The Way campus bought by non-profit
By Rachel E. Blakeman
The Journal Gazette
ROME CITY - Sylvan Springs Inc., a non-profit group, announced Thursday it has
bought The Way College of Biblical Research Indiana Campus and will turn it
into a family center for northeast Indiana.
Sylvan Springs said the purchase price for the Rome City
compound was $750,000, including all of the furniture, kitchen equipment and
other accessories.
"The vision is for three separate, yet connected opportunities for learning,"
said Max Roesler, president of the Sylvan Springs board of directors.
They are: the Sylvan Springs
Professional Learning
Center, Sylvan Springs Family
Enrichment and Conference Facility and the Sylvan Springs
Family Life
Center. Some of the
programs that the group wants to organize include vocational training, marriage
counseling and a child-care center.
Linda Speakman-Yerich, Sylvan Springs administrative director and board
treasurer, said tours of the campus will be offered in the next three to four
weeks and programs will begin within three months. It has not been decided what
will be offered first.
Sylvan Springs officials said the project's funding will come from
contributions, leasing space, program fees and grants.
Speakman-Yerich said she will serve as administrative director until a chief
executive officer is named.
The Way International, founded in Van
Wert, Ohio, and based
in New Knoxville, Ohio, is a religious group that differs from other Christian
beliefs. Unlike most Christians, The Way followers do not believe in the
Trinity - the unity of God, Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit.
The seven staff members of The Way who had been maintaining the buildings and
grounds were moving off the campus after Wednesday's news conference.
The campus had been for sale for about two years, after The Way announced it
was moving the Rome City classes to a Gunnison, Colo., campus.
Howard Allen, secretary and treasurer emeritus for The Way, said what became
Sylvan Springs was the first group to tour the campus when it went on the
market in December 1997.
According to Noble County records, The Way International made its first Rome
City land purchase in 1976 from the Sisters of the Precious Blood and bought
more land in 1979 from a couple.
It has almost 190 acres, according to the Noble County Assessor's Office, with
about 30 buildings.
PUBLISHED: THURSDAY DECEMBER 16, 1999
|