Gleeson SJ in Philadelphia: inquiring student minds at work

Are we Catholics past the point of settling with accusers to avoid bad publicity and/or losing in court in sexual abuse and/or harassment matters? Rev. Thomas Gleeson SJ, outed three weeks ago in Philadelphia, could have had his day in court 11 years ago, but Jesuits fought the very idea and settled with the accuser, a former Jesuit scholastic. Case closed, end of story, they thought or hoped. Hardly.

As a campus chaplain at St. Joseph’s U., he had been placed in a position too public to be ignored by The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), and there he was again, in the very limelight he’d wanted to avoid by the settlement. And people in charge of his new place of employment tried once again to slide under publicity radar, and once again failed. (His crucial role in ousting a fellow Jesuit from the Wheeling Jesuit U. presidency — under suspicious circumstances partly of Gleeson’s own making — was a bad move by someone seeking anonymity.)

This time, Phila. Daily News coverage drove the St. Joe’s president, Rev. Timothy Lannon, S.J., to issue a university-wide memo “as students were finishing midterms and packing up for spring break,” as the student newspaper, The Hawk, noted this week. The memo was terse, even perfunctory: Gleeson had been accused but had been vetted by the Jesuits — “cleared for assignment,” a spokeswoman told the News.

Missing from the memo was “information concerning Gleeson’s history and subsequent settlement,” The Hawk’s editors wrote. Indeed, “the poorly worded statement created more questions and concerns than conclusions, and the university has yet to reveal how it plans to move forward with Gleeson’s case in the future,” they wrote in a carefully constructed editorial.

They added:

Given the enormous accusations currently levied against the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, it is surprising that Saint Joseph’s University officials did not think more carefully before responding in a seemingly distant and ineffective way.
The university could have opened the door for conversation about the circumstances and reasoning behind Gleeson’s hire, providing a great opportunity for community discussion on issues that are dominating Philadelphia’s headlines. Instead, St. Joe’s offered the same one-way declaration that has plagued the Catholic Church for decades.

Instead, the university offered “lackluster explanations” that did not inspire confidence. “When the university doesn’t defend their employees it makes it hard for students to get behind them with support,” the editorial noted.

That’s a fair description of how the Gleeson business has been handled, not only in Philadelphia but before that in West Virginia and before that in California. (It’s also how much or most priest abuse and/or harassment has been treated, for that matter.)

At what point, we must ask, does Jesuit loyalty to their own (as bishops’ to their priests) give way to the sort of “open communication” that has been respectfully requested by St. Joseph’s U. student editors?

Don’t publish that law, she said

Age pyramid for Dane County, Wisconsin, United...
A college-town county, fat with early 20s

This judge exceeded her authority, says Wisc. AG. Her decision is not appealing, and he will appeal.

The Legislature and the Governor, not a single Dane County Circuit Court Judge, are responsible for the enactment of laws, said [J.B.] Van Hollen. Decisions of the Supreme Court have made it clear that judges may not enjoin the Secretary of State from publishing an Act.

Will the orange-shirts besiege the appeals court?

Helping Japan? Go Salvation Army

Help Japan
Help Japan?

The Sallies have her vote.

Catherina Wojtowicz “couldn’t keep [her] mouth shut on this” (not that she’s known for keeping her mouth shut):

BEWARE of the RED CROSS! Donate to the Salvation Army!

Folks!

Many are talking about donating to the good people in Japan. I just want to add my two cents about all this boasting about the Red Cross.

They are a horrible, thieving organization! [!!]

I don’t care who suggested to donate to them, including Glenn Beck. The Red Cross is NOT a place where one wants their money to go, if they want it to be used for those in need.

I say this because of years of personal and professional experience in working emergency relief efforts and as a military family member.

The Red Cross will spend your money as wisely as the federal government does. [!]

However, the Salvation Army are a wonderful organization and they do great work. Here is the Salvation Army – Japan site for anyone interested in donating.

If not the Salvation Army, consider a church who works with the people. If you have questions about the validity of what I say, ask a [military] veteran.

Thanks for listening. I just couldn’t keep my mouth shut on this.

Catherina Wojtowicz
Chicago Tea Patriots, organizer
312-662-8666

Out of Wisconsin comes this masked man . . .

