From Philadelphia-
Hunger, health care, and urban violence are the usual subjects of concern when the Religious Leaders Council of Greater Philadelphia gathers for its semiannual meetings.
But at the spring 2011 session, a new topic was cast into the mix: real estate.
A member noted that he was grappling with a growing stock of vacant churches. Hoping for a solution from his high-placed peers at the conference table, he got instead a chorus of me-toos.
"I always thought I could sell my buildings to you," a prelate of one Protestant denomination joked to another.
The group erupted in laughter.
"But it was kind of sick humor," Episcopal Bishop Charles E. Bennison Jr. recalled. "We all have these empty buildings now. We're all in trouble."
They are costly to maintain and increasingly difficult to sell, but painful to demolish, even as they decay into neighborhood eyesores. There are now so many shuttered houses of worship - at least 300 estimated across the Philadelphia region - that the anxiety over what to do with them has spread beyond religious circles and into City Hall and suburban town councils.
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