|
Victory
in Massachusetts
From
CHILD (Children's Healthcare Is a Legal Duty)
Newsletter Number 1, 1994. Writer and editor Rita Swan.
©
1994 CHILD,
Inc. Reprinted
with permission.
On
December 28, 1993, Governor William Weld, R-Massachusetts,
signed S.219 into law. The bill made child abuse a crime
and repealed a religious exemption from the criminal code.
Massachusetts thereby became the third state in the nation
to remove all religious exemptions from a duty to provide
medical care to a sick child. South Dakota repealed such
exemptions in 1990 and Hawaii in 1992.
The
victory in Massachusetts is an especially significant achievement
in that the international headquarters of the Christian
Science church is located there. It was the culmination
of a five-year struggle.
1986:
Repeal of religious exemption sought
The
project began as the vision of one Boston-area CHILD member,
Ken Casanova. In 1986 Ken read about a toddler named Robyn
Twitchell who died in suburban Boston of a bowel obstruction
because his Christian Science parents did not get him medical
care.
Ken
also read about a religious exemption statute in Massachusetts
that the Christian Science church said gave the parents
the right to withhold medical care. Ken called his Representative,
John McDonaugh, and asked him to work for the repeal of
this religious exemption.
Origins
of religious exemption: 1967 - 1971
Massachusetts
passed its religious exemption four years after a Christian
Science mother in Barnstable was convicted of manslaughter
in 1967. Dorothy Sheridan allowed her five-year-old daughter,
Lisa, to die of pneumonia without medical care. The child
was sick for three weeks, and an autopsy found more than
a quart of pus in one of her lungs. The case is described
in a book entitled The Crime of Dorothy Sheridan
by Leo Damore, which is currently available in a Dell paperback.
The
Christian Science church pushed a religious exemption through
the legislature in 1971. At the time, church officials described
it as a very small thing they were asking for, an exemption
to a misdemeanor that carried a $200 fine. Their presentation
to legislators did not mention the Sheridan case. But once
the law was passed, the church claimed it was a response
to the case and evidenced the legislature's intent to prevent
prosecutions of Christian Scientists. (See John Kennedy,
"Key to manslaughter case is 1971 law change," Boston
Globe, 27 April 1988, and Legal Rights and Obligations
of Christian Scientists in Massachusetts, 1983 edition,
p.19.)
The
law the church obtained in 1971 was an ambiguous exemption
to a neglect charge. Although charge was only a misdemeanor,
the church promoted the exemption as a defense to manslaughter.
1988:
Bill finally filed--support solicited
In the
fall of 1988 Representative McDonaugh recontacted Ken and
was ready to file a bill. This bill, filed late in 1988,
did not repeal the exemption, but added an amendment requiring
parents to provide medical care when "necessary to
protect the child from suffering serious physical harm or
illness."
McDonaugh
asked Ken to build support for the bill. Ken spoke with
the Massachusetts Council of Churches, the Massachusetts
Public Health Association, the Massachusetts Office for
Children, the Department of Social Services, the Department
of Public Health, the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Children, the Catholic church, the Children's
Trust Fund, the Massachusetts Association of Social Workers,
and the Massachusetts Bar Association. All of these organizations
declined to endorse the bill when Ken first asked them for
their support.
Ken
obtained a statement by the American Academy of Pediatrics
(AAP) calling for the repeal of religious exemptions. He
met with Dr. Michael Grodin, Dr. Jonathan Caine, and other
Boston-area pediatricians. The Massachusetts Chapter of
the AAP endorsed the bill, and Grodin helped get an endorsement
from the American Society for Law and Medicine. Caine lobbied
for the bill throughout the long struggle. The Massachusetts
Medical Society also endorsed the bill that first year.
Ken
also called upon Jetta Bernier, the Director of the Massachusetts
Committee for Children and Youth. Jetta immediately gave
her support for repealing the exemption. She became one
of the strongest and most skillful players in the long fight
for repeal.
1989:
Legislative opposition
In 1989
the Judiciary Committee held a hearing on the McDonaugh
bill. Chairman Salvatore DiMasi showed Ken a pile of over
100 letters from the Christian Scientists and told Ken to
get an equal number for the bill. DiMasi did his best to
keep the bill from getting out of committee though he became
one of our supporters in later years. Our legislative allies
kept pushing for a vote. They finally got the committee
to vote 9 to 5 for the bill after it was too late to move
the bill any further.
