom of religion.
"For someone who grew up reading authors like [Voice of the Martyrs
founder] Richard Wurmbrand and [Open Doors founder] Brother Andrew, the
parallels to the old Soviet Union and its satellites are striking. The
notion of a 'knock on the door' in the middle of a prayer meeting is so
counter to everything we have understood to be fundamental to the
notion of 'freedom of religion' as to be almost unthinkable," he wrote.
The one good thing about the plan, he said, is that the application of
new taxes, fees and limits would be on all "religious" facilities,
including temples, mosques, ashrams and chapels.
"Which is why a coalition of 'faith groups' has been formed … to fight
this," he said.
Pastor Kevin Begley is the head of the new Brampton Faith Coalition,
and indicated the details truly are horrific. He cited the new "plans"
for new churches.
"If you want to use a rec centre or a school, you can't get that every
week because it's not available," Begley told the website. "(But) if
you rent a space in an industrial unit, the draft document recommends
that it must be under 3,000 square feet, and you're only allowed in
that area for three years. Well, 3,000 square feet - and that includes
your offices, your sanctuary, your lobby, your children's or youth
(ministries), whatever you want to do - you have 3,000 square feet
which is ... about half the size of a gymnasium. And you're only
allowed there for three years. After three years, you must have the
money in the bank to go out and purchase (your own land and building).
That's just not realistic. Land in our city right now is running about
a million dollars an acre."
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Regulators' assault plan puts church in crosshairs
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