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  Scranton Diocese Budget Crisis Sheds New Light on Bishop Martino's Departure

Catholic Culture
February 22, 2010

http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=5515

The Diocese of Scranton, Pennsylvania faces a severe budget crisis. The alarming financial figures may offer a clue to the sudden resignation of Scranton's Bishop Joseph Martino last August.

The Scranton diocese ran a deficit of $15.5 million for 2009. The previous two years had seen multi-million dollar deficits, but the 2009 shortfall more than doubled the 2008 figure. The soaring losses showed that despite plans to close schools and parishes, the Scranton diocese had no real prospect of restoring a balanced budget.

In announcing the financial figures, Cardinal Justin Rigali of Philadelphia-- who took on additional temporary duties as administrator of the Scranton diocese after Bishop Martino's resignation-- conceded that the numbers "are deeply troubling and present formidable challenges." Diocesan officials said that a variety of budget-slashing plans are under consideration, although they promised to maintain existing social services.

The Vatican announced on August 31, 2009, that Pope Benedict XVI had accepted Bishop Martino's resignation. That announcement caught local Catholics by surprise because Bishop Martino was just 63 years old. Although an official diocesan announcement cited health concerns, the outgoing bishop admitted openly that he had no major health problems.

During his tenure in Scranton Bishop Martino had incurred controversy on several occasions, clashing with politicians who supported legal abortion and with administrators of Catholic colleges in the diocese. His abrupt resignation had led many observers to the conclusion that the Vatican disapproved of his confrontational governing style. The diocesan budget problems, which he had evidently failed to bring under control, introduce an important new element to the story.

 
 

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