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Justice Department sues Va. county over proposed mosque

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Justice Department on Monday against Culpeper County, Virginia, over an April board vote that effectively blocked construction of a mosque, the department said in a news release.

The federal complaint alleges that the county’s Board of Supervisors imposed a substantial burden on the Islamic Center of Culpeper (ICC)’s exercise of religion, and that the board was discriminating when it refused to grant a “pump-and-haul” permit for transporting sewage from a septic system.

County officials had told the ICC that such a permit was necessary because its soil, like much soil in the area, could not support a septic system.

The board later voted down the ICC’s permit request in a 4–3 vote, effectively preventing the ICC from building a small mosque on land that it had purchased. The land is located in a zoning district where religious land use is permitted.

The federal complaint alleges, however, that since 1992, the county has considered 26 applications and has never denied such a permit for commercial or religious use.

The board’s vote, prosecutors say, violated the .

Back in April, Supervisor Sue Hansohn that she had received complaints from residents expressing fears about the Islamic center.

“The majority of the calls and emails I had was because of the religion, not because it’s a pump-and-haul or environmental reasons,” said Hansohn, who supported the permit.

Jack Pointer

Jack contributes to ݮý.com when he's not working as the afternoon/evening radio writer.

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