Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

New audit finds near-total compliance with policies on sex abuse

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • New audit finds near-total compliance with policies on sex abuse

    New audit finds near-total compliance with policies on sex abuse
    By Agostino Bono, Catholic News Service

    Catholic News Service
    Feb 18 2005

    WASHINGTON (CNS) -- An independent audit released Feb. 18 in
    Washington reported that 96 percent of the 195 U.S. dioceses and
    Eastern-rite eparchies were implementing every applicable article of
    the U.S. bishops' policies to prevent clergy sex abuse of minors as
    of Dec. 31.

    Despite the almost-total compliance, "continued external oversight and
    evaluation (are) essential" since compliance "may improve or diminish
    over time," said the audit report for 2004 prepared by the bishops'
    Office of Child and Youth Protection.

    An audit "does not ensure that all offenders or potential offenders
    have been appropriately removed from ministry," it added.

    The 50-page report said that in 2004 there were 1,092 new allegations
    of child sex abuse made against 756 diocesan and religious priests
    and deacons, with most of the alleged abuse taking place in 1965-74.
    It said 73 percent of the accused, prior to the allegation, had been
    removed from ministry or were dead or missing. No breakdown of priests
    and deacons was given.

    Half of the new allegations were against clergy who had been previously
    accused. Males accounted for 78 percent of the 1,083 accusers.

    During 2004, the U.S. church spent $158 million for sex abuse
    related activities, with more than $106 million paid in settlements
    to victims, the report said. The figures include money spent by
    religious orders. When added to other published figures, the U.S.
    church has now spent about $1 billion in child sex abuse related
    costs since the beginning of 1950.

    The statistics are contained in the 2004 annual report on the
    implementation of the "Charter for the Protection of Children and
    Young People"; the report was released at a press conference at
    the National Press Club. The child protection office prepared the
    report for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and the National
    Review Board, appointed by the bishops to monitor compliance with
    the charter. The all-lay review board approved the report before it
    was sent to the USCCB.

    The charter was approved by the bishops in 2002 and calls for an
    annual compliance report.

    "There is undoubtedly progress still to be made," said Bishop William
    S. Skylstad of Spokane, Wash., USCCB president, in a cover letter to
    the report.

    "Much of what dioceses face today is the result of past abusive
    behavior -- often long past -- and procedures are in place to deal
    with and put a stop to new instances of abuse that may be reported,"
    he said.

    The data on new allegations and spending came from a separately
    commissioned study done by the Center for Applied Research in the
    Apostolate, known as CARA and based at Georgetown University in
    Washington, and incorporated into the final report by the bishops'
    child protection office.

    The report also includes recommendations for improving policies.
    These include developing a mediation system for the resolution of
    allegations and an annual report by each diocese and eparchy with
    information about new allegations and costs.

    This was the second year in a row that on-site audits were done in
    dioceses, with much of the data based on self-reporting by church
    officials. While the charter requires the child protection office to
    issue annual compliance reports, it does not stipulate how to gather
    the data for the report.

    Other figures from the 2004 report include:

    -- 3,277 victims and some of their relatives received outreach services
    from dioceses.

    -- 43 priests were laicized.

    -- 66 priests and two deacons were directed to lead a life of prayer
    and penance.

    -- 56 allegations received before 2004 were judged false in 2004.

    -- 57 of the allegations made in 2004 were judged false.

    The audit also reported major inroads in conducting background
    checks of clergy, lay employees and lay volunteers coming into
    regular contact with children. Important strides were also made in
    implementing "safe environment" education programs to prevent abuse.
    The background checks and education programs are considered crucial
    to long-term efforts to prevent child sex abuse.

    Some of the safe environment findings include:

    -- Almost 84 percent of the 34,514 diocesan priests received safe
    environment education.

    -- More than 82 percent of the church's 13,663 deacons took safe
    environment courses.

    -- More than 1.4 million adults and more than 3.1 million children,
    over half the minors in Catholic schools and religious education
    classes, have taken safe environment courses.

