According to Cath News, the report was posted on the ACBC and CRA websites on 14 December to coincide with the first anniversary of the completion of the Royal Commission, as required by one of the Commission’s recommendations. It is expected it will be published on the NOCS website alongside other non-government institutions’ reports in the coming days.
The first annual report follows the Church’s official response to the Royal Commission, delivered at a joint ACBC-CRA press conference in August.
“While acknowledging that there is much more work to be done, the report outlines a series of actions taken during the past 12 months – indeed, over the past three decades – and signals the determination of the bishops and religious leaders to do what is required,” ACBC President Archbishop Mark Coleridge said.
The report looks at the work of some important Catholic organisations, including the Implementation Advisory Group, an advisory body monitoring the Church’s response to the Royal Commission and its recommendations, and Catholic Professional Standards Ltd, an independent company developing safeguarding standards and auditing compliance with those standards, reports Cath News.
At the grassroots level, safeguarding activities continue in congregations, schools, dioceses and agencies across the country.
The report also explores the Church’s engagement with the National Redress Scheme, in which 27 of 35 archdioceses, dioceses and eparchies are now participating, and which the first religious order has now joined.
More dioceses and religious institutes are currently having applications to join the scheme processed by the Department of Social Services and are expected to join in the coming months.
CRA president Sr Monica Cavanagh RSJ said: “Catholic religious continue to acknowledge the depth of pain endured by survivors of abuse within the Catholic Church and all those who have been hurt by that abuse”.
The recent National Day of Sorrow and Promise kept the survivors – and the damage done to them – front of mind for religious brothers, sisters and priests, and follows other local and national initiatives over the past year focused on delivering a clear promise for a better, safer future.
As part of the ongoing work to address child sexual abuse in Catholic settings, Archbishop Coleridge will attend a gathering of the presidents of episcopal conferences from around the world at the Vatican in February.
He said Pope Francis’ decision to hold such a rare gathering demonstrates the urgency of the issue internationally, but he acknowledged that action – not more talking – was what was needed from the meeting.