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Justice Department takes on small Idaho town in religious freedom battle over church permit

The Justice Department accused a small city in northern Idaho of religious discrimination after it denied a zoning permit to a local evangelical church seeking to hold worship services.
The DOJ announced on May 20 it had filed a lawsuit alleging the city of Troy, Idaho, violated the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA) after it denied a conditional use permit to Christ Church to hold services in its downtown C-1 zoning district, where nonreligious assembly uses such as clubs, museums, auditoriums, and art galleries were allowed.
The RLUIPA is federal legislation passed in 2000 that’s intended to “protect individuals, houses of worship, and other religious institutions from discrimination in zoning and landmarking laws,” the DOJ states.
According to the lawsuit, Christ Church, a small but quickly growing evangelical church based in Moscow, Idaho, sought to accommodate its growth in September 2022 by establishing another church campus in the neighboring town of Troy.
The Department of Justice announced it had filed a religious discrimination lawsuit against the city of Troy, Idaho, over its permit denial to a local church. (Getty/Michael Calene)
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The conservative, evangelical church faced opposition from some in the Moscow community over the years because of its beliefs and influence in the liberal college town, with some residents boycotting businesses tied to the church, according to the Spokesman-Review.
The church made national headlines in September 2020 after a few of its members were arrested for not wearing masks at an outside worship service protesting the city’s mask mandate during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Senior Pastor Douglas Wilson faced criticism for his provocative writings and allegations he wants to make America a “Christian theocracy,” according to a recent article from Politico.
Christ Church allegedly reached out to various locations in Troy to rent on weekends for services, without success. In November 2022, Matt Meyer, an elder at the church and Troy resident, purchased a vacant, former bank in the city’s downtown business district with the intention of converting part of the property into a space to be used by the church for worship services and church meetings, while the other part of the property would be rented out as an event space for the community.

“Troy Days” in Downtown Troy, Idaho. (BJ Swanson)
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Meyer applied for a conditional use permit and told the city he failed to find another suitable space to hold services in Troy. In his application, he said there would be little impact on the surrounding businesses and his purchase of the vacant building would bring in property tax revenue for the city.
After holding a public hearing on the matter where locals expressed strong opposition to the permit request, the Troy City Council rejected the church’s application in March of that year.
According to the DOJ, the city council denied the permit on the basis that the church “did not enhance the commercial district.”
Furthermore, the city council argued the majority of locals were against granting the church a permit in this zone and the decision would burden residents and businesses by creating traffic and parking issues in the city, whose population is fewer than 1,000 people.
In their lawsuit filed on Christ Church’s behalf, the DOJ questioned how the city justified the denial on the basis of several of its arguments.

Matt Meyer, an elder of Christ Church, purchased a former bank in the downtown area to convert the vacant property into an events center and a church space for meetings and weekend worship services. (Matt Meyer)
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The lawsuit questioned why the city told Meyer he could use the building for other community events, which had no retail purpose, and these would be considered to “enhance the commercial district” and be allowed under the city’s zoning law.
They claimed the city did not conduct a traffic study, or offer conditions that could be imposed on the church to ameliorate the traffic and parking concerns.
Many of the public comments at the public hearing demonstrated “animus and discrimination against Christ Church, its members, and their religious beliefs,” the lawsuit also claimed.
The DOJ lawsuit accuses the city of Troy of violating RLUIPA by not treating Christ Church on “equal treatment” with nonreligious assemblies through its zoning code, by imposing a “substantial burden” on the church’s religious exercise and by discriminating against Christ Church on the “basis of religion.”
City of Troy attorney Todd Richardson rejected the DOJ’s discrimination allegations in an interview with Fox News Digital. He said they’ve allowed Christ Church to hold services in the building for the past two years, while the investigation has been ongoing, and they have cooperated fully with federal investigators.

The Department of Justice stepped in after an Idaho church claimed the town of Troy, Idaho was discriminating against it by denying it a zoning permit. (Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images))
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The city attorney accused the Justice Department of using “bullying tactics” to try to force their hand.
The case isn’t about religion, he said, but about the city preserving the two-block downtown area as a commercial district and resisting the influx of as many as 15% of its population gathering at one location and putting a “strain on the city’s limited resources.”
“We have no complaints about Christ Church being in town. We have concerns about overwhelming that zone,” he said.
Matt Meyer, the elder at Christ Church who filed a complaint with the DOJ over the dispute, told Fox News Digital that the church would be happy to work with the city to accommodate any of its concerns, such as parking restrictions, but city leaders “have never asked us for any sort of conditions” to do so.

Matt Meyer filed a religious discrimination complaint with the DOJ after the city of Troy refused to give his church a conditional use permit to hold services in a building in its downtown area. (Getty Images)
He found the city’s allegations about parking and impacting businesses unfounded, saying many of the buildings in this downtown area are vacant, and the town is “largely empty” on Sunday mornings.
Meyer attended the public hearing where many residents spoke out against the church permit being granted. He referred to the hostile comments made by some in the community toward the church, as mentioned in the DOJ lawsuit, to argue they likely played a role in the city council’s decision.
“It seems logical that elected officials could be influenced by a vocal group of residents even if that group is a minority, but I can’t read the mind of the city council,” he said.
In April 2025, Troy passed an interim zoning ordinance that changed many of the previously permitted uses in the business district to “not permitted,” including auditoriums, community centers, civic and fraternal organizations, parks, playgrounds, schools, museums, libraries, and movie theaters, and prohibits churches as a conditional use, according to the lawsuit.
In its press release, Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division said, “RLUIPA unequivocally forbids local governments from deciding zoning matters based on their dislike of certain religious groups. The Department of Justice will not hesitate to file suit against jurisdictions that discriminate in land use matters on the basis of the applicants’ religious beliefs.”
Christ Church pastor Douglas Wilson told Fox News Digital that public backlash to his opinions shouldn’t be a factor in how city leaders treat his church.
“The content of things that I say should have nothing to do with whether a church is allowed to meet. You don’t approve a religious assembly based upon your disagreement with certain views expressed.”
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The Justice Department told Fox News Digital it did not have further comment on the matter.
Idaho
Obituary for Veda May Page at Eckersell Funeral Home

Idaho
Idaho Public Defenders will get bump in pay starting June 1

BOISE, Idaho — Eric Fredericksen was appointed by Governor Little almost two years ago to run the newly created Public Defense Commission.
“We were under-funded, under-staffed, and we were not meeting our constitutional obligations,” Fredericksen said.
The plan was to restructure public defenders in the state’s 44 counties and put them under one roof. “We don’t have enough attorneys, and so our caseloads for our attorneys are too high at this point in time, so we’re working at getting that down, and the only way to do that is to have more attorneys,” Fredericksen said.
So they went to lawmakers this spring with an increased budget that fits those goals. “Our goal is to make sure that to attract attorneys that we need to pay them what they need to be paid for the quality representation that they do,” Fredericksen added.
The Legislature agreed and approved the budget. So, starting June 1, public defenders will get the bump in pay that many had been asking for.
“So, the contractors go from 100 dollars an hour to 125 an hour, which is a pretty good-sized bump up for them, and it’s much needed,” Fredericksen said.
Fredricksen truly believes that once somebody goes into public defense, it’s harder to get them out. “It’s the clients and the work you do, it’s fascinating work. Every day you’re doing something different, and cases are interesting, and you really grow to love your clients.”
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