Pa. secretary of state out after failure to advertise constitutional amendment
By Mark Scolforo and Marc Levy
Associated Press
February 1, 2021
HARRISBURG, Pennsylvania -- A proposed Pennsylvania state constitutional
amendment allowing lawsuits for otherwise outdated child sexual abuse
claims was not advertised as required, delaying the required voter
referendum for at least two years, the Wolf administration disclosed
Monday.
The Pennsylvania Department of State in a news release
called it "simple human error" and apologized, saying the mistake was
discovered late last week. As a result, Secretary of State Kathy
Boockvar is leaving her job, and the inspector general will be looking
into the matter.
"The delay caused by this human error will be heartbreaking for
thousands of survivors of childhood sexual assault, advocates and
legislators, and I join the Department of State in apologizing to you,"
Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf said in a statement. "I share your anger and
frustration that this happened, and I stand with you in your fight for
justice."
House Republican spokesperson Jason Gottesman said caucus leaders are angry about the mistake, first reported by Spotlight PA.
"I
think the people that should be very upset are one, the victims who
will not have justice, delayed once again by this administration's
incompetency, and the people of Pennsylvania who can't trust this
administration to perform the basic processes," Gottesman said.
Constitutional
amendments must pass both chambers in two successive two-year sessions
before going before voters in a referendum as the final OK. That had
been expected to occur in the May 18 primary.
The proposals also
have to be advertised in each two-year session, and that did not occur
for the statute-of-limitations amendment during the session that ended
Nov. 30.
"I'm just shocked," said state Rep. Mark Rozzi, D-Berks,
a prime backer of the amendment. "I just can't believe that this is
where we are at right now in this process, that the secretary of state
has dropped the ball."
Just last week, the state House gave what was then thought to have been its final approval to a proposal to change the Pennsylvania Constitution to give those who say they were victims of child sexual abuse a retroactive two-year "window" in which to file civil lawsuits, no matter how long ago the alleged abuse occurred.
Victims of childhood sexual abuse have long sought another chance to sue their perpetrators or institutions that covered it up. Many of them lost the chance to sue when they turned 18, or as young adults, depending on the state law at the time.
In 2018, a landmark state grand jury report gave the fight new life, recommending that the now-adult victims of child sexual abuse get a two-year reprieve from time limits in state law that otherwise bars them from suing.
The House of Representatives passed it overwhelmingly weeks later, and it had support from Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf, Attorney General Josh Shapiro, Senate Democratic leaders and victim advocates.
However, Senate Republicans blocked a floor vote on it, calling it unconstitutional. It also had opposition from Pennsylvania's Roman Catholic bishops and the insurance industry, which said that its premiums had never accounted for the potential of such liability.
The state's dioceses opened temporary victim compensation funds and lawmakers later agreed to set in motion the multi-year process for amending the constitution to allow the two-year window.
1 comment:
When you are the big dog you are responsible to see that shit gets done. Too bad, so sad.
Post a Comment