Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests’ Letter to
National Review Board Chair Nicholas Cafardi
December 12, 2004
SNAP
Survivors Network of those Abused By Priests
P.O. Box 6416,
Chicago, Illinois 60680-6416
312-409-2720
Nicholas P. Cafardi, Chair
The National Review Board
3211 Fourth Ave. NE
Washington, DC 20017
Dear Mr. Cafardi:
Congratulations on your appointment to chair the National Review Board.
We are writing on behalf of the thousands of victims of clergy sexual
abuse in our organization with the hope that we will be able to develop
a close and productive relationship with you and the new board.
We are troubled by America’s Catholic bishops’ decision
last week to (in the words of a Philadelphia Inquirer reporter) “scale
back their method of sex-abuse compliance audits, replacing the independent
field investigators that have visited dioceses for the last two years
with a self-reporting system in which dioceses fill out questionnaires.”
This description, we feel, is an understatement.
We have written Cardinal George with our concerns and have yet to receive
a reply.
The bishop’s decision, we fear, is nearly a total reversal of
what bishops pledged in Dallas in June of 2002, of what took place in
2003 and 2004, and of the bare minimum steps of what Catholics and victims
deserve and have come to expect.
In a nutshell, outside audits have basically been replaced by self-reporting.
The decision essentially ends what already minimal oversight remained
on how individual bishops were implementing the much-touted Dallas Charter.
As you know, for the last two years, small teams of “auditors” have
visited every diocese in America. They have looked for evidence that
bishops are living up to the commitments they made to respond better
in sexual abuse cases (as spelled out in the Dallas Charter). In the
years ahead, thanks to this new decision, we suspected fewer than 10%
of all dioceses will receive such visits.
Anyway you “spin” it, that is a stark backtracking from
an important pledge. And it has taken place barely two years after the
promise was made. The end result: we’ll all just have to take bishops
at their word that they are living up to the Charter. No outside person
or body will be able to ascertain whether this is in fact true. We’re
basically back to square one, where we have no choice but to trust in
many of the same men whose repeated deceit and misconduct led to the
molestation of thousands of innocent Catholic youngsters.
We are also troubled by the deceptive way in which the matter was described
both before and after the meeting. Again, according to the Philadelphia
Inquirer, “The system, which will take effect next year, was presented
by a bishops’ committee as one of several ‘tweaks and fine-tunings’ in
the implementation of the child-protection charter adopted in 2002.
But this is not “tweaking.” It is, in our opinion, “gutting.”
You can stare in a mirror and call it an x-ray. But that doesn’t
make it so. You can use a written self-survey and call it an audit. But
that doesn’t make it so.
Background
Before, during and after the June 2002 US Conference of Catholic Bishops
meeting in Dallas, annual audits were repeatedly and emphatically promised
by dozens of bishops.
USCCB President Wilton Gregory bragged about the audits as an “unprecedented
means to hold ourselves accountable to our people. A National Office
for Child and Youth Protection will report annually on our successes” and
failures “in
implementing our commitment in all our dioceses.”
These audits, we were told, were a sign of how seriously bishops now
took sexual abuse and would ensure that they would not “backslide” on
their public commitments to do better in future. By the frequent use
of the word “annual” we were of course led to believe that
these audits would take place every year.
From the outset, we felt that the Charter was vague and weak. We’ve
doubted the effectiveness of an “audit” process based purely
on the voluntary cooperation of historically secretive bishops. We’ve
worried about the effectiveness of “auditors” who were basically
getting paid by the bishops they were supposed to be auditing. We were
upset that auditors spoke with only a handful of victims across the country.
Still, in our view, even a flawed “audit” is better than
no audit at all. Even a brief visit by an audit team is better than no
visit at all.
The Decision Itself
Last month, by a 189-35 vote, bishops adopted an audit process for 2005.
Sadly, it is a drastic departure from what has been promised.
Under this new plan, only those dioceses that were found “not
in compliance” will have on-site audits next year. According to
last week’s Pittsburgh Post Gazette, for example, “This
third audit would be streamlined, with dioceses that already have a clean
bill of health able to submit self-reports.”
