Diocese of Fall River, Mass.
F riday , November 13, 2015
Diocese to begin assessing parishes in January By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff kensouza@anchornews.org FALL RIVER — For the first time in its history, the Fall River Diocese will begin assessing each of its 82 parishes to help support the financial operations of the diocese. In the United States, parish assessments are already in place in more than 90 percent of dioceses. Beginning in January 2016, each of the parishes will be assessed between eight and 14 percent of their regular income, including weekly and annual collections. The assessment will vary from parish to parish, based upon its reported annual income. Specially designated drives and charitable collections — including the diocese’s annual Catholic Charities Appeal — will not be subject to the assessment, however. The annual springtime campaign provides funding for the critical charitable services and programs sponsored by the diocese to help those in need throughout Southeastern Massachusetts, Cape Cod and the Islands. The assessment, estimated at $3.8 million, will be used to cover part of the growing deficits in the diocese’s annual budget, according to director of communications John E. Kearns Jr. Collected revenue will help fund the operations of the central administration of the diocese, which, in turn, supports all diocesan parishes and institutions. Among these services are those handling matters of real estate, clergy personnel, employee benefits and insurance, canonical processes, archives, some facilities and construction consultation, and legal assistance. Pastors and parochial administrators were notified of the assessments last month and formal
announcements were made to parishioners last weekend. The financial challenges in the diocese have been steadily growing since the 1990s and upon consultation with other diocesan officials, the bishop determined the time had come to address it, Kearns said. “After careful review of the situation and after prayer, reflection and consultation with the diocesan Finance Council and the Presbyteral Council, Bishop Edgar M. da Cunha, S.D.V., had concluded that the implementation of a parish assessment policy in the Fall River Diocese was necessary,” Kearns said in a prepared statement issued by the diocese last week. The Church’s Code of Canon Law provides the diocesan bishop with the right to impose an assessment or tax on parishes for the support of the needs of the local Church. It’s a practice that dates back centuries and is in wide use in the Church around the world. To date, the Fall River Diocese has been very fortunate — it has been among the very few dioceses to have not had to rely on such income. Unfortunately, the situation today is far different. Over the past 20 years, a number of financial challenges have emerged that have impacted the financial stability of the diocese. Since the 1990s, declining church attendance, rising costs and increased spending to support the diocese have all negatively impacted its financial resources. In addition, over the years an increasing number of entities in the diocese have significantly fallen behind in paying for their property and health insurance, requiring the diocese to advance these costs on their behalf. Exacerbating this financial situation has been many years of low, and at times,
non-existent interest rates. What has remained in investments and savings has earned little in return. Together, these challenges have created a “perfect financial storm of sorts,” according to Kearns, which have depleted reserves and eroded the diocesan financial foundation to the point where the need for change was imminent. Dr. Charles Zech, faculty director of the Center for Church Management at Villanova University School of Business, said he was surprised to hear that the Fall River Diocese didn’t already have a parish assessment in place. Turn to page 18
Supreme Tribunal affirms decree regarding St. John the Baptist Church
The Diocese of Fall River received notification that the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura has confirmed the decree of the Apostolic Signatura affirming the bishop’s decision to relegate Saint John the Baptist Church in New Bedford to profane but not sordid use. This decree rejects the appeal that a small number of former parishioners had made to the Supreme Tribunal, and the cover letter from the Most Rev. Frans Daneels, O. Praem, the Secretary of the Apostolic Signatura, states explicitly that this decision “is not subject to any further challenge.” The matter is finally closed.
Anchor works to say afloat amid stormy seas By Dave Jolivet Editor davejolivet@anchornews.org FALL RIVER — On Apr. 11, 1957, Fall River Bishop James L. Connolly wrote a letter to the faithful of the Diocese of Fall River on page one of the very first edition of The Anchor. In his welcoming statement he wrote, “Here’s a word of cordial welcome to our new diocesan paper. Coming to us each week with pictures, news and views it is bound to bring us closer together and improve our Spiritual and social customs. I am sure The Anchor will find an honored place, like the crucifix, in every home throughout the diocese. “Permit me, here and now, to thank the staff, the supporters and all who subscribe to our new, important venture. May God bless my personal representative, this diocesan paper, as it comes to make a port of call each week in your home. May it help hearten us all in our journey through life. Up Anchor, and away!” In its more than one-half century of service to the faithful of the Diocese of Fall River, The Anchor has graced mail receptacles of countless diocesan faithful each week, save one — the week of the Blizzard of ’78, the February 10 edition. The story on this page about the implementation of a new diocesan assessment as of Jan. 1, 2016, explains that move is necessary to “fund the operations of the diocese’s
central administration which supports all diocesan parishes and institutions.” In order to help diocesan parishes to be able to pay the assessment, The Anchor will no longer be partially funded by parishes as of the first of the year. This is a significant change for The Anchor since more than 60 percent of its revenue came from parish assistance. As a result, The Anchor is diligently working on developing means to sustain itself thus enabling it to continue bringing local and international Church news to the faithful of the Diocese of Fall River. It is no secret that a draining economy is affecting many areas, secular and non-secular alike. The Anchor, like many diocesan parishes, schools, and ministries, is feeling the effects of this economy, and is appealing to those who find value in the publication’s fine columnists, reporters, photographers, and news sources, to help us keep the paper arriving in mailboxes from the Attleboros, Taunton, Fall River, New Bedford, to Cape Cod and the Islands, and locales in between. The Anchor staff, ranging in longevity from 20 to seven years, is also at risk of falling prey to the fragile economy. In one cost-saving measure, as of the Jan. 8, 2016 edition, The Anchor will become a bi-weekly publication, arriving in subscribers’ homes every other week. In addition, the paper has had to release two of its fine correspondents. Turn to page 18