BY STEPHEN BEALE
The Goffstown Board of Selectmen has decided it will not try to stop a church from building in an industrial zone.
“My reaction is a happy one, of course,” said Joe Johnsick, the founder and pastor of Goffstown Harvest Christian Church. “But not because in any way we’re trying to win anything against the town. What causes us to have a positive reaction is that we are happy that we can go forward in serving the town and being a blessing to this community.”
A month ago, the church and town seemed to be on a legal collision course, after a plan to move out of a nearby shopping plaza into a new building at the corner of Saint Anselm Drive and Route 114 ran afoul of town goals for economic development in the area.
The Zoning Board of Adjustment in early June granted two variances to Goffstown Harvest Christian Church: one excusing the steeple from conforming to the maximum building height set by the ordinance and another variance permitting a church to be in an industrial zone.
The Board of Selectmen voted at the end of the month to appeal that decision. The board had to act quickly to make a 30- day deadline for appeals, according to Selectman Scott Gross.
But after that vote, the board received a letter from the town attorney that prompted them to drop the appeal.
“He thought that our prevailing on an appeal would be very unlikely based on his review of the ZBA’s minutes and the issues we raised,” Gross said. “We decided that it would not have been beneficial to the town to proceed with an appeal.”
Gross said the legal process would have cost thousands of dollars and wasted the time of the Zoning Board of Adjustment, which would have had to schedule a special meeting to vote on whether it would grant the selectmen’s request for a rehearing on the variances.
Johnsick, who said he had prepared for a legal battle, was relieved.
“My prayer was that God would not cause us to fight any battles that tomorrow we would have to heal.”
The church still has to get the stamp of approval from the town Planning Board, which is scheduled to review the church plan at its Sept. 11 meeting. “I’m not done with boards,” Johnsick said. “At least we can go forward now.”
The first phase of the project is a 479-seat sanctuary, estimated at $1.2 million to $1.5 million. That would allow Goffstown Harvest to move out of the space it rents in a shopping plaza down the street, across from the Shaw’s supermarket on Mast Road.
At some point in the future, Johnsick also wants to build an outdoor amphitheater for special services and events and a multi-purpose facility with a gym, youth room and television studio on the 5-acre property. Those would add $600,000 to the original cost.
Both the outdoor venue and the facility would be open to other town groups or organizations. “This is something very nice that the community could use,” he said.
The Zoning Board, according to its minutes, has restricted what Johnsick can do outside, saying he cannot have services in the amphitheater. Johnsick wondered if that decision could prevent him from even having a church picnic there because it could be construed to be a “service.”
He said it was not his intent to have regular services there, but he would like to hold special events.
“I’m not going to have anyone tell me I can’t have outside events,” Johnsick said.
The timing of the additions, Johnsick said depends on the growth of his ministries, something that can be hard to guarantee or gauge for the future.
“It’s kind of like telling an oak tree you’ve got six months to be 10 feet tall,” Johnsick said. “You can’t do it. You have to wait for it to grow.”