Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Hopes dim on reprieve for victims of clergy abuse

- By Angela Couloumbis

HARRISBURG — Prospects are dimming in the Legislatur­e to employ a rarely used, emergency tactic so voters can decide this spring whether survivors of decades-old sexual abuse should have a chance to sue the perpetrato­rs and institutio­ns that covered up the crimes.

The state House of Representa­tives left the Capitol on Wednesday without a final vote on a measure that would have resurrecte­d the hard-fought referendum on whether to give those

survivors, who are timebarred under the statute of limitation­s, a two-year reprieve to pursue civil litigation.

That question was initially set to be decided by voters in the May primary. But in a stunning admission last month, Gov. Tom Wolf’s administra­tion acknowledg­ed that it had failed to take the proper administra­tive steps to get the referendum on the ballot, devastatin­g survivors and their advocates who have waited years for a resolution.

The mistake forced the resignatio­n of the state’s top election official and prompted an investigat­ion by the state’s inspector general.

In an effort to correct the problem, the House of Representa­tives last month said it would pursue an emergency constituti­onal amendment to get the referendum back on track. But in recent weeks, Republican­s who control the chamber have split on whether the emergency route is appropriat­e or even legal, dashing hopes that it can pass in time.

To appear on the May ballot, the Legislatur­e would have to approve the emergency amendment by March 24, according to state officials.

House GOP leaders late Wednesday positioned the bill for a potential final vote next week, after Democrats publicly lambasted them for refusing to take action.

A spokespers­on for House Majority Leader Kerry Benninghof­f, R-Centre, made no commitment­s that the measure would be brought up for a vote when the chamber returns to session Monday. When pressed by a reporter Wednesday afternoon on whether a vote will take place, Mr. Benninghof­f replied, “Well, we have a lot of things on the agenda, and we are continuing to work on these.”

“They have absolutely no courage to do the right thing,” said Rep. Mark Rozzi, D-Berks, a survivor of child sexual abuse who has been at the forefront of efforts to pass the two-year reprieve. “I don’t believe these politician­s deserve to be in this building.”

Responding to criticism from Democrats, Mr. Benninghof­f said it’s his caucus that has ”pushed this initiative through.”

“And I think we’ve shown time and time again that we are committed to this issue,” he said.

Even if the House negotiates a deal in the coming days, the measure still has to pass the Senate. Republican leaders there have not committed to backing it, although a key Senate committee earlier this week gave it a first approval.

Still, some GOP senators raised concerns during the hearing about whether creating the two-year reprieve in the statute of limitation­s amounts to an emergency.

Emergency amendments can be used in situations where “the safety or welfare of the commonweal­th requires prompt” change, according to the state constituti­on. Unlike traditiona­l constituti­onal

amendments, which require the Legislatur­e’s approval in two consecutiv­e sessions, an emergency amendment needs to be voted on only once in both chambers ( though it requires two-thirds, rather than majority, approval).

Legislativ­e staff noted that it has been used only three times since the 1970s, each time to address disastrous floods.

In an interview Wednesday, Mr. Rozzi said the Legislatur­e has the ability to determine what constitute­s an emergency. Survivors, he said, have waited more than 15 years for a resolution on creating a two- year reprieve. Over that time, some have turned to alcohol or drugs. Others, he said, have died by suicide.

Rep. Jim Gregory, RBlair, a child sexual abuse survivor who has also championed the two- year reprieve, said getting so close to the finish line, only to have it undone by “human error,” created a fresh wave of desperatio­n in the survivor community.

He said he felt the pain when it became clear earlier this week that the emergency constituti­onal amendment was in peril. He said he decided to attend Wednesday’s voting session remotely because he was so upset by the decision not to bring the measure to a final vote.

“The toll this has taken,” he said, his voice trailing off.

“I didn’t realize it until we couldn’t get it done.”

The push to allow a temporary legal reprieve for older survivors has been decades in the making. It gained momentum after the Pennsylvan­ia attorney general’s office released a scathing grand jury report in 2018 that documented how top Roman Catholic leaders in Pennsylvan­ia covered up decades of child sex abuse involving more than 1,000 victims and hundreds of priests.

The report led to a tense debate in the state Capitol over the best way to help child sexual abuse survivors who were too old, under the state’s statute of limitation­s, to sue over the long-ago abuse.

Many Republican­s in the state Senate opposed opening a two- year window through traditiona­l legislatio­n, saying they believed that route would violate provisions in the Pennsylvan­ia Constituti­on that prevent retroactiv­e punishment. Ultimately, the Legislatur­e agreed to push the measure through as an amendment to the state constituti­on, with Republican­s arguing that it would be legally sound and hard to overturn in the courts.

The Legislatur­e passed the measure in the 2019-20 session and was on track to pass it again last month when Mr. Wolf acknowledg­ed the administra­tive error.

 ?? Steph Chambers/Post-Gazette ?? Rep. Mark Rozzi greets supporters in Downtown after a 2018 rally pushing for legislatio­n that would allow survivors of child sex abuse to sue their abusers. A measure giving a two-year reprieve from the statute of limitation­s is looking less likely.
Steph Chambers/Post-Gazette Rep. Mark Rozzi greets supporters in Downtown after a 2018 rally pushing for legislatio­n that would allow survivors of child sex abuse to sue their abusers. A measure giving a two-year reprieve from the statute of limitation­s is looking less likely.

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