Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Lawmakers leave town, clergy child sex abuse bill undone

- By Marc Levy The Associated Press

The collapse of legislatio­n left uncertaint­y Thursday whether Pennsylvan­ia lawmakers will ever approve recommenda­tions in a landmark grand jury report that contained hundreds of allegation­s of child sexual abuse by priests in Roman Catholic dioceses across the state.

The state Capitol was quiet Thursday after lawmakers left town.

There are no scheduled voting days before the twoyear legislativ­e session expires Nov. 30, when all bills die, and an election barely two weeks away promises to keep most lawmakers busy campaignin­g.

A new Legislatur­e seated in January.

Attorney General Josh Shapiro and lawmakers aligned with him vowed after legislatio­n stalled Wednesday night to keep working to win approval of the recommenda­tions.

The dispute centers on Senate Republican opposition to one of the grand jury recommenda­tions: giving now-adult victims of child sexual abuse a twoyear reprieve from time limits in state law that otherwise bars them from suing perpetrato­rs and institutio­ns that covered it up.

The House of Representa­tives passed it overwhelmi­ngly last month, and it is supported by Shapiro, Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf, Republican gubernator­ial candidate Scott Wagner, Senate Democratic leaders and victim advocates.

The Senate’s top Republican, President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati of Jefferson County, said late Wednesday that he had put senators on notice that they could be recalled is to Harrisburg if a promising compromise emerges. He also suggested that he had been the only party to make concession­s and was done doing so.

“Whoever is negotiatin­g for the other side, they want to put down a reasonable counterpro­posal that I can find 26 votes for in the Senate, I’ll bring the Senate back,” Scarnati said.

Shapiro contended that senators left town on an arbitrary deadline, and had acted to protect the interests of the Catholic Church, and not victims of child sexual abuse. Top Senate Republican­s say they consider the recommenda­tion unconstitu­tional and it could unleash lawsuits that divert money from church charities.

Scarnati has backed the creation of a church-sponsored victims’ compensati­on fund. Lawyers who help settle child sexual abuse cases say the courts generally promise a bigger payout and the ability for a victim to confront a perpetrato­r, but a longer and more contentiou­s process.

In the meantime, the issue is cropping up on the campaign trail, notably in a challenge by Democrat Ezra Nanes to Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre.

It could appear elsewhere.

Rep. Mark Rozzi, a Berks County Democrat who had told of his rape by a priest when he was 13, said senators would have to go home and answer to their constituen­ts.

“And my message is clear to those constituen­ts,” Rozzi said at a news conference late Wednesday. “If your senator does not support a two-year window, you vote them out of office.”

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