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Movement to Restore Trust asks Bishop Malone to resign

Michael Mroziak, WBFO

The organizing committee of the Movement to Restore Trust, a panel of lay Catholics formed last year to address concerns about the Diocese of Buffalo's child sex abuse scandal, has asked Bishop Richard Malone to resign, it said in a written statement issued Thursday afternoon.

The committee issued the following written statement: "Members of the Organizing Committee of The Movement to Restore Trust (MRT) contacted Bishop Richard J. Malone today (Sept. 5, 2019), asking that he resign immediately.

"This was a very difficult decision that was arrived at following lengthy prayer, reflection and discussion.

"MRT is the independent organization of concerned, committed Catholics of the diocese, formed in 2018 to assert the laity’s rightful role in the Church and to help lead a movement to restore trust and confidence in the Church in the wake of public disclosures about the diocese’s handling of clergy sex abuse cases.  In the past nine months, MRT has hosted symposia and coordinated the production of a 68-page report detailing its blueprint for reform.

"We make this request of Bishop Malone with a degree of humility and sadness.  We had embarked upon our work with the hope that we could be a catalyst for reform and the restoration of trust of the faithful in the diocese.  While we have made some progress toward that goal by working with Bishop Malone and the Joint Implementation Team, recent events and disclosures have led us to conclude that the diocese is at a critical point and that further progress is not possible.  We believe that continuing to press forward under these circumstances jeopardizes MRT’s comprehensive reform agenda and compromises our ability to be agents for positive change.

"Our decision to ask Bishop Malone to resign was not made lightly and as we have pointed out in the past, the sex abuse scandal in the diocese dates back several decades, long before Bishop Malone arrived here.  But it is also true that he has not handled current cases properly and as a result, there is a substantial risk of harm to the diocese and the good works that the Church does in this region.

"MRT believes that the Vatican should appoint a temporary diocesan administrator, a priest with no ties to the Diocese of Buffalo, while it considers the appointment of a permanent Bishop of Buffalo.  We will be making our views known to Cardinal Timothy Dolan, archbishop of New York and metropolitan for the Ecclesiastical Province of New York, which includes all eight Catholic dioceses in the state, and to the Apostolic Nuncio to the United States, Archbishop Christophe Pierre.

"Our goal remains justice and healing for the victims of sex abuse and the restoration of trust in Christ’s Church.  In order for our Church to move forward, and for the good of the diocese, the time has come for new leadership - leadership committed to openness, transparency, and co-responsibility with the laity.

"We look forward to developing a rapport with the next spiritual leader of the Buffalo Diocese in order to get the process of reform back on track as soon as possible.  The MRT report contains very rich material that provides a roadmap for the next leader of this diocese.

"At this time, we are formally pulling back from all of our commitments with the diocese until the bishop resigns. For that reason, MRT will not be participating in the next diocesan Listening Session scheduled for Wednesday, Sept. 11."

WBFO forwarded a message to the Diocese seeking comment from Bishop Malone. A reply was received Thursday evening from a spokeswoman who explained that "Due to his full schedule, which included Mass and a gathering with members of the Bishop’s Council of the Laity, we are unable to issue a statement this evening, but will soon."

Bishop Malone, at a Wednesday news conference, restated his position that he does not intend to resign, explaining it's his obligation to see the Diocese through the scandals.

"Once again, if I thought that if the majority of Catholic people in particular we're calling for my resignation, that would be a different story," Malone said during that news conference. "But I don't feel that. I go out to parishes and schools all the time for visits. I am always well-received where I go. Who knows what people's thoughts are sitting in the pews that they don't articulate? But I do feel enough support, honestly, to continue on."

The listening session to which the MRT was referring in its statement was subsequently canceled, as noted by the Diocese.

Niagara University issued the following statement explaining the cancelation of the event: "As a leading Catholic university in Western New York, we fully supported the Movement to Restore Trust, and commend the work they have completed. However, with the news of the recent weeks, we notified the diocese this morning that hosting this discussion on our campus would not be productive or appropriate.

"Now is the time for all leaders of the Catholic Church to focus less on the institution of the church, and more on the people it serves, particularly the most vulnerable among us. It is a time of accountability and action. We must ensure that we create a healthy and safe environment for the people in our community, and to engage in advocacy and to give a voice to survivors of any claim of sexual misconduct in the church or in our society."

Michael Mroziak is an experienced, award-winning reporter whose career includes work in broadcast and print media. When he joined the WBFO news staff in April 2015, it was a return to both the radio station and to Horizons Plaza.
Mike Desmond is one of Western New York’s most experienced reporters, having spent nearly a half-century covering the region for newspapers, television stations and public radio. He has been with WBFO and its predecessor, WNED-AM, since 1988. As a reporter for WBFO, he has covered literally thousands of stories involving education, science, business, the environment and many other issues. Mike has been a long-time theater reviewer for a variety of publications and was formerly a part-time reporter for The New York Times.
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