Guest Post by Morbo
So there’s this 40-foot cross atop a hill in Holmen, Wisc. The problem is, the property is owned by the local government.
Apparently, it’s quite a deal. They light it up every March, and you can see it from miles away. Of course, not everyone is in favor of the government displaying lighted religious symbols. Some old-fashioned people continue to oppose faith-based government and believe maintaining and displaying religious symbols is the job of houses of worship.
Sure enough, a Holmen resident, Eric Barnes, an assistant physics professor at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, had the temerity to point out that this isn’t cool — or constitutional.
Local officials were smart enough to realize that this is not worth getting dragged into court over. But they were not smart enough to do the right thing and take down the cross. Instead, they have proposed selling the land. And my guess is that they intend to make sure that whoever buys the land will keep the cross up there.
Here’s where it gets fun: The land is valued at only $100. The local Lions Club has been talking about plunking down the $100 to buy themselves a nice hill. But then two national organizations that promote non-theism, the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF) and the American Humanist Association (AHA), got wind of what was going on and sent in their own offers to buy the land. The AHA offered a cool $1,000. The FFRF topped that with a $1,200 offer.
Municipal officials are saying that they are not required to take the highest offer for the land. But, as Cheryl Gill, an attorney who is advising the town, told the Holmen Courier, turning down a bid that is 12 times higher than what the Lions offered “might be considered an abuse of discretion.”
D’ya think?
This is silly. The town owns the hill and ought to keep it. But it should be a place where everyone feels welcome. There’s an easy solution to this: Donate the cross to a place where it will be more at home. I’m thinking a Christian church.
Late-Breaking Update: Shortly after I wrote this post, I learned that the Holmen Village Board met Thursday night and voted to sell the land to — surprise! — the Lions Club (who have upped their bid to a whopping $600). Is there a church-state lawyer in the house?