In 2003, 90% of America’s dioceses passed these
audits.
Therefore, it is logical to assume that when the final results are in
for the 2004 audits, roughly the same pattern will hold true. So instead
of having 100% of the dioceses visited, roughly 10% of the dioceses will
be visited. Again, by any standard, this effectively guts the only process
that even approaches real oversight.
Without auditors physically visiting dioceses, a church official can
safely check ”yes” or “in compliance” to every
single box on a “self-report” form, knowing that no one will
check the accuracy of his responses.
Would we let building owners with terrible safety records conduct unsupervised,
written, self-surveys on their compliance with fire codes? Would we let
convicted drunk drivers get behind the wheel of school buses based on
conduct unsupervised, written, self-surveys? How can we in good conscience,
after just two short years, allow bishops to “grade” their
own compliance with their own weak, vague policies?
Given the horrific crimes that have taken place, often with the complicity
of bishops who are still in office, this reckless move simply invites
backsliding.
Adding insult to injury, some in the hierarchy describe this process
as “self-auditing.” In our view, the phrase “self-audit” is
an oxymoron. No doctor tells a cancer patient, after one decent check
up, ‘OK, from now on you can do annual self x-rays at home.’
We need to be strengthening oversight, not weakening, oversight. This
is premature and reckless backsliding.
The Process
Before the November meeting, a media advisory appeared on the USCCB
web site. It listed topics to be discussed at the Washington conference.
The advisory contained just one phrase about the audits: “The
agenda will include. . . permission requested by the Ad Hoc Committee
on Sexual Abuse to proceed with plans for a 2005 audit process. . .”
No mention was made of any modifications, large or small, to the audits.
At the meeting itself, material provided to bishops before the vote
was downright deceptive.
A memo from Archbishop Harry Flynn of Minneapolis-St. Paul said “The
Ad Hoc Committee on Sexual Abuse . . .unanimously recommends . . that
we approve a plan to conduct a national audit again for 2005.” Again,
no mention of any modifications. (The memo alludes to possible changes “eventually,” which
clearly implies that no real changes are planned now.)
After the meeting, no news release was forthcoming that explained what
the bishops had done.
Even now, no explanation appears on the USCCB web site for the action
that was taken last week.
And Catholic news agencies are presenting last week’s action inaccurately. “Catholic
bishops OK new round of audits,” claims a Catholic News Agency
headline. The story continues: “Church
leaders also authorized a third-round of annual audits of all U.S. dioceses
to determine whether they are complying with the bishops' policies on
preventing clergy sex abuse.”
Again, no mention is made of the fundamental change in the process.
The Catholic News Service is reporting that the bishops “Approved
streamlining the process for the 2005 diocesan audits related to sex
abuse.” Again, no mention of the drastic reversal that was
made.
Conclusion
In short, Mr. Cafardi, this entire mess seems like a “bait and
switch” maneuver. Victims, Catholics and journalists were led to
believe that a routine decision to continue the audits would be made
last month.
Instead, a very different decision was made. It was couched in carefully
crafted terms as just “more of the same.” But it is not.
It was a dramatic departure from what was promised in Dallas, what took
place the last two years, and what we were all led to believe would happen.
We echo the concerns of Portland (Maine) Bishop Richard Malone. On the
floor of the Bishops Conference meeting last month, he said “I
do have a bit of concern about the reception of self-reporting by our
people, at least by many of them at this point. I don't believe that
in every case we have enough distance from the crisis to be confident
that our credibility is adequately restored for self-reporting to be
accepted as trustworthy, at least generally.”
Please, Mr. Cafardi, use your new position as Chair of the National
Review Board to prod the bishops to reconsider this ill-fated and self-destructive
back-pedaling.
Letting this decision stand will further erode the trust of the laity
in the church hierarchy, will deepen the already severe betrayal many
victims feel, and will enable some bishops to withdraw from the relatively
belated and begrudging steps toward reform that they have been forced
to take.
It is risky and unwise. Please help see that it is at least re-examined
in a full, careful public discussion, if not fully reversed.
Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely,
Barbara Blaine, SNAP President 312/ 399 4747
David Clohessy, SNAP National Director 314/ 566 9790
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