Imagine you are a member of a nonprofit board that one day wakes up and is told by the city government that it was going to lose its youth-serving property thanks to eminent domain. The city claimed that the area was blighted, thus unsafe and fell under the rules of eminent domain.
This youth organization believed differently, sued saying the city was using false grounds to take their building (the city was really wanting to do economic development). And the youth organization won.
For me, the equally amazing line to this story is that the board of a tiny nonprofit stood up and said they weren't going to take it. Nonprofit boards everywhere: take notice!
Here's the story and congratulations to the Community Youth Athletic Center!