A new clergy abuse hot line staffed by mental health professionals from a Twin Cities nonprofit was announced Thursday by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.
The archdiocese partnered with Canvas Health to staff the 24-hour line, assess callers and refer them to appropriate services. It's the first time an independent agency has been hired to handle these sensitive calls.
Until now, archdiocese staffers would field such calls and make the first contacts with victims, a process victims' advocates say often resulted in abuse reports being discounted or stifled.
"We're not sure how many people have not called because there wasn't an independent option," Tim O'Malley, the archdiocese's director of ministerial standards and safe environment, said Thursday. "And we haven't had the expertise that Canvas brings."
The archdiocese has had a victims' assistance program since 1992. However, it hasn't been able to identify how many new victims have called the program in recent years, in part because call statistics may include duplicate calls by the same person, church officials said.
That said, the chancery reported that nine people called the victims' assistance program in 2012, 10 in 2013, and 26 so far this year.
Jeff Anderson, a St. Paul attorney who has represented many clergy abuse victims, said archdiocese staffers were not equipped to help individuals facing psychological trauma and that their allegiance was to the archdiocese, not victims.
"This is a very positive step," said Anderson, adding that Canvas Health is well qualified to take on the new role.