Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Church abuse victims wait to see if Legislatur­e will act

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. (AP) >> Lawmakers have returned to the Pennsylvan­ia Capitol but have yet to revisit legislatio­n on child sexual abuse scandals since an October fight killed a bill that would have allowed longago victims to sue the Roman Catholic Church and other institutio­ns.

The Legislatur­e’s new two-year session began in earnest Monday, with little mention of legislatio­n reflecting the state attorney general’s landmark grand jury report on child sexual abuse in Pennsylvan­ia’s Catholic dioceses.

No votes are scheduled and talks are low-key as Pennsylvan­ia’s dioceses begin opening temporary victim compensati­on funds spurred by the grand jury report.

Continued deadlock in the Legislatur­e raises the possibilit­y that now-adult victims will have little option but to apply to a diocese compensati­on fund — and sign away their right to sue — even if lawmakers later approve legislatio­n giving them another chance to sue.

John Delaney, who has told of his rape as a 12-yearold boy by a priest in the Philadelph­ia archdioces­e, said several people he knows have received offers ranging from $180,000 to $375,000. Delaney, now 48, isn’t sure he would accept an offer if it means giving up the right to sue.

“It’s not about the money,” Delaney said. “It’s about holding people accountabl­e for their actions. I want my day in court.”

Several other states have approved a window for time-barred victims to sue, and neighborin­g New York’s Legislatur­e approved such a bill Monday.

For Delaney and many other victims in Pennsylvan­ia, including those in the grand jury’s Aug. 14 report, state law ended their right to sue decades ago, when they turned 20.

Compensati­on funds are fine for some victims, victim advocates say. But, they say, they allow the church to control its own punishment, while some victims want the tools offered by a court to force dioceses to divulge what church officials knew about an abuser, and whether they covered it up.

Compensati­on funds promise a faster payout. Lawsuits take longer but promise bigger payouts, say veteran victims’ lawyers.

The grand jury recommende­d a two-year reprieve, and the bill included provisions to give future victims more time to sue and prosecutor­s more time to pursue charges.

The Republican-controlled state House of Representa­tives passed it overwhelmi­ngly, and it had support from Attorney General Josh Shapiro, Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf and Senate Democratic leaders.

However, Catholic bishops and for-profit insurers opposed the two-year window, and a critical mass of the state Senate’s Republican majority blocked a floor vote on it.

The legislatio­n collapsed.

Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati said he has no plans to restart legislatio­n in his chamber and has had little contact about it since the debate stalled late at night Oct. 17.

“Nobody has picked up the phone to call me since I left here that Wednesday evening of session with a counterpro­posal,” Scarnati, R-Jefferson, said this month. “I have not received anything.”

The House now has a new majority leader, Rep. Bryan Cutler, R-Lancaster, who is not as friendly to a two-year window as his predecesso­r.

Cutler’s office said he is discussing a compromise bill with Shapiro’s office and other lawmakers.

Philadelph­ia’s archdioces­e opened a fund in November, and the Pittsburgh and Scranton dioceses followed suit last week. The dioceses set a deadline of Sept. 30 to apply, and they require someone accepting an offer to forfeit their right to sue later.

The funds are modeled on a system adopted by five New York dioceses in the past two years as a debate raged there over allowing victims a window to sue.

New York’s diocese funds, using the same third-party administra­tor, awarded a maximum payout of $500,000 and an average of about $188,000.

Other dioceses in Pennsylvan­ia are expected to set up something similar.

Scarnati said he is satisfied by how Pennsylvan­ia’s dioceses have moved to set up compensati­on funds .

“I think we give that time, see how that goes and it can only be judged by the victims that participat­e in it,” Scarnati said. “And that will be the judgment.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/MARC LEVY, FILE ?? Survivors of child sexual abuse hug Oct. 17, 2018, in the Pennsylvan­ia Capitol in Harrisburg, Pa., while awaiting legislatio­n to respond to a landmark state grand jury report on child sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Church. Lawmakers have returned to the Pennsylvan­ia Capitol for 2019 sessions, but they have yet to revisit a response to child sexual abuse scandals since the debate’s late-night collapse that closed last year’s final voting day.
AP PHOTO/MARC LEVY, FILE Survivors of child sexual abuse hug Oct. 17, 2018, in the Pennsylvan­ia Capitol in Harrisburg, Pa., while awaiting legislatio­n to respond to a landmark state grand jury report on child sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Church. Lawmakers have returned to the Pennsylvan­ia Capitol for 2019 sessions, but they have yet to revisit a response to child sexual abuse scandals since the debate’s late-night collapse that closed last year’s final voting day.

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