Also
in 1989 a criminal child abuse bill was filed. One section
of it required parents to provide medical care to children.
The Christian Science church went to the Criminal Justice
Committee and got them to add a religious exemption to the
bill. The bill went to the floor, but Ken alerted legislators
who got the bill recommitted to the committee where it died.
Advocates
organize to plan strategy
That
same year Jetta Bernier began holding regular meetings in
her office with child advocates to plan a strategy against
the exemption.
Ed Brennan,
the lobbyist for the AAP Chapter, was one of the most helpful
participants at the meetings because he always had accurate
inside knowledge on the legislature and was willing to do
the one-on-one contact work that it takes to compete with
the Christian Science church.
1990:
Obfuscation yields gridlock
In 1990
the bill changing the religious exemption went to the Health
Committee, which was not favorable to it. The bill was sent
to the House counsel, who said that the legal force of the
religious exemption was questionable. Late in 1986, the
legislature had repealed the neglect law to which the religious
exemption related. The religious exemption had been left
in the code, but it no longer related to a specific crime.
It was an exemption to nothing.
Also
in 1990 the criminal child abuse bill was presented to the
Criminal Justice Committee again. At the request of the
Christian Science church, the committee dropped the entire
neglect portion from the bill. The committee did not, however,
grant the church's request for a religious exemption to
the abuse part of the bill.
When
the bill got to the floor, the church tried to add language
from Colorado, which allows parents to withhold medical
care from sick children if they have prayer treatments that
are paid for by insurance companies and recognized by the
Internal Revenue Service as a medical care expense. (Only
Christian Science prayers meet these criteria.)
In 1990
both the pediatricians and the Massachusetts Committee on
Children and Youth opposed making child abuse a felony.
Both the child abuse bill and the bill restricting the religious
exemption died that year.
1991:
Coalition seeks outright repeal
In 1991
a coalition to work for the repeal of the religious exemptions
was formalized. More than two dozen organizations endorsed
repeal and sent representatives to the meetings in Jetta's
office. They did not think that outright repeal was politically
possible, but they did not want to amend the existing religious
exemption and thereby give it more status. After a long
debate, they finally voted to seek straight repeal.
Ken
Casanova wrote the coalition's major position paper, "Death
by Religious Exemption," a 46-page statement.
Massachusetts
Coalition to Repeal, Religious Exemptions to Child Abuse
Laws:
American
Jewish Congress
American Pseudo Obstruction and Hirschprungs Disease Society
Boston University School of Public Health
Brightside for Families and Children
Cambridge Family and Children's Services
Children's Advocacy Network
Children's Friend and Family Service Society
Communities for People Inc.
Concord-Assabet Adolescent Services
Harbor Schools (Newbury)
Humanist, Atheist and Ethical Organizations of Massachusetts
Italian Home for Children (Jamaica Plain)
Jewish Big Brother and Big Sister Association of Greater
Boston
Jewish Family and Children's Service (Boston)
KEY, Inc. (Framingham)
Legislative Children's Caucus
Massachusetts Adoption Resource Exchange (MARE)
Massachusetts Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics
Massachusetts Child Welfare League of America, Executive
Group
Massachusetts Civil Liberties Union
Massachusetts Committee for Children and Youth
Massachusetts District Attorneys Association
Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children
Massachusetts Medical Society
New England Home for Little Wanderers (Boston)
Office for Children, State Advisory Council
Parents Anonymous of Massachusetts
Intervention
opposed
The
Judiciary Committee held meetings on the repeal bill in
1991. Dean Kelly of the National Council of Churches testified
against it, but the Council has no official position on
the issue. Kelly argued that those believing in faith healing
should be allowed to withhold medical care for children
because "medical science has its failures too" and because
poverty, substance abuse, and child pornography are "more
widespread perils."
In his
conclusion, though, Kelly conceded that in cases "involving
contagion," the "public health and safety may require civil
intervention."
Like
several legislators that year, he was willing for Christian
Science children to die for their parents' beliefs and supported
state intervention only when a child's illness might jeopardize
public health.
Federal
judge Thomas Griesa also testified for the Christian Science
church. Although Griesa is a dissident Christian Scientist
who has spearheaded a lawsuit against church officers, he
fully supports the church's "right" to withhold medical
care from children.
