The Day

Sale of church property would require buyer to pay off lien placed by city

- J.penney@theday.com

remediatin­g the site and clearing out the rubble.”

Attempts to reach Engaging Heaven officials on Thursday at the group’s Florida headquarte­rs were unsuccessf­ul.

Any sale would require a buyer to pay off a lien placed on the property in February by the city as part of its efforts to recoup the nearly $250,000 it spent in the aftermath of the steeple collapse.

Ministry founder James Levesque previously said the city would be fully reimbursed for its costs. In a statement on an Engaging Heaven fundraisin­g page, Levesque said donations are needed to “cover the disaster, to clear the rubble, and of course, we need the finances to construct another Church building.”

Fire Marshal Vernon Skau on Thursday said a report on the cause of the Jan. 25 steeple collapse is not yet complete.

The 0.65-acre Union Street property, ringed with fencing and yellow caution tape printed with “God At Work” slogans, sits in the city’s Central Business District 1, which restricts street-level property use to commercial operations, but allows residentia­l units on upper floors.

City Director of Economic Developmen­t and Planning Felix

Reyes said his office has fielded calls from curious developers, though he’s unaware of any purchase deal in the works.

He said redevelopm­ent of the church property would require an atypical approach.

“Any developer would have to pay off the lien and mortgage for what, essentiall­y, would be treated as a brownfield site,” Reyes said. “And it wouldn’t be just a ground-up build, because the property would need to be cleaned up. But that is a sizable lot in a very appealing area right in the heart of the central business district.”

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