New York Post

NY Dems ‘ retaliate’ vs. Catholic Church

- By KIRSTAN CONLEY in Albany and CARL CAMPANILE in NYC ccampanile@nypost.com

Assembly Democrats, under pressure from the Catholic Church to pass a tax break to help parochial schools, on Monday revived a bill that would allow lawsuits involving decadesold claims of sexual abuse by priests.

“This is a retaliator­y strike against the church,” Dennis Poust, spokesman for the New York State Catholic Conference, told The Post.

“We haven’t heard a whisper about this bill in six years.

“If this bill becomes law, it will have catastroph­ic consequenc­es for the church — and they know it,” Poust added

The legislatio­n, sponsored by Assemblywo­man Margaret Markey ( DQueens), would wipe out a law giving accusers up to five years to file suit once they reach 18. But after that period, lawsuits are barred.

The new law would allow anyone to sue going back decades for one year after the measure is enacted.

The Democratic­controlled Assembly hasn’t seriously debated the sexabuse issue since 2008, Poust said. But the dormant proposal was amended on Sunday and put before the Assembly Codes Committee on Monday, when the Legislatur­e was considerin­g a flurry of bills before breaking for summer recess.

The move comes as Democrats in the Assembly, who have close ties to teachers unions, face withering criticism for opposing a plan advanced by Gov. Cuomo and opposed by the unions to aid parochial schools through tax credits.

That proposal, backed by the GOP-controlled Senate, would offer a 75 percent tax credit for donations of up to $ 1 million to finance scholarshi­ps for students at faithbased or other private schools.

It also would provide a tax credit of up to $ 500 to families with income under $ 60,000 who have a child in parochial school.

“This is retaliatio­n,” Poust said. “The timing makes it impossible to come to any other conclusion. There are no coincidenc­es in Albany.”

The Catholic Conference sent an email alert to supporters saying it won’t buckle to bullying by lawmakers.

“This is a political maneuver that is beneath the dignity of the state Assembly,” the email blast said. “I urge you to reject this transparen­t attempt to silence the Church.”

A spokesman for Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie (DBronx) dismissed accusation­s of retributio­n.

For her part, Markey said she had “nothing to do” with the bill’s resurrecti­on.

“This has been going on for five, six years and California has done this bill,” she said. “Other states have done the bill.”

Brooklyn Assemblyma­n Joe Lentol ( DBrooklyn), who chairs the Codes Committee, said, “Nobody has told me that this is in retaliatio­n for anything. They just asked that it be put on the agenda.”

He said Markey may have persuaded Heastie to take up the cause.

“Ms. Markey is pretty persistent. We have a new speaker and it hasn’t been considered before by the former speaker for a long time. So, it makes sense that he may have yielded to her,” Lentol said.

This is a retaliator­y strike against the church . . . If this bill becomes law, it will have catastroph­ic consequenc­es for the church — and they know it.

— Dennis Poust ( left), of the New York State Catholic Conference

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