BishopAccountability.org

NY- Victims blast Catholic bishops lobbying effort

By Mary Caplan
Survivor Network of Those Abused by Priests
March 19, 2014

http://www.snapnetwork.org/ny_victims_blast_catholic_bishops_lobbying_effort

New York's Catholic bishops – including Cardinal Tim Dolan - are trying to get more tax breaks through a proposed bill about schools. Lawmakers should think long and hard before agreeing to this.

http://www.saratogian.com/government-and-politics/20140319/video-cardinal-timothy-dolan-visits-albany-lobbies-for-tax-credit

When they want money for their institutions, Catholic officials lobby hard and say they care deeply about kids. But when kids who were abused want a chance for justice, Catholic officials lobby hard to deny those kids their day in court. All across the US, Dolan and his brother bishops use all their political will and power and resources to block moves to reform archaic, predator-friendly statute of limitation laws that endanger kids and protect those who commit and conceal heinous child sex crimes.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/14/us/sex-abuse-statutes-of-limitation-stir-battle.html?pagewanted=all&gwt=regi

For at least three reasons, public schools are inherently safer than private schools. There is more openness and more accountability in public schools than private schools. And there's less incentive to ignore or conceal child sex crimes in public schools than private schools.

First, law enforcement and fiscal authorities can more readily and easily audit and investigate public schools than private schools.

Second, citizens and journalists can better gain access to records in public schools than private schools.

Third, public school parents can attend and speak at regular, public school board meetings. They can oust board members, back other candidates, and run for those positions themselves.

These "checks and balances" aren't perfect. Kids do, of course, get molested in public schools, far more than anyone would like to admit. And child sex crimes are sometimes covered up in public schools. But in our experience, there are far fewer cover ups of crimes against kids in public schools than private ones.

We are grateful when people are generous, especially to institutions that help kids. But such generosity is better targeted to institutions that are less apt to conceal crimes against kids.

Catholic parishioners who worry about shrinking Catholic schools should insist that their bishops take real measures, not symbolic ones, to end the long-standing and dangerous church culture of recklessness and deceit in child sex abuse cases. That will no doubt help stem declining enrollment in parochial schools.

Dolan is quoted in the New York Times as saying that “Anything we can do ... to help our kids, we want to do it as vigorously as possible.” That's not quite true. He supports “anything” to “help” as long as it doesn't help expose Catholic priests, nuns, seminarian, brothers and bishops who commit or conceal child sex crimes or help deter them from committing those crimes.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/18/nyregion/cardinal-dolan-heading-to-albany-to-push-for-education-tax-credit.html

Contact: mcaplan682@aol.com




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