NY Archdiocese lays off workers to pay for Catholic Church sex abuse scandal and more may have to go

The Archdiocese of New York is laying off workers — and says more staff may have to go — to help pay for the Catholic Church’s sex-abuse scandal.The cash-strapped Church already previously announced the sale of the archdiocese’s Cardinal Cooke headquarters building in Midtown.“Such decisions are never easy, but the current financial crunch the archdiocese faces, and the upcoming move to our new offices in 2025, make this the appropriate time to make some tough decisions,” Cardinal Timothy Dolan wrote in a letter to archdiocese faithful this month in announcing the layoffs.The pink slips are going to 18 staffers, or about 4% of the work force involved in the archdiocese’s administration, and will save more than $1.5 million as officials focus more resources on parishes, according to the Church and Catholic media.“Our goal in all of this is to ensure that we are responding as effectively as possible to the needs of the people we are called upon to serve in the ten counties and nearly 300 parishes that make up this archdiocese,” Dolan said. “This restructuring has, unfortunately, resulted in regrettable lay-offs for some workers at the Cardinal Cooke Building of the Catholic Center and elsewhere around the archdiocese.”Dolan added that the staff reduction is “not a one-time event” and that more job cuts could be in the offing, at the very least through attrition.The specific jobs being axed were not released because some of the affected workers have not been notified yet, the National Catholic Reporter said.

The Archdiocese previously announced the sale of its 40,000-square-foot, 20-story headquarters at 1011 First Ave.between East 55th and 56th streets for more than $100 million.

The Vanbarton Group, a developer of office and luxury buildings, bought the prime Manhattan property, The Spirit news outlet reported.The building’s church workers are being relocated to a smaller building at 488 Madison Ave., closer to St.Patrick’s Cat...

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Publisher: New York Post

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