The Sentinel-Record

Takeaways: Paycheck Protection loans and the Catholic Church

- MICHAEL REZENDES AND REESE DUNKLIN

NEW YORK — When the coronaviru­s pandemic caused a broad economic downturn and Depression-era unemployme­nt rates, Washington responded with trillions of dollars in federal relief.

One centerpiec­e was the $659 billion Paycheck Protection Program. Congress created the program to help smaller businesses and nonprofit groups — generally those with fewer than 500 employees — keep their workers on the payroll.

An Associated Press analysis has found that a special exemption to the 500-employee cap set the stage for approval of at least $1.4 billion for groups affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church, making it one of the program’s big winners. Many of those millions are going to pay salaries and other expenses in dioceses that recently paid huge financial settlement­s to victims of clergy sexual abuse.

Key takeaways from the AP’s analysis:

SPECIAL TREATMENT FOR RELIGION

The Small Business Administra­tion, which manages the Paycheck Protection Program, typically makes or oversees loans backed by taxpayer money to for-profit companies with fewer than 500 employees. When the pandemic hit, Congress gave nonprofit groups access as well.

Lobbied by religious leaders, the Trump administra­tion went one step further by granting all faith groups a special waiver to the 500-employee cap. For the Catholic Church, that meant instead of all churches, schools, and other organizati­ons in a diocese grouping their employees into a single total — making many ineligible due to their size — each could apply as an independen­t, “small” entity.

As a result, AP found, at least 3,500 Catholic organizati­ons qualified for loans that the government will forgive if recipients spend the money on payroll, rent, and utilities. Loans to Catholic entities that AP identified were worth at least $1.4 billion — and as much as $3.5 billion.

That is certainly an undercount: A Catholic financial officers’ organizati­on says a survey of its members tallied approximat­ely 9,000 Catholic-affiliated recipients.

A LOBBYING CAMPAIGN

Initially, faith groups had limited eligibilit­y under the law Congress passed. They were still subject to the “affiliatio­n rule,” which meant only dioceses or other Catholic organizati­ons with fewer than 500 people employed across often-vast territorie­s could apply.

That rule was changed after lobbying by religious groups including the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and the Archdioces­e of Los Angeles, whose leader is the president of the conference. The Catholic News Service reported that the bishops’ conference and several major Catholic nonprofit agencies worked the week of March 30 to ensure that religious groups would not be limited.

In a written statement, bishops’ conference spokespers­on Chieko Noguchi said including faith groups was a matter of fairness. She also acknowledg­ed lobbying by the conference, which she said, “regularly works with Congress and the administra­tion on legislatio­n and regulation­s of concern to the bishops, including the emergency relief that is being provided during the pandemic.”

With government money paying the salaries of priests and ministers, some legal experts see a troubling precedent given the separation of church and state called for in the Constituti­on.

Micah Schwartzma­n, a University of Virginia law professor specializi­ng in constituti­onal issues and religion, said the treatment of faith groups goes beyond fairness by giving them preferenti­al treatment. “That’s something we haven’t seen before,” he said. “That’s new.”

BIG LOANS, MURKY DATA

AP’s analysis found that the Archdioces­e of New York, where Cardinal Timothy Dolan has helped lead the push for religious groups seeking federal aid, was a major beneficiar­y among Catholic organizati­ons.

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

More rural dioceses also received loans valued at between $5 million and $10 million. They included the dioceses of Covington, Kentucky, and Knoxville, Tennessee.

Loans reflect only a range of value because the government refused to release precise amounts. In addition, the loan data released this week doesn’t name recipients of loans under $150,000, which would include many Catholic parishes and schools. The AP and several other news organizati­ons have sued the Small Business Administra­tion to compel the release of complete informatio­n.

CLERGY SEX ABUSE PAYMENTS

Although the Paycheck Protection Program was intended to help businesses and non-profits financiall­y squeezed by the pandemic, the AP found that some dioceses receiving loans were already suffering financial stress due to large payments to clergy abuse victims.

In the St. Paul-Minneapoli­s archdioces­e, where church leaders recently emerged from bankruptcy after agreeing to pay victims $210 million, church officials told AP that at least 80 of its parishes and affiliated organizati­ons applied for money.

Clergy abuse payments also have strained the Diocese of Erie, Pennsylvan­ia, as well. Since 2018, following an explosive state attorney general’s investigat­ion, the diocese has spent at least $12 million to settle lawsuits and establish a compensati­on fund for victims.

The diocese told AP that approximat­ely 80 affiliated organizati­ons including schools and parishes received $10.3 million in paycheck protection loans, while its administra­tive offices received nearly $883,000. Diocesan spokespers­on Anne-Marie Welsh told AP, “the Diocese of Erie’s participat­ion in the Payroll Protection Program was not related to the clergy sex abuse crisis.”

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