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SBC abuse reform efforts energized by latest announcement

“Given the current legal and financial challenges facing the SBC and [EC], the formation of a new independent organization is the only viable path that allows progress toward abuse reform to continue unencumbered." —Josh Wester, ARITF chair
  • February 21, 2024
  • Jennifer Davis Rash
  • Featured, Latest News, SBC, Sexual Abuse Investigation Archive
Members of the Abuse Reform Implementation Task Force answer questions about the recently announced new ARC organization during a news conference Feb. 20 in Nashville.
(Photo by Morris Abernathy/The Baptist Paper)

SBC abuse reform efforts energized by latest announcement

*This story was updated under the “Funding Plan” subhead below at 3:07 p.m. CT. The original version posted at 5 a.m., and two other minor edits for clarification purposes took place around 8 a.m. and 1 p.m.  

**At 3:25 p.m. CT, The Baptist Paper received an email with a statement from Send Relief leaders noting the funds available to ARITF would not be used to fund an organization outside the SBC. See the “Funding Plan” and “Send Relief response” sections below for context. The full statement can be read on Baptist Press’ site here.

—–

The incorporation papers for Abuse Response Commission — a new 501(C)(3) organization — are prepped and ready to be submitted in South Carolina.

With ARC comes a permanent home for abuse reform in the SBC, according to members of the Abuse Reform Implementation Task Force participating in a Feb. 20 news conference in Nashville. ARC is not a Southern Baptist entity and not part of the Cooperative Program allocation structure.

ARITF chair and North Carolina pastor Josh Wester also shared the information the night before during the opening session of the Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee’s February trustee meeting.

‘Only viable path’

“After painstakingly evaluating and exhausting every option, there is broad agreement that the best way to accomplish [our goals] is through an independent organization,” Wester said.

“An independent organization will have more credibility with survivors, more flexibility to help our churches and more success in accomplishing the mandate given to us by [convention] messengers,” he said.

“Given the current legal and financial challenges facing the SBC and the Executive Committee, the formation of a new independent organization is the only viable path that allows progress toward abuse reform to continue unencumbered and without delay.”

Independent of SBC

ARC’s incorporators are Wester; Marshall Blalock, a pastor in South Carolina; Melissa Bowen, a retired attorney in Alabama; Brad Eubank, a pastor in Mississippi; Mike Keahbone, a pastor in Oklahoma; and Jon Nelson, a pastor in Missouri.

Blalock previously served as ARITF chair and was vice chair for the original Sexual Abuse Task Force, which was formed following concerns raised by annual meeting messengers in 2021 about the EC’s handling of sexual abuse cases during the previous 20 years.

ARC “is being started by a group of concerned individual Southern Baptists who want to continue to move forward our efforts to combat sexual abuse (and happen to be some of the) current and former members of [ARITF],” Wester said.

Protection from liability

“ARC intends to make sure that it moves forward in a manner that will protect the SBC and the Executive Committee from additional liability,” he said. “It intends to procure an insurance policy that includes coverage that would provide cost of defense and indemnification to the SBC and Executive Committee in the event that they’re named in lawsuits related to the work and activities of ARC.”

Funding plan

Mike Keahbone (left) and Josh Wester (chair) are among six ARITF members participating in a Feb. 20 news conference in Nashville. (Photo by Morris Abernathy/The Baptist Paper)

Wester said ARITF is working with Send Relief and other convention leaders on a funding plan.

“We are having ongoing conversations with Send Relief about the funds they generously allocated toward abuse reform in 2022 and we are obviously incredibly grateful for the money that they set aside for this cause,” he said.

The plan is to use the balance of the $3 million Send Relief funds earmarked for abuse reform efforts “as we are working to establish this new organization,” Wester said, indicating Send Relief had given the go-ahead the evening prior to the news conference.

However, concerns surfaced after that statement appeared in The Baptist Paper’s 5 a.m. release of the original version of this article Feb. 21.

