Troubling financial data being released next week about the Roman
Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia does not reflect recent
improvements in the church's monetary health, according to the
archbishop.
The results of the 2012 audit "are serious — and that's
an understatement," Archbishop Charles Chaput said Friday.
But, he
noted, "we've taken big steps toward raising new resources and
eventually eliminating our annual budget deficit."
Chaput's comments came in his weekly column and
apparently aim to soften the blow of figures that will be published
online Wednesday. The data will reflect the fiscal year that ran from
July 2011 — two months before Chaput came to Philadelphia — through June
2012.
Most of the church's financial problems stem from bad
spending habits, not fraud or the priest sex-abuse scandal, the
archbishop said. The church had a $6 million deficit as of August 2012;
an updated figure was not immediately available.
Previous officials had "a crippling habit of trying to
hang on to the past and keep unsustainable ministries, schools and
parishes afloat," Chaput said, "despite great changes in our demographic
and financial realities."
"(I)t flows out of well-intentioned but poor management
decisions made over a period of nearly two decades at every level of
archdiocesan and parish leadership," he said.
However, the priest scandal and fraud did take their
tolls. By August 2012, the archdiocese had spent $10 million on legal
fees related to clergy-abuse cases over the previous two fiscal years.
That figure did not include many bills from the landmark criminal trial
of Monsignor William Lynn, who was convicted that summer of felony child
endangerment.
In July 2011, the archdiocese fired its chief financial
officer. She was later convicted of embezzling $900,000, though the
losses were covered by insurance.
Chaput said the church has gradually started to regain
its monetary footing with a new chief financial officer, who started in
April 2012, and with what he called a "reinvigorated" finance council.
The bottom line has also been boosted by the sales of a
home known as the cardinal's residence, which Saint Joseph's University
bought last year for $10 million, and a vacation house for priests in
Ventnor, New Jersey Chaput did not mention how much the beach property
sold for, though it had been assessed at about $6.3 million.
Next month, eight more church properties will be put on
the auction block. The parcels up for sale on July 24 include two
former schools and three former convents in Philadelphia, plus three
large lots in Bucks and Montgomery counties.
Chaput said results for the current fiscal year, which
ends Sunday, will be more upbeat. He did not say when those figures
would be released.
The archdiocese serves about 1.5 million Catholics in Philadelphia and four surrounding counties.