Judge sees progress in Twin Cities archdiocese’s child protection
Published 8:58 am Wednesday, December 21, 2016
By Tory Cooney
Pioneer Press
The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis remains on track with its agreement to protect children from sex abuse, a Ramsey County District judge said Tuesday morning.
Archdiocese and Ramsey County officials reached a settlement in December 2015 calling for an “aggressive” timeline to implement “substantial” cultural changes after allegations of sex abuse by a priest, Ramsey County Chief Judge Teresa Warner said. The Catholic archdiocese was accused of turning a blind eye toward repeated misconduct in the case.
“There’s no doubt the reason for this settlement is to protect our children,” Warner said. “For the next several years, it’s going to be our North Star, the guiding principle. It’s a good agreement and it’s there for the right reasons.”
Requirements include a new child-protection plan and protocols such as mandatory reporting of abuse. All adult volunteers and clergy must also undergo background checks, child-protection training and sign codes of conduct.
The 187 parishes, 92 schools and two seminaries that belong to the archdiocese are required to comply with the settlement as well, said Janell Rasmussen, the archdiocese’s deputy director of ministerial standards and safe environment. Each has its own coordinator who undergoes additional safe environment training to serve as an “on-site expert” and monitor the enforcement of child-protection policies.
To date, nearly 90,000 adults have undergone background checks and training and are required to repeat the process every three years. In 2016, about 7,500 adults underwent training, Rasmussen said.
“So we have 90,000 sets of eyes and ears out there watching to make sure kids are safe,” director of ministerial standards and safe environment Timothy O’Malley said.
Archbishop also takes training
Archbishop Bernard Hebda, who attended the hearing along with Rasmussen and O’Malley, completed his own child-protection training in accordance with the new policies — including a recent online training update that addressed how to recognize the signs of abuse, he said.
“I was really happy to see this is what our people throughout the archdiocese are receiving,” Hebda said. “It really just raises the bar in terms of our attentiveness to the issues that are there. It’s certainly a huge undertaking.”
The Ramsey County attorney’s office and Warner found the archdiocese to be in “significant compliance” with the settlement. The county attorney’s office has been monitoring how the archdiocese followed through on its commitments.
The settlement neither required the attorney’s office to do the extra legwork to ensure the archdiocese’s compliance nor required the archdiocese cooperate to the additional oversight measures — but both willingly went beyond the base requirements, Warner said.
Warner also said that she is pleased with the archdiocese’s acknowledgement that while it is in compliance, its work is not yet complete.
Working toward change
In the future, the archdiocese intends to hold restorative justice sessions with the victims of abuse, which is intended to bring healing. However, leaders acknowledge that they can’t rush that process and must continue working toward systemic change and gain the trust of victims.
Even some of the survivors who have worked with archdiocesan leaders on the development of policies remain “cautious but hopeful” as they see those changes beginning to take effect, O’Malley said.