    -- 97 percent of the 203,393 Catholic educators have taken safe
    environment courses.


    -- 82.5 percent of the 203,343 other church employees required to
    take safe environment courses have had the training.

    -- 73 percent of 1 million church volunteers received safe environment
    training.

    Background checks have been conducted on 92 percent of the 34,874
    diocesan priests needing them. All 13,559 deacons subject to background
    checks have been screened.

    More than 97 percent of the 185,924 Catholic school educators have
    had background checks. More than 85 percent of the 207,817 other
    church lay employees have been screened. And almost 79 percent of
    the 978,172 church volunteers have had background checks.

    The report said that background screenings and evaluations also take
    place for priesthood candidates in the 112 seminaries run by the
    dioceses and eparchies audited.

    The report is based on audits of 194 of the 195 U.S. dioceses and
    eparchies conducted by the Gavin Group Inc. of Boston and on data
    collected by CARA from dioceses, eparchies and religious orders.

    Only the Diocese of Lincoln, Neb., did not participate in the
    compliance audits. No reason was given in the report. It noted that
    participation in an on-site audit was voluntary. The Lincoln Diocese
    was judged noncompliant with article 8 of the charter, which calls
    for participation in an audit process.

    Of the 194 dioceses and eparchies audited, only seven were not
    compliant with one or more of the charter's 17 articles on Dec. 31.

    This is a significant advance from the 2003 report, when 19 of the
    191 dioceses and eparchies audited were not compliant with aspects
    of the charter.

    Compliance was judged in two steps. First was the on-site audit,
    which judged the situation since the 2003 audit. Dioceses not in
    compliance with aspects of the charter were given "required actions"
    to remedy the situation and had until the end of the year to take
    the actions. Initially, 50 dioceses received "required actions"
    with 43 taking the necessary actions by the end of 2004.

    The report warned, however, that compliance audits do not measure
    the quality or effectiveness of the programs.

    Regarding allegations and spending, CARA received responses from
    181 dioceses and eparchies, representing 93 percent of the total,
    and from 158 religious communities representing 71 percent of the
    total U.S. male religious population.

    Spending figures showed that 32 percent of the $140 million spent
    by dioceses and eparchies was covered by insurance and 12 percent of
    the $18 million spent by religious orders was covered by insurance.

    The report said that the new allegations generally parallel the
    patterns of gender and age reported in the massive "nature and scope"
    study of clergy child sex abuse from 1950 to 2002 released last year
    by the National Review Board.

    The "nature and scope" study conducted by the John Jay College of
    Criminal Justice in New York reported that 81 percent of the accusers
    were males while the 2004 audit showed that 78 percent were males.
    The John Jay study reported that 59 percent of the accusers were
    between 10 and 14 years old when the abuse began while the 2004
    figures reported that 55 percent were in the same age group.

    Recommendations in the 2004 report for improving sex abuse prevention
    programs include:

    -- Informing people if a lawyer is being used by the diocese or
    eparchy to receive allegations and providing an alternative person
    for people uncomfortable talking to a lawyer.

    -- Special outreach to clergy and religious who have been victims of
    sexual abuse.

    -- Developing practices for monitoring priests and deacons at risk
    as offenders.

    The report notes that the church needs to continually develop new
    prevention initiatives because full implementation of current policies
    "will not ensure that no child will ever be abused again in a church
    environment."

    It asks Catholics to be "unwavering in our commitment to ensuring
    the accountability of all Catholic bishops of the United States to
    their people in the future and to the safety of all our children."

    The seven dioceses and eparchies not in compliance on Dec. 31 all
    failed to implement safe environment programs. Some also were cited
    for other failures. The seven are: Armenian Catholic Exarchate of the
    U.S.A. and Canada, headquartered in New York; Diocese of Burlington,
    Vt.; Chaldean Eparchy of St. Peter the Apostle, headquartered in
    El Cajon, Calif.; Diocese of Fresno, Calif.; Melkite Eparchy of
    Newton, Mass.; Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston, W. Va.; and Diocese
    of Youngstown, Ohio.
Working...
X