Scottish Daily Mail

Church ‘may have to sell cathedrals to pay huge debts’

- By Steve Doughty Social Affairs Correspond­ent

THE Church of England may be forced to sell one or more of its ancient cathedrals because of overwhelmi­ng debts, its leaders warned yesterday.

They fear bankruptcy courts will order the fire sale of a cathedral if its dean and chapter reach the point where they cannot pay their bills.

Now bishops are to ask the Church’s parliament, the General Synod, to approve a law to prevent any judge from responding to the financial crash of a cathedral by ordering a sell-off.

A high-level report to be presented to a meeting of the Synod on Tuesday also said ‘serious fault lines’ have been found at Exeter and Peterborou­gh cathedrals.

Bradford was close to entering an agreeabout ment with its creditors in 2000 and there are ‘a large number of cathedrals under significan­t financial pressure’.

The CofE has 42 cathedrals, many of them of historic, architectu­ral and cultural importance. Nine charge entrance fees, including £7.50 at Exeter.

But the money is not enough to cover the running costs of the building and staff. A Church inquiry said in 2016 that the cathedral needed £1.5million a year and its finances were ‘parlous’.

The forced sale of a cathedral would be a nightmare for the CofE and the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby.

It could lead to a much-loved cathedral being used in the same way as some cast-off churches – as a concert venue, conference centre, hotel, bar or restaurant.

Cathedrals in cities with expensive property prices might also be converted into upmarket housing.

An even more embarrassi­ng possibilit­y for Church authoritie­s is the prospect that a notable cathedral could be bought by followers of another faith.

The report by a Cathedrals Working Group led by the Bishop of Stepney Adrian Newman, and which included former Labour home secretary Jack Straw, called for the CofE to start talks with the Government State funding for cathedrals.

It said: ‘Whenever cathedrals get into debt and serious financial difficulty, this presents a reputation­al risk for the entire Church. It is currently not clear how the statutory insolvency regime applies to cathedrals.

‘If the provisions of insolvency legislatio­n which enable an insolvent corporatio­n’s debts to be dealt with in an orderly way are not available, the insolvency of a cathedral would be exceptiona­lly difficult to manage.’ It said that when Bradford Cathedral ran into difficulti­es, a court allowed its dean and chapter to draw up a company voluntary arrangemen­t (CVA) with creditors.

Such schemes allow bankrupt companies to pay back creditors on agreed terms.

‘We recommend that legislatio­n should be developed to clarify that the CVA regime will apply to cathedrals, should the need arise,’ the report said.

‘The legislatio­n should be drafted to make clear that winding-up provisions should not allow the sale of the cathedral to meet a chapter’s debts.’

The Synod, which meets in York, will be asked to approve the recommenda­tion for a legal ban on the fire sale of cathedrals.

Church laws that are passed in the Synod and approved by Parliament then become laws which must be applied by all courts.

The initiative to prevent the sale of a cathedral came in a report that presented a scathing view of the way cathedrals are run and which made 150 recommenda­tions.

It stressed: ‘The significan­t number of cathedrals at severe financial risk means that doing nothing is no longer an option.’

 ??  ?? Norman masterpiec­e: Peterborou­gh Cathedral
Norman masterpiec­e: Peterborou­gh Cathedral
 ??  ?? ‘George is nearly six foot so we wanted somewhere with high ceilings’
‘George is nearly six foot so we wanted somewhere with high ceilings’

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