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2011 Year in Review: Bronx Church’s Fight with DOE Goes Supreme

Editor’s Note: The latest edition of the Norwood News is out now, and its our annual Year in Review issue–a recap of the biggest stories that took place in 2011, in the Bronx and beyond. Over the next week or so, we’ll be rolling these top stories out here on Breaking Bronx. Enjoy, and a happy and healthy New Year to all of our readers!

A June 3rd court decision banned churches, including Bronx Household of Faith (shown here in the PS/MS 15 auditorium) from worshiping inside city public schools. (Photo by Alex Kratz)

The Bronx Household of Faith’s 17-year legal battle with the Department of Education came to a close in 2011 with the University Heights church and dozens of other religious groups facing eviction from school buildings throughout the five boroughs. The story thrust the small evangelical congregation into the national spotlight and struck up a debate that will move onto the legislative stage in 2012.

Thanks to support from local elected officials, including City Councilman Fernando Cabrera and State Assemblyman Neslon Castro, Bronx Household and its 48-member congregation may be able to continue holding worship services inside the PS/MS 15 auditorium on Andrews Avenue, as it has for the past decade. Castro introduced legislation that would change the state’s education law to allow churches to worship in public school buildings.

Before this past June, few had heard of Bronx Household of Faith, which has operated in University Heights since 1973, first in a backyard on Andrews Avenue and then in a group home for struggling men nearby on University Avenue. In 1994, the church applied to worship inside PS/MS 15 and was denied, touching off a legal battle that would go back and forth over the next 17 years.

They won the right to worship inside PS/MS 15 in 2002 when a court ordered an injunction of the DOE’s rule prohibiting worship inside schools. Other churches citywide promptly followed their lead.

In June, however, an appeals court ruled, 2-1, to uphold the DOE’s policy against worship services inside its buildings. Bronx Household and the Alliance appealed the ruling, which brought the case all the way to the Supreme Court. But after deliberating on the case for at least a week, the Supreme Court declined to review the case without comment on Dec. 5.

That move upheld the lower court ruling in favor of the DOE, which gave churches until Feb. 12 to find a new place to worship. Bronx Household leaders hope that will be enough time for state legislators to pass the bill, introduced by Castro, that would allow them to stay at PS/MS 15 indefinitely, or at least until they can complete construction on a new church in a building just across the street.

Welcome to the Norwood News, a bi-weekly community newspaper that primarily serves the northwest Bronx communities of Norwood, Bedford Park, Fordham and University Heights. Through our Breaking Bronx blog, we focus on news and information for those neighborhoods, but aim to cover as much Bronx-related news as possible. Founded in 1988 by Mosholu Preservation Corporation, a not-for-profit affiliate of Montefiore Medical Center, the Norwood News began as a monthly and grew to a bi-weekly in 1994. In September 2003 the paper expanded to cover University Heights and now covers all the neighborhoods of Community District 7. The Norwood News exists to foster communication among citizens and organizations and to be a tool for neighborhood development efforts. The Norwood News runs the Bronx Youth Journalism Heard, a journalism training program for Bronx high school students. As you navigate this website, please let us know if you discover any glitches or if you have any suggestions. We’d love to hear from you. You can send e-mails to norwoodnews@norwoodnews.org or call us anytime (718) 324-4998.

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