Boston Herald

Catholic schools facing a wave of closures

- By ERIN TIERNAN

Already under pressure from falling enrollment, Catholic schools are taking a heavy hit from the coronaviru­s pandemic with 11 shutting down in Massachuse­tts amid a wave of closures nationwide.

“This is the largest number of closures in almost 50 years,” said Thomas Carroll, superinten­dent of schools for the Boston Archdioces­e. “This is a pretty extraordin­ary moment for the archdioces­e.”

Catholic education has been grappling with declining enrollment and financial challenges from lost tuition for years, but Carroll said a perfect storm of circumstan­ces has left Catholic schools, “handcuffed by the economic realities of COVID.”

Two schools in Weymouth and ones in Marlboro, Braintree, Holbrook, Lowell, Winchester, Roxbury, Chelsea, Methuen and Kingston have permanentl­y closed and Carroll warns that could be just the beginning.

Enrollment is down 7% from March, Carroll said, as many parents choose to forgo a private, Catholic education amid mass unemployme­nt and the enduring

‘Unlike public schools, we don’t just send bills to taxpayers, people actually have to pay tuition or we can’t pay teachers.’

THOMAS CARROLL superinten­dent of schools for the Boston Archdioces­e

pandemic and Carroll said the church won’t be able to fully quantify the hit until later this fall. He said he expects more schools to close come September and October.

“Unlike public schools, we don’t just send bills to taxpayers, people actually have to pay tuition or we can’t pay teachers,” he said. Roughly 32,000 students attend 99 Catholic schools within the archdioces­e — a number that has been dwindling in recent years.

Carroll said the usual “bobbing and weaving” to keep Catholic school budgets in the black was wiped out as the pandemic also shuttered churches, cutting off collection­s and stopping cash flow for the church.

It’s a reality facing Catholic schools nationwide as the pandemic has forced the permanent closure of more than 140 Catholic schools, according to officials.

The school systems’ saving grace could come in the form of federal stimulus aid. Church leadership is lobbying the Trump administra­tion to include scholarshi­p assistance for economical­ly disadvanta­ged families to use at Catholic or other private schools in the next aid package.

Three of the nation’s highestran­king Catholic leaders, in a recent joint appeal, said Catholic schools “are presently facing their greatest financial crisis” and warned that hundreds more closures are likely without federal support.

“Because of economic loss and uncertaint­y, many families are confrontin­g the wrenching decision to pull their children out of Catholic schools,” said New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley and Los Angeles Archbishop José Gomez, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

 ?? NICOLAUS CZARNECKI / HERALD STAFF FILE ?? SUPPORT URGED: Cardinal Sean O'Malley joined with other Catholic leaders to warn that ‘economic loss and uncertaint­y’ are forcing some parents to stop sending their children to Catholic schools.
NICOLAUS CZARNECKI / HERALD STAFF FILE SUPPORT URGED: Cardinal Sean O'Malley joined with other Catholic leaders to warn that ‘economic loss and uncertaint­y’ are forcing some parents to stop sending their children to Catholic schools.

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