The Lone Ranger and the Lost City of Gold
Here, with the great horse Silver. Hiyo!

What the . . . ???

. . . to rout the outlaws, shooting their pistols out of their hands. Public unions are anomalous, as FDR and George Meany said, and this guy knows it.

FDR:

“All government employees should realize that the process of collective
bargaining, as usually understood, cannot be transplanted into the public
service. It has its distinct and insurmountable limitations when applied to
public personnel management.”

Yet another Pfleger hullabaloo-who?

Hullabaloo Soundtrack
Wuxtry, wuxtry, read all about it!

Manya Brachear in her blog, Chi Trib’s only coverage of the latest Pfleger episode:

Pfleger’s flock fears that a new priest handpicked by Cardinal Francis George will dismantle anything that doesn’t adhere to church guidelines, but enriches their worship and brings them closer to God.

Careless, I hope. She meant to write “enriches their worship and THEY SAY brings them closer to God.” As I say, I hope she meant that. Otherwise, you have an unseemly, un-journalistic identifying with a subject, unworthy of her calling.

Moreover, she argues a position:

The mere fact that Pfleger is still at St. Sabina after nearly 30 years illustrates an exception to the rule that permits priests to stay at one church for two six-year terms, or up to 12 years. By-the-book Catholics have frowned on Pflegers exemption for years.

Unless “illustrates an exception” is a laboring of the obvious, that Pfleger has plowed his own path. We know that.

However, she has a good news item that I have not read elsewhere, though I suspected it:

[President of Leo HS Dan] McGrath [Leo alum, ex-Trib sports editor] said progress also has been made repairing the schools relationship with Pfleger, which had soured in recent years. [Italics
added]

It’s disconcerting, however, to read the lede:

The hullabaloo regarding whether the Rev. Michael Pfleger will stay at St. Sabina Catholic Church has become something of a traditional rite in Chicagos Roman Catholic Archdiocese, much like the 40 days of Lent. [Heh]

Here’s how it always unfolds: Rumors swirl with no one willing to confirm or deny them. His fans rally for him to stay. His foes rally for him to go. Non-statements are issued. The rumors are put to rest and everyone goes back to business as usual. Why do we care?

A blog is less formal, let-hair-down kind of writing, but no matter the venue, you don’t want to ask that question in the second paragraph article or item and then go on for many paragraphs more.

Flash: In a Breaking News story posted 20 minutes ago that draws heavily on the blogged one, Pfleger says he is writing a reponse to the archdiocese “but wouldn’t say to what he was responding.”

Stay tuned. Everyone loves a hullabaloo.

Oak Park’s Cabrini-Green on its way?

Cabrini-Green
Coming up for Oak Park?

Oak Park is considering its first public-housing project.  CHA, eat your heart out.  It’s a do-over of a Madison Street building rented out by Comcast for many years until Comcast moved to greener pastures in DuPage County — taxes, you know, range of employees to choose from, security, etc., we presume.

That left a big empty building a block west of Oak Park Avenue, 6800–plus West, a low-hanging fruit to be picked by Catholic Charities and others on which to develop something for low-income people.  It’s to be a concentration of such, hence a good old-fashioned public-housing project such as was criticized in a 1996 report:

Although scattered-site public housing has been promoted as an alternative to large projects that concentrate poverty and problems, little systematic information is available about its characteristics and performance. However, Scattered-Site Housing: Characteristics and Consequences, by James Hogan, fills this gap with an important synthesis of survey data, secondary data, and case studies, describing scattered-site as “a demonstrably better housing choice for families than concentrated high-density projects.” [Italics added]

In fact, did not that experiment die quite a while ago, in favored of scattered site public housing for low-income people, otherwise known as Section 8?  Not in the minds of some advocates for low-income people, who see no problem in putting them in a building just for them.

The village plan commission has found no problem with it.  The two dissenters (of eight commissioners) had a problem with parking, a tried-and-true issue that says nothing about social engineering — “the murky tenant profile,” for instance — but a lot about traffic engineering.

It will come before the village board — for not quite half of which there’s an election coming up April 5 — on May 16.  Five of seven trustees have to approve overturning the Plan Commission. (Italics added)  None of the five candidates running for three trustee positions say how they would vote on the matter.

This is wild.  Election time, and they won’t say?  Love us or leave us, they are saying, regardless of this issue.