i think you have to work pretty hard to read this bill as anti-Catholic. all this says is that at the bishop’s discretion that a group of parishoners can be formed as a corporation with certain fiscal responsibilities that would then belong to them as a corporation. on the one hand, this insulates the diocese against fiscally insolvent parishes since the debts of the parish would belong to it alone. more importantly, and this is probably the point of the bill, it allows the parishoners to see and take responsibility for the way in which parish funds are distributed. i suspect this is in direct response to the case of the CT priest who embezzled massive amounts of parish funds in order to support a rather lavish lifestyle for himself and his partner. the priest is now unable to shield “corporation” financial records from the members of the corporation.
this does not hand over ownership of parish property to the corporation or give them the power to appoint the priest, etc., etc. the whole bill is about the budget.
quite frankly, if i were the parishes, i would be very leery of this since i think it makes it even easier for the diocese to let a financially insolvent parish fold since all the debts belong to the corporation.
if i were the bishop, the only thing i might want to see present is a way of dissolving the corporation?
- so they are just expanding the current law (which dates all the way back to the 50s, if i read it correctly) to make clear that the financial records are open and that the priest must report how funds are being spent (secs. f and g). this seems to me to be the meat of this bill. and given what happened in CT you can understand why.
salaam.*
I am afraid you are greatly downplaying the harm this bill would do. I am not a lawyer but the bill makes a few critical changes.
- It states that the pastor reports to the board.
- It gives the board full rein over virtually everything except purely religious matters. This takes away the authority, for example, of a bishop to approve renovation plans to ensure conformity with liturgical guidelines.
- It gives the board full rein over outreach programs and community programs. At least in my diocese, anything the parish does must be in conformity with diocisan guidelines. We couldn’t, for example, have Dignity in our parish, since they are not approved by this diocese. Under this bill, the board could invite Dignity in and the Bishop would not be able to do much about it.
I am sure there are more but that’s what I see at first glance.
Someone in the other thread stated that this isn’t something a Bishop MUST do for each parish but something that CAN be done. However, the reciprocity means that all parishes organized under the older version of the law will now have this new form of government.