Funds are distributed to the ARITF after requests are reviewed by Send Relief leaders to ensure they comply with the intended use, a Send Relief spokesperson explained to The Baptist Paper mid-afternoon Feb. 21.

Send Relief response

Send Relief leaders also released a statement late afternoon to clarify how Send Relief sexual abuse response and prevention funds are used and stated they “would not be used to fund an organization outside the SBC.” Read the full statement here.

The spokesperson deferred to the ARITF to report how many funds remain available.

Wester told The Baptist Paper that the two ARITF groups serving in 2022–2023 and 2023–2024 have been using the funds to cover the costs of consulting with experts and attorneys, to develop the database with high levels of security, to produce curriculum and training, and to cover the costs of the various meetings throughout the nearly two years of existence.

Receipts have added up to nearly $1 million, leaving a little more than $2 million still available, he said.

These funds are separate from another Send Relief allocation in 2022 related to sexual abuse reform. That gift of $1 million was for survivor care and trauma training for pastors and SBC leaders.

$2.5 million needed to launch

While ARC’s business plan and other specific details are still being worked out, the anticipation is a $1.5 million annual operating budget, which includes all aspects of running the organization and staffing an executive director. Another $1 million also is needed in the launch phase for final development of the Ministry Check website and initial insurance coverage.

Basically, $2.5 million is needed “to successfully launch this,” Wester said.

“There’s a lot of different ways to fund this work, and we’re not necessarily tied to any specific one of them,” he said, noting he has been in discussions with the various SBC entity and auxiliary leaders for ideas on securing long-term funding.

Much of the resources provided by ARC will be free, but some services will have a fee attached which could help generate revenue going forward, Wester added.

Ministry Check website

Securing financial backing seems to be the only remaining obstacle because there’s no longer a concern over whether it can be done or if it can be insured, he indicated. “It turns out, databases like this do exist, they are insured, and they don’t get sued all the time.”

Wester said the Ministry Check website will feature two categories initially — criminal convictions and civil judgments related to sexual abuse. The ARITF members and ARC investors want the site released “as soon as possible,” he added.

Database idea has long roots

The idea of creating a publicly available database of individuals in churches who have been convicted of or found liable for sex abuse has been brewing for more than 25 years.

A particularly aggressive effort took place in 2007 when then-Oklahoma pastor Wade Burleson presented a motion at the SBC Annual Meeting to create a Database of Clergy or Staff in SBC Churches Involved in Sexual Harassment or Abuse. It was referred to the EC and ultimately declined.

Along with noting practical concerns for maintaining such a database, the group appointed to study the possibility stated, “the Convention does not have the authority to create a centralized investigative body to investigate whether an individual has been ‘credibly accused’ by someone within a local church in regard to any matter.”

Previous EC discussions

A few weeks prior to Burleson’s motion in 2007, then-SBC and EC attorney Jim Guenther is noted as proposing a similar plan, according to page 61 of the Guidepost Solutions Independent Investigation Report. He presented the idea to D. August “Augie” Boto, then executive vice president and general counsel for the EC.

Guenther suggested the SBC website link to a database that listed the names of individuals “who engaged in sexual misconduct and were convicted of a felony or criminal misdemeanor, and/or had a judgment in a civil action for a common tort,” according to the report.

He said the plan “would fit our polity and present ministries to help churches in this area of child abuse and sexual misconduct,” the report continues.

On page 64 of the report, Guidepost officials state that Boto said in their May 2022 interview with him that he was against an SBC database because the EC could not be involved in making judgments about who should be on the list, which could create a risk of false accusations and liability.

According to the report, Boto stated he was in favor of a database if it had been managed by an outside entity so it would not be on the SBC to assume the liability.

For more information

To read more from Wester’s report to the EC, see the ARITF updates at the sbcabuseprevention.com website here. And learn more about essentials to abuse prevention and protection in the site’s ministry toolkit section here.

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