The Columbus Dispatch

Lawmakers revive bill to help former Boy Scouts get money

Legislatio­n had failed to clear Ohio Senate in ’22

- Haley Bemiller

Ohio lawmakers have revived bipartisan legislatio­n that would level the playing field for Ohioans who were sexually abused by Boy Scout leaders and want to seek financial relief from the organizati­on.

House Bill 35, introduced last week by Reps. Bill Seitz, R-cincinnati, and Jessica Miranda, D-forest Park, stems from rules laid out in the Boy Scouts of America’s bankruptcy settlement. It would scrap Ohio’s civil statute of limitation­s for child sex abuse in bankruptcy cases, allowing survivors to recoup the full amount owed to them.

The House passed the bill late last year, but it failed to clear the Senate during the Legislatur­e’s lame-duck session. That means Seitz and Miranda are starting from scratch.

Boy Scouts of America filed for bankruptcy in 2020 as it faced hundreds of lawsuits across the country from former scouts who said they were molested and raped by leaders and volunteers. Nearly 2,000 abuse claims have been filed in Ohio alone.

The settlement, approved in September, allows survivors to apply for a $3,500 expedited payout. Alternativ­ely, survivors can pursue an independen­t review or see where they fall on a matrix that doles out money based on the severity and frequency of abuse. For those two options, the state’s statute of limitation­s is a key factor.

In Ohio, survivors of child sex abuse have until age 30 to file a suit against the perpetrato­r or affiliated institutio­n. Per the settlement rules, Ohio’s current law would limit survivors to 30% to 45% of what they’re eligible for under the matrix. They would not

What happens next with bill

The new version of the bill includes two new requiremen­ts: The law would sunset after five years, and it would apply only to organizati­ons with a congressio­nal charter, a type of federal recognitio­n the Boy Scouts earned in 1916.

“It narrows the scope of the bill, and it doesn’t set a precedent in permanent law,” Seitz said. “It mimics instead those states that have reopened their statutes of limitation for a period of time.”

Ohio lawmakers currently have until September to enact changes, but multiple appeals to the settlement have created some uncertaint­y. Seitz said those cases could change the timeline for the bill’s passage or render it moot.

Haley Bemiller is a reporter for the USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau, which serves the Columbus Dispatch, Cincinnati Enquirer, Akron Beacon Journal and 18 other affiliated news organizati­ons across Ohio.

 ?? BROOKE LAVALLEY/THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Mujaddid Muhammad is among hundreds of former Boy Scouts in Ohio who are seeking financial compensati­on through the Boy Scouts’ bankruptcy settlement.
BROOKE LAVALLEY/THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH Mujaddid Muhammad is among hundreds of former Boy Scouts in Ohio who are seeking financial compensati­on through the Boy Scouts’ bankruptcy settlement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States