While Los Angeles Archbishop Jose Gomez said he and his fellow
bishops are "committed to moving forward" from the fallout of the
late-January release of thousands of pages detailing clergy sex abuse,
revelations from a December 2012 finance report have kept the focus on
how the archdiocese plans to fund the largest abuse settlement in U.S.
history.
"We need to keep praying for those who are hurting. We need to ask
again for forgiveness for the sins of the past and for our own failings.
And we need to match our prayers for grace with concrete actions of
healing and renewal," Gomez wrote in a Feb. 8 column for his
archdiocesan paper, The Tidings.
But how the Los Angeles church advances past its abuse scandal remains
tied to how it first deals with its 700-million-pound elephant -- $722
million, to be exact, in global settlements agreed upon in 2005 and 2007
with 550-plus victims in clergy abuse cases.
In its 2012 audited finance report of the fiscal year ended June 30,
the archdiocese details sources covering settlement sums. Of the total
$722 million, nearly $200 million will come from archdiocesan insurers;
$162 million from other defendants and their insurers; and $362 million
from archdiocesan administrative office resources and bank financings.
For the 2007 settlement alone, Tod Tamberg, director of media
relations, confirmed insurance companies contributed $236 million,
religious orders and their defendants paid $132 million, with the
archdiocese funding the remaining balance through $117 million of
archdiocesan assets, investment resources and property liquidations, and
a $175 million bank loan, which has been refinanced.
The report, conducted by an independent auditing firm, also reveals the
archdiocese has considered a capital campaign as one means to repay the
$175 million loan, nearly $147 million of which was still outstanding
as of June 30.
In the 2012 fiscal year, the archdiocese hired the Catholic consulting
firm Guidance in Giving Inc. to conduct a planning study for a $200
million campaign that would address a variety of needs -- priest
retirement, seminarian education, Catholic schools, Catholic Charities
and parish needs, according to the consultant firm's website -- but did
not directly mention abuse settlements. The fundraiser, if held, would
be the first such effort for the archdiocese in more than 60 years.
Other funding sources have already come to light.
A day after Gomez's column published, the Los Angeles Times
reported that the archdiocese had reallocated $115 million, or 88
percent, of a cemetery maintenance fund toward relieving the $660
million 2007 global settlement.
According to the 2012 report, the archdiocese in October 2007
appropriated $144,986,000 from the perpetual care fund "for purposes of
funding the global settlement reached in July 2007 related to the
lawsuits for claims of sexual misconduct by certain individuals." The
report stated the archdiocese intended to replenish those funds through
future cemetery sales of graves, crypts and niches, though not until
"all liabilities associated with the [2007 global settlement] lawsuits …
are paid off."
The Times stated that the archdiocese's repurposing of
cemetery funds, while legal, came without first informing relatives of
the deceased of its decision. Nor did it list the cemetery fund as a
source for the global settlement in numerous public statements regarding
its financing.
The archdiocese classified the Times story as an attempt "to
create a false impression" that it had hindered cemetery operations by
redirecting the funds toward the global settlement.
"Nothing could be further from the truth. Our 12 Catholic Cemeteries
remain in financially sound condition," read a letter sent to parishes
Feb. 12.
Since 2007, the archdiocese said it has made $8.7 million in capital
improvements to the cemeteries. It defended the funds' reallocation as a
way to protect other assets -- parishes, schools and "essential
ministries" -- and said it does not foresee future negative impacts to
the cemeteries' maintenance.
Still, it remains unclear how much the archdiocese spent in defending
itself against abuse claims before reaching the global settlements. Only
the 2012 report is available from the diocese currently, and requests
to review past financial reports had not been granted at press time.
Two weeks after writing his own defense following his barring from
public and administrative duties in the archdiocese for his role in the
sex abuse scandal, Cardinal Roger Mahony returned to his personal blog
Feb. 14, saying God's grace had helped him understand his call "to be
humiliated, disgraced and rebuffed by many."
"In recent days, I have been confronted in various places by very
unhappy people. I could understand the depth of their anger and outrage
-- at me, at the Church, at about injustices that swirl around us," he
wrote Feb. 14. "Thanks to God's special grace, I simply stood there,
asking God to bless and forgive them."
The sanctions against Mahony, who retains his vote in the upcoming
papal conclave, came the same day as the Jan. 31 court-ordered release
of 12,000 abuse-related documents, and at the hand of Gomez, who also
relieved Auxiliary Bishop Thomas Curry from his post as regional bishop
of Santa Barbara. In his Feb. 8 column, Gomez attempted to further
address his relationship with Mahony, with whom he had entered into a
rare public spat between bishops.
"I have been talking and reflecting with Cardinal Mahony and Bishop
Curry, along with our other Auxiliary Bishops about the events of last
week. We are committed to moving forward in our ministries with hope and
confidence in God's grace," Gomez wrote.
Gomez appeared to use his column not only as an attempt to repair his
public quarrel with Mahony, but as a way to unite his archdiocese in
moving forward, urging all Los Angeles Catholics to use the Lenten
season to seek "the grace of a new conversion" and "to draw closer as
one family of God."
"The way forward for our Church is for each one of us to rediscover this universal call to holiness," he said.