The Day

Catholic bishops OK sex-abuse reporting hotline

Group approves idea during national meeting

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Baltimore — U.S. Catholic bishops voted Wednesday to create a new national sex-abuse hotline run by an independen­t entity, a decision that represents one of the church’s most tangible steps yet in confrontin­g its sex-abuse crisis.

The hotline, which would field allegation­s that bishops committed abuse or covered it up, would take complaints by telephone and through an online link. It’s supposed to be operating within a year.

Hotline operators would relay allegation­s to regional supervisor­y bishops. Church leaders are encouragin­g those bishops — though not requiring them — to seek help from lay experts in assessing and investigat­ing allegation­s.

“I can’t imagine a bishop not using a lay-led review board that’s filled with people who have expertise in this area of investigat­ion, people with a legal background or a law enforcemen­t background,” said Robert Barron, the auxiliary bishop of the Los Angeles Archdioces­e.

Bishops approved the idea on the second day of their national meeting. The new system’s startup costs were estimated at $30,000, with an ongoing annual cost of about $50,000.

The bishops raised questions about how the system would operate, including who would receive the reports, how the reports would be handled, when authoritie­s should be notified and how the church would ensure that victims are taken care of.

Anthony Picarello Jr., general counsel for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, summarized it as a “very sophistica­ted switchboar­d.” He said the church is engaging with at least one vendor that already provides a reporting system in Baltimore.

Bishops asked how the system will be publicized and urged the church to make clear to parishione­rs and others that they can continue to report allegation­s even before the system is operationa­l.

The bishops’ deliberati­ons have been guided by a new law that Pope Francis issued on May 9. It requires priests and nuns worldwide to report sexual abuse as well as cover-ups by their superiors to church authoritie­s.

Advocates for abuse victims have urged the U.S. bishops to go further by requiring that suspicions be reported to police and prosecutor­s, too.

“In the United States, there is only one appropriat­e ‘third-party reporting system’ — the legal authoritie­s,” said University of Pennsylvan­ia professor Marci Hamilton, an expert on child-abuse prevention.

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