| Report Slams Chichester over Child Safeguarding
By Ed Thornton
Church Times
September 7, 2012
www.churchtimes.co.uk/articles/2012/7-september/news/uk/report-slams-chichester-over-child-safeguarding
"DYSFUNCTIONALITY" within Chichester diocese is preventing adequate child-safeguarding, and must be "urgently addressed", the interim report of the Archbishop of Canterbury's commissaries, published on Thursday of last week, says.
The archiepiscopal visitation, the first for more than 100 years, is being carried out by a former Bishop of Chelmsford, the Rt Revd John Gladwin, and Canon Rupert Bursell QC (News, 30 December).
The Archbishop of Canterbury said in a statement, issued the same day as the report, that there remained "several areas of concern" in the diocese, and that he had therefore decided that the visitation "should continue, and that both safeguarding and appointments matters should be conducted under the supervision of this office until uniformly better practice can be assured".
The interim report says that "dysfunctionality . . . continues to impinge upon the adequacy of safeguarding within the diocese." Such dysfunctionality - which includes clerics' officiating without permission - demonstrates "a failure to appreciate the connection between safeguarding and the proper structures of the Church".
The report goes on to say that "this dysfunctionality is underlined by the facts that a decision was made (rightly or wrongly) by some or all of the diocesan safeguarding advisory group to commence the procedure to lay a complaint under the Clergy Discipline Measure 2003 against the Bishop of Lewes [the Rt Revd Wallace Benn] and that the latter has felt not only that he has been consistently kept out of the loop but that he has been made the scapegoat for systemic problems within the diocese" (News, 18 November 2011).
The report stops short of "pointing the finger at any particular person or persons", but calls for "a radical change of culture in the diocese - one in which the sanctity, dignity and well-being of children and vulnerable adults is openly and transparently at its heart".
Since the Historic Cases Review was carried out in the diocese, in 2008-09, "a mutual lack of trust and confidence occurred between the safeguarding advisory group" and the "senior team" of the Bishop at that time, Dr John Hind, the report says. This "brought about weaknesses within diocesan safeguarding".
The report also suggests that the episcopal-area scheme in Chichester diocese has undermined the authority of the diocesan bishop, with whom "final responsibility for safeguarding rests". It is "essential for the well-being of safeguarding throughout the diocese" that the area scheme "should now be reconsidered".
Concern is also expressed "about the level of resources provided" in Chichester for safeguarding. Clerics who do not take part in training on child-safeguarding, and who fail to ensure that they have up to date Criminal Records Bureau (CRB) checks - on 14 June, there were 138 clergy in the diocese without current CRB checks - should face disciplinary action.
Speaking on Thursday of last week, Bishop Gladwin said that the diocese had "made a start" on implementing the recommendations of a review by Baroness Butler-Sloss (News, 27 May), and that children and vulnerable people were "a dear sight safer [in Chichester diocese] than they were two years ago, because the diocese has moved forward. But there is a lot more to be done."
Bishop Gladwin said that the appointment of a new diocesan Bishop, Dr Martin Warner (News, 11 May), was "a crucial change" for the diocese. He said that the visitation would continue "for as long as" Dr Williams wanted it to; he would be "very surprised" if the work were complete before the end of the year.
In a statement accompanying the publication of the report, Dr Williams said that "the abiding hurt and damage" done to "survivors of abuse" in Chichester diocese "is something that none of us in the Church can ignore, and I am deeply sorry that they should have been let down by those they ought to have been able to trust. . .
"The interim report confirms that there have been many and longstanding failures in implementing a robust and credible safeguarding policy in the diocese of Chichester. The guidelines laid down by the national Church and the agreed standards of best practice have not been consistently followed, and the flaws in safeguarding practice have put children and others at risk."
Dr Williams said that his commissaries had "identified some areas where they believe that lessons learned from Chichester could usefully point to some further development of national policy or processes. These will now be considered, along with the rest of this report, by our national safeguarding group as soon as pos-sible."
A statement from Dr Warner said in part: "I am deeply grateful to the commissaries for their work in producing such a detailed, honest and wide-ranging analysis of the current situation concerning safeguarding in the diocese of Chichester. I have not yet officially begun my work as diocesan bishop and so, in many respects, their report comes at an apposite time as the diocese also looks forward to a new phase in its ministry and mission."
The chairman of the Joint Safeguarding Liaison Group, the Bishop of Southwell & Nottingham, the Rt Revd Paul Butler, said that the National Safeguarding Group would review some of the report's recommendations "carefully", and that "any changes to the national safeguarding policies would be for the House of Bishops to agree, and any changes to the law would need to go to the General Synod."
A statement issued on Saturday by Minister & Clergy Sexual Abuse Survivors (MACSAS) welcomed the publication of the report, but expressed concern "that effective safeguarding procedures are still not in place" in the diocese.
"What is now required is moral courage and committed effort on the part of all working in the diocese of Chichester and the National Safeguarding office of the Church of England to bring about a radical change in thinking in the diocese and beyond."
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