Stalemate:
no criminal child abuse law
Massachusetts
was one of only two states in the country without a criminal
child abuse law. However, nearly all the child advocacy
groups in Massachusetts opposed the child abuse bill.
Ken
proposed a conference with the district attorneys, who wanted
the bill, and the advocacy groups opposed to it. Their first
meeting was held in June of 1991. After months of dialogue
and negotiation, deep divisions remained. Jetta Bernier's
Committee on Children and Youth and the state chapter of
the American Academy of Pediatrics werer willing to support
a criminal child abuse bill, but other organizations were
not.
Two
child abuse bills were introduced. Representative Shannon
O'Brien had allowed a religious exemption to be added to
her bill. Representative Brett introduced a bill which did
not deal with criminal neglect, but did make child abuse
and the permitting of child abuse a crime.
Bernier
urged the Criminal Justice Committee to put the O'Brien
bill into a study. All fall she and pediatricians tried
to negotiate improvements to the Brett bill.
Under
heavy pressure from the Christian Science church, the House
Judiciary Committee agreed that the church would have the
chance to add a religious exemption to the abuse bill on
the floor of the House. If the church was not successful,
or if the abuse bill did not come to the floor by midautumn,
the Judiciary Committee would allow the repeal bill to come
out for a vote.
The
abuse bill did not come out of committee in 1991. Weary
of the stalemate, Representative Douglas Stoddart, R-Natick,
brought the repeal bill to the House floor and delivered
his maiden speech urging its passage. Stoddart was booed
by fellow legislators, who voted to send the bill back to
committee.
1992:
Coalition gives up repeal effort
In 1992,
the coalition gave up on their effort to repeal the religious
exemption and focused on working for a criminal child abuse
bill. They thought legislators would rather vote "for" something
than "against" an existing statute.
They
noticed that, even though the church had gotten the neglect
portion of the bill removed, the last paraagraph prohibited
parents from "permitting" a child to suffer serious
physical injury. They reasoned that the law would apply
to those who withheld medical care on religious grounds.
Many
members of the coalition quit. They did not like the child
abuse bill and would not even help stop the Christian Science
church from adding a religious exemption to it.
Battle
to kill amendment
The
bill passed the House without objection from the Christian
Science church. But in the Senate, the church quickly derailed
the bill. Senator Linda Melconian, D-Springfield, added
an amendment on the floor with only a handful of Senators
present. It stated that "any person who, having care and
custody of a child, provides such child with health care
by treatment solely by spiritual means through prayer in
accordance with a recognized religious method of healing,
shall not be considered to have caused or permitted such
child to suffer any physical injury or to have committed
a criminal offense for the sole reason he did not provide
medical treatment for such child. . . ."
The
amendment put the coalition in a defensive posture. Ken
had to prepare more fact sheets urging legislators to defeat
it, spend days trudging around the Statehouse, and get others
to write legislators.
In November
Ken and our other allies got the bill reconsidered by a
16 to 15 floor vote.
New
opposition from domestic violence groups
Late
in the fall, to our dismay, domestic violence groups announced
their opposition to the child abuse bill. They objected
to a criminal penalty for caretakers who "negligently [permit]
serious physical injury to a child." They argued that some
women are so terrorized by their partners that they cannot
prevent abuse of their children.
John
Kiernan, who had prosecuted the Twitchells, pointed out
that the crime of negligence presumes a capacity to act.
If a woman was psychologically unable to protect her child
in a violent household, she already had a defense. She could
offer evidence of her state of mind to the court.
But
the domestic violence groups insisted that the penalty for
permitting serious physical injury should be dropped. In
other words, every parent should have the right to sit around
and let his or her child be beaten to a pulp.
"No
excuses for child abuse"
Bella
English wrote a powerful column in the Boston Globe entitled,
"No Excuses for Child Abuse" attacking the "Christian Science
exemption" and the "battered women's syndrome exemption."
It generated many angry phone calls to the Senate.
However,
the district attorneys voted to support a willful and wanton
standard for the permitting of child abuse. This meant that
people having care and custody of a child could permit the
child to suffer substantial bodily injury from abuse unless
they maliciously intended for the child to be harmed.
This
surprising development seemed to pull the rug from Bernier
and Brennan, who had agreed to support the criminal child
abuse bill wanted by teh prosecutors after months of negotiations.
