Before ending formal sessions last month, the Massachusetts Legislature failed to act on a bill that would eliminate a cap on liability in child sexual abuse cases against nonprofit charities. The lawmaker who proposed the bill said the Catholic Church lobbied against it.
The bill, S.916, would have removed several barriers to recovering damages for child sexual abuse, according to state Sen. William Brownsberger. It would have eliminated the liability cap on child sexual abuse cases against public charities, as well as for similar cases against state and local governments. It also would have removed a feature of the state’s sovereign immunity law that makes it difficult for people to sue for negligent supervision of employees.
The legislation targets Massachusetts’ charitable immunity law, which caps damages against nonprofit charities at $20,000. (Medical malpractice lawsuits against a nonprofit provider are capped at $100,000.)
The cap…
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