Parishioners at Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church in Minneapolis are finding a letter in their church bulletins this weekend that explains the parish's decision to contribute to an unexpected fund — the archdiocese's long-in-the-making financial settlement with clergy sex abuse victims.
On Thursday, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis announced that it had reached a $210 million settlement for about 450 victims — the largest of its kind nationwide. Of that, roughly $13 million is to be paid by parishes.
Up to half of the archdiocese's 187 churches are donating or considering doing so. They include parishes where children were abused as well as those where there were no incidents, such as Our Lady of Lourdes.
"It's the right thing to do," said the Rev. Daniel Griffith, the parish's priest. "We're all part of the archdiocese, and we all need to be part of the solution."
Many Twin Cities Catholics walked into church this weekend grateful that the archdiocese had finally reached an agreement with abuse victims but uncertain about what it means for their own parishes.
The settlement brought somber closure to years of disputes that have transformed the archdiocese. In January 2015, it sought bankruptcy protection from an avalanche of abuse lawsuits that followed passage of a law opening a three-year window for suits stemming from older cases. The archdiocese eventually identified 91 abusers, and Archbishop John Nienstedt stepped down amid allegations of coverup and inaction.
The vast majority of the landmark settlement — about $170 million — will come from insurance carriers.
The parishes' direct contribution of about $13 million will include excess premiums in the parishes' general insurance fund, excess premiums from their medical benefit plan and other sources, said Tom Abood, chairman of the archdiocese's finance council.