Prosecutors
convinced to change position
John
Kiernan was especially alarmed. Kiernan pointed out four
different standards that prosecutors can be held to in proving
charges: negligence, gross negligence, wanton and reckless
conduct, and willfulness. Negligence is the lowest, and
willfulness is the highest. Kiernan said Massachusetts has
a negligence standard for drunken drivers and ought to have
a negligence standard for those who allow child abuse.
Finally,
Kiernan got the district attorneys to change the standard
to "wanton and reckless." The domestic violence groups also
agreed to this compromise standard.
After
all that work, the bill died once again in 1992.
1993:
Governor speaks out--decisive House vote
In the
spring of 1993, Governor William Weld-R held a press conference
urging the legislature to pass a child abuse bill. He also
stated his opposition to religious exemptions.
Shortly
afterwards, the bill was put out on the House floor. After
extensive debate the Massachusetts House voted 99 to 56
to reject the religious exemption amendment proposed by
the Christian Science church and then passed the bill by
112 to 37.
The
bill then went to the Steering and Policy Committee. "Willful"
was added to the "infliction of abuse" prohibited
by the bill, perhaps at the request of the Massachusetts
Civil Liberties Union and some child advocates.
Tougher
compromise bill negotiated
John
Kiernan again went to work and got the district attorneys
mobilized in opposition to a willfulness standard.
Some
defense attorneys and legislators thought the abuse bill
was too harsh and brought forward a different bill.
Elected
to the Senate in 1992, Shannon O'Brien was a skillful, tireless,
and dedicated negotiator. She lowered the penalties on her
abuse bill and changed "infliction" to "assault and battery."
By those concessions, she was able to keep out a willfulness
standard.
Supreme
Court ruling on religious exemption
In August
the Massachusetts Supreme Court ruling on the Twitchell
case established that the extant religious exemption did
not provide a defense for manslaughter. CHILD members and
other pointed out that, sincer there was not a religious
exemption when the child died, there should not be an exemption
in cases of serious injury to children either.
On September
15, 1993, the coalition once again met in Jetta's office.
O'Brien and Senator Robert Antonioni attended. They promised
the coalition that they would try not only to get the abuse
bill passed without a religious exemption, but to repeal
the existing religious exemption. They planned to gather
the votes for repeal quietly and then introduce a repeal
amendment on the floor without the Christian Science church's
knowledge.
Church
renews fight for criminal exemption
The
week before the vote the church pulled out all stops to
try to get the Senate to add a religious exemption to the
child abuse bill. More than a hundred Christian Scientists
packed one Senator 's office imploring him to support an
exemption. More than 35 came to Senator Marian Walsh's office.
October
1993: Senate acts
On October
18, the criminal child abuse bill came out on the Senate
floor. A religious exemption amendment was introduced. There
were 2 yeses and 4 or 5 no's. The Senate chairman announced
that the amendment was defeated. The church's spokesmen
did not ask for a roll call. It appeared that they did not
want their support for the church to go on record.
Then
a senator introduced another version of a child abuse bill
wanted by defense attorneys, but he could not get even a
second for this bill.
Next
the chairman called for a vote on O'Brien's abuse bill with
its reduced penalty compromise. Nobody voted, but he said
the aye's had it.
Old
religious exemption also repealed
Then
O'Brien rose and said there was one more thing that needed
to be taken care of on the bill. She introduced a motion
to repeal chapter 273, section 1 (the religious exemption).
There was no discussion. The chairman called for a vote.
Nobody voted, but Antonioni said the aye's had it.
O'Brien
introduced a motion for reconsideration of her bill. There
was no discussion. The chairman called for a vote. Nobody
voted, but this time he said the motion was defeated.
O'Brien's
parliamentary maneuver prevented anyone else from calling
for reconsideration later.
Leadership
united for repeal
Both
the House and Senate leadership supported repeal of the
exemption, so the conference committee was dominated by
our supporters. The child abuse bill including the repeal
amendment was approved by the conference committee, returned
to both houses for another vote, and then sent to the Governor's
desk.
On Tuesday,
December 7, the Massachusetts District Attorneys Association
held one of their regular meetings with the Governor. They
expressed their pleasure that the religious exemption had
been repealed by the legislature.
Governor
filp-flops
Governor
Weld gave them no reason to believe he objected to repeal,
but on Friday, December 10, he returned the child abuse
bill to the legislature and asked them to restore the religious
exemption.
