Santa Fe New Mexican

Catholic Church got $1.4B in virus aid

Officials used unpreceden­ted exemption from federal rules to amass funding

- By Reese Dunklin and Michael Rezendes

NEW YORK — The U.S. Roman Catholic Church used a special and unpreceden­ted exemption from federal rules to amass at least $1.4 billion in taxpayer-backed coronaviru­s aid, with many millions going to dioceses that have paid huge settlement­s or sought bankruptcy protection because of clergy sexual abuse cover-ups.

The church’s haul may have reached — or even exceeded — $3.5 billion, making a global religious institutio­n with more than a billion followers among the biggest winners in the U.S. government’s pandemic relief efforts, an Associated Press analysis of federal data released this week found.

Houses of worship and faith-based organizati­ons that promote religious beliefs aren’t usually eligible for money from the U.S. Small Business Administra­tion. But as the economy plummeted and jobless rates soared, Congress let faith groups and other nonprofits tap into the Paycheck Protection Program, a $659 billion fund created to keep Main Street open and Americans employed.

By aggressive­ly promoting the payroll program and marshaling resources to help affiliates navigate its shifting rules, Catholic dioceses, parishes, schools and other ministries have so far received approval for at least 3,500 forgivable loans, the AP found.

The Archdioces­e of New York received 15 loans worth at least $28 million for its top executive offices. Its St. Patrick’s Cathedral on Fifth Avenue was approved for at least $1 million.

In Orange County, Calif., where a sparkling glass cathedral estimated to cost over $70 million recently opened, diocesan officials working at the complex received four loans worth at least $3 million. A loan of at least $2 million went to the diocese covering Wheeling-Charleston, W.Va., where a church investigat­ion revealed last year that then-Bishop Michael Bransfield embezzled funds and made sexual advances toward young priests.

Being eligible for low-interest loans was a new opportunit­y. But the church couldn’t have been approved for so many loans — which the government will forgive if they are used for wages, rent and utilities — without a second break. Religious groups persuaded the Trump administra­tion to free them from a rule thaty disqualifi­es an applicant with more than 500 workers. Without this preferenti­al treatment, many Catholic dioceses would have been ineligible.

“The government grants special dispensati­on, and that creates a kind of structural favoritism,” said Micah Schwartzma­n, a University of Virginia law professor specializi­ng in constituti­onal issues and religion who has studied the Paycheck Protection Program. “And that favoritism was worth billions of dollars.”

The amount that the church collected, between $1.4 billion and $3.5 billion, is an undercount. The Diocesan Fiscal Management Conference, an organizati­on of Catholic financial officers, surveyed members and reported that about 9,000 Catholic entities received loans. That is nearly three times the number of Catholic recipients the AP could identify.

The AP couldn’t find more Catholic beneficiar­ies because the government’s data didn’t name recipients of loans under $150,000 — a category in which many smaller churches would fall. And because the government released only ranges of loan amounts, it wasn’t possible to be more precise.

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