10/06/2005
Bend,Oregon — "...The next topic is one that I bring up only with
great reluctance for I do not want to give any appearance whatsoever of
being soft on my desire to assure the complete safety and protection of
children. The Charter for the Protection of Children has been
interpreted to include mandatory “safe-environment training” for all
children of or connected with the Church. In the diocese, we have
indicated that such training must be made available to all children
under our supervision in our Catholic schools but have not taken on the
nearly impossible task of assuming responsibility for every child in the
diocese.
"As a result of this discrepancy between a new interpretation of the
charter and our diocesan policy, the annual charter audit will
undoubtedly find the Diocese of Baker, and me as bishop, “Not in
Compliance” and will issue a “Required Action,” which I am prepared, at
this point, to ignore. I say this not because I resist efforts to
protect children, but rather precisely the opposite. There are a series
of questions that I believe need to be answered before I could mandate
such a diocesan-wide program of “safe-environment training.”
"A few such questions follow: Are such programs effective? Do such
programs impose an unduly burdensome responsibility on very young
children to protect themselves rather than insisting that parents take
such training and take on the primary responsibility for protecting
their children? Where do these programs come from? Is it true that
Planned Parenthood has a hand or at least huge influence on many of
them? Is it true that other groups, actively promoting early sexual
activity for children, promote these programs in association with their
own perverse agendas? Do such programs involve, even tangentially, the
sexualization of children, which is precisely a part of the societal
evil we are striving to combat? Does such a program invade the
Church-guaranteed-right of parents over the education of their children
in sexual matters? Do I have the right to mandate such programs and
demand that parents sign a document proving that they choose to exercise
their right not to have their child involved? Do such programs introduce
children to sex-related issues at age-inappropriate times? Would such
programs generate a fruitful spiritual harvest? Would unsatisfactory
answers to any of the questions above give sufficient reason to resist
such programs?
"There are many concerned parents who have indicated to me that the
answers to all of these questions are unsatisfactory. If this is true,
do these multiple problematic answers provide sufficient reason to
resist the charter interpretation? At very least, even the possible
unsatisfactory answers to any of the questions above leaves me unwilling
and possibly even unable to expose the children of the diocese to harm
under the guise of trying to protect them from harm. I pray that, in
this, I am neither wrong-headed nor wrong.
"For holding to this conviction I and the diocese may be declared
negligent, weighed and found wanting."
Catholic Sentinel