Weld
pointed out that the Massachusetts Supreme Court had recently
ruled in the Twitchell case that the religious exemption
was not a defense to manslaughter. Weld wrote that repeal
of the exemption was therefore "unnecessary. However, this
provision may afford protection in civil proceedings, and
I believe it is fair for the law to continue to afford such
protection."
We and
other advocates were shocked. Prosecutors all over the state
faxed protest letters to the Governor. The American Academy
of Pediatrics wrote a forceful letter, reminding Weld that
he had publicly supported repeal of the exemptions a few
months earlier. There was speculation that Christian Scientists
at the national level of the Republican party had persuaded
Weld to do this because of his aspirations for national
office.
The
Christian Science Monitor speaks
The
church was ready with a long column and a lead editorial
in the December 13 Christian Science Monitor. The
editorial, entitled "Prayer is not Criminal," tried to educate
society:
It
needs to be better understood that for Christian Scientists,
prayer is not just instead of treatment, or in support
of treatment: Prayer is treatment. The decision
to rely on prayer instead of "shunning conventional medicine,"
as the familiar wire-service phrase now has it, is a positive
one, not a negative one. And in the case of even young
children, it is a decision generally made with their active
consultation to a degree not widely appreciated.
When
Christian Scientists endure an apparent failure of their
methods, as in some recent publicized cases, they face
pressure to pull them into the general net of medical,
insurance, and legal practices. . . .
We
appreciate Governor Weld's action discerning among the
competing interests and we are confident that the legislative,
executive, and judicial system can discriminate between
criminal and spiritual matters.
Message
of legislative intent
Senator
Shannon O'Brien charged that Weld was sending Christian
Science parents "the wrong message" by proposing restoration
of the exemption. Other observers pointed out that restoration
of the religious exemption under such circumstances would
be the worst kind of legislative history. If another death
of a Christian Science child was prosecuted, the court might
decide that the legislature consciously chose to have a
religious defense to a serious crime.
The
Boston Globe speaks
Bella
English wrote another powerful column in The Boston Globe.
Entitled "Weld Flip-Flop may risk lives," the editorial
suggested that Weld had "caved in to some heavy-duty lobbying
by high-level Republican officials in the Christian Science
Church."
English
continued:
Weld
has called his version of the bill "a minor amendment,"
but it's hardly minor to all those children who may suffer
needless pain, permanent impairment, and even death because
Mom and Dad wouldn't call a doctor.
English
interviewed Doug Lundman, an architect who now lives in
the Boston area and whose son died of diabetes because his
mother was a Christian Scientist and withheld medical care.
His son Ian "was just a normal kid," Doug said. "He
wanted to live. He was interested in playing games, not
some abstract religion. If something was wrong, he wanted
someone to fix it."
English
asked, "Is [Weld] really willing to kill a child abuse bill
that has been painfully hammered out over four years?"
"The
legislature ought to send this bill back promptly, as is.
And Weld, a father of five, ought to sign it," she concluded.
House
and Senate stand firm--Governor signs
Both
the House and Senate passed the bill once again with the
repeal of the religious exemption and returned it to the
Governor. On December 28, 1993, Weld signed the bill into
law, but hinted that he might propose a new religious exemption
in the future.
Church
silent
On December
30, The Christian Science Monitor briefly noted the
signing and added, "There was no comment from The First
Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, which opposed the
bill because it removes the accommodation for spiriutal
healing." The church also declined comment in August
about the Massachsuetts Supreme Court's ruling that the
then existing exemption was not a defense to manslaughter.
Rep.
Byron Rushing, who has the church's headquarters in his
district, has introduced a bill with a new religious exemption
this year, but we do not think it will get very far. Massachusetts
legislators do not want to deal with this issue again. And
we have learned through the years that it is a hundred times
easier to kill a bill than to pass one.
We hope
that this victory in Massachusetts will be an incentive
for other state legislatures. If the home state of the Christian
Science church can remove all religious exemptions from
a duty of care for a sick child, other states can do it
too.
Taken
in part from The Boston Globe, 30 Nov. 1992 and 15
Dec. 1993, and The Christian Science Monitor, 13
and 30 Dec. 1993.
CHILD
(Children's Healthcare Is a Legal Duty), Inc.
Box 2604, Sioux City, IA 51106
Phone: 712-948-3500
http://www.childrenshealthcare.org/
Return
to top.
|