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Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Synod stops in need of fully independent national safeguarding

THE General Synod stopped in need of transferring all safeguarding functions to an external organisation, not less than within the short term, after a charged debate on Tuesday.

After hours of dialogue, all three Houses — Bishops, Clergy, and Laity — voted for an amendment moved by the Bishop of Blackburn, the Rt Revd Philip North, which pivoted the motion towards outsourcing the National Safeguarding Team (NST) while further study would go into how diocesan teams could possibly be added later to this latest independent body.

The shadow of months of controversy after the publication of a series of safeguarding failures — most notably within the Makin report on the John Smyth affair, which ultimately led to the resignation of the Archbishop of Canterbury — hung over the controversy.

Several speeches referred to an absence of trust within the Church, and the necessity to make a radical change to rebuild the trust of each abuse survivors and of the general public. Others, nevertheless, warned that pursuing full independence, nationally and locally, was an untried model that raised legal and technical challenges.

In the top, Bishop North’s proposal, which he presented as a compromise middle-ground solution, won the day.

Speaking to reporters after the controversy, he said that he was aware that his amendment would appear to be kicking full independence into the long grass, but he insisted that this was not his intention.

“What would have been irresponsible could be to vote for something we couldn’t implement after which have to return back to Synod to apologise,” he said. “That would have been a disaster.”

Instead, he argued that his approach meant that deliverable types of independence could possibly be brought forward right away, while full independence could return to the Synod in the longer term, once the remaining issues had been resolved.

But the lead bishop for safeguarding, the Bishop of Stepney, Dr Joanne Grenfell, said that she was very disillusioned within the result. “I feel the Church has missed an enormous opportunity to send a message to victims and survivors that we hear their concerns about trust and confidence.”

She told the Church Times that she was determined to proceed working on delivering fully independent safeguarding.

The motion, as amended by Bishop North, called for the implementation of Model 3, while “further work as to the legal and practical requirements needed to implement Model 4” was accomplished.

Under Model 3, two independent bodies could be established: one to supply scrutiny and resolve complaints about church safeguarding, and a second to soak up the NST and perform operational safeguarding work.

Model 4 could be the identical, except that each one cathedral and diocesan safeguarding officers would even be transferred to the brand new independent body and now not be employed by their dioceses or cathedral Chapters.

 

THE debate began with contention, as a lay member, Sam Margrave (Coventry) protested that one in every of his amendments, calling for “full independence”, had been cut from the order paper. The chair attempted to elucidate the clerk’s reasoning: that Mr Margrave had withdrawn the amendment in an email at half-past midnight, and that, in any case, it overlapped with one other amendment that was on the order paper.

Mr Margrave, nevertheless, was not placated, and, before leaving the rostrum, shouted that the choice was a “disgrace”.

In a presentation that preceded the controversy, the external co-chair of the Response Group that had brought the proposals forward, Lesley-Anne Ryder, told the Synod: “This is your moment: please use it correctly.”

Geoff Crawford/Church TimesThe external co-chair of the Response Group, Lesley-Anne Ryder

The complexity of the Church’s current systems had contributed to the lack of “trust and confidence”, she said, citing rules related to the employment terms of the clergy which “in the true world . . . don’t make sense”.

Speaking as an observer of the Church of England, she said that it had “created structures which confuse people, and cause suspicion”, and suggested that, “in time”, Model 4 could possibly be a streamlined and effective system.

Both models of future safeguarding would represent “considerable progress”, the Bishop of Stepney, Dr Joanne Grenfell (Southern Suffragans), said.

The motion in her name endorsed Model 4 because, she said, it could best ensure consistency across church safeguarding. “We must set things up so there could be no actual or perceived conflicts of interest.”

Both models contained provision for an independent scrutiny body, and with either option the Church would retain responsibility for the event of safeguarding policy, as this was something that the Charity Commission had advised couldn’t be outsourced.

Early speeches in the controversy on the primary motion alternated between endorsements of Model 3 and Model 4.

Speaking in favour of keeping diocesan safeguarding teams within the employment of the Church, Shayne Ardron (Leicester) said that the Church must not “pretend that the whole lot is superb, but nor do I feel we will outsource the whole lot”. Central funding for diocesan teams would help to create consistent safeguarding provision across the Church, she said. Currently, this frontline work was funded entirely by the dioceses themselves.

An independent scrutiny body was required in order that the Church wouldn’t be marking its own homework, but Model 4 safeguarding risked attempting to outsource the homework itself, she said.

The Dean of Blackburn, the Ven. Peter Howell-Jones (Northern Deans), referred to his well-publicised experience with safeguarding concerns a couple of priest at Blackburn Cathedral (News, 14 August 2024). “This is about current handling of safeguarding cases,” he said, suggesting that current practice was “abusive” and prioritised “self-protection”.

The Bishop of Rochester, Dr Jonathan Gibbs, said that the concentrate on structures was misplaced. It was not poor structures that had prevented Iwerne camp leaders’ reporting John Smyth, he said, but a culture “so supple and so powerful that at times we don’t even realise it is going on”.

Model 3 would give the Church the perfect likelihood of fixing that culture from inside, he said, but urged members to concentrate on culture change no matter which option that was taken forward from this meeting.

The Second Church Estates Commissioner, Marsha de Cordova MP (ex officio), made her first speech to the Synod since her appointment in October (News, 7 October 2024). The past months had been an unprecedented crisis for the Church, she said, and should be a “watershed moment”.

Choosing Model 4 could be a “first step towards restoring trust”, she said, and an illustration to Parliament and the general public that change was under way.

Geoff Crawford/Church TimesThe Second Church Estates Commissioner, Marsha de Cordova MP (ex officio), makes her first speech to the Synod since her appointment in October

That change could be too slow under Model 4, argued Stephen Hogg (Leeds). It would take years to establish a latest body to undertake operational safeguarding, and it threatened a “governance nightmare”. A “higher, quicker solution” to improving safeguarding provision was to go for Model 3, he said.

The Revd William Harwood (Truro) endorsed Model 4. He began his speech by saying that he was a victim of church-related abuse and was determined to challenge the powers that had permitted and covered up abuse. “Any change is being hampered by a secretive, self-protecting House of Bishops,” he said, before singling out the Bishop of Newcastle as a “bishop of courage and transparency”, to scattered applause across the chamber.

The Revd Nicki Pennington (Carlisle) acknowledged that the calls for radical change via Model 4 were compelling, but that she had concerns about whether such a system could be effective. Before being ordained, she had been a social employee for 25 years, and her experience taught her that the more “interfaces” there have been in any system, the greater the likelihood was that cases would fall through the gaps.

The Bishop of Birkenhead, the Rt Revd Julie Conalty (Northern Suffragans), said that regardless of the Synod voted for — and she or he hoped that it could be Model 4 — “radical” change would still be needed in HR, accountability, and governance. “Gold-standard independent safeguarding delivery alone is not going to be enough,” she said, but it surely was a needed step. “We must go that extra mile; for we’ve broken trust with survivors and with our nation,” and that meant selecting Model 4.

Martin Sewell (Rochester) then moved his amendment, to call for “total independence” quite than “greater independence”. He characterised diocesan safeguarding staff as simply protecting their very own interests in a recent letter by which greater than 100 had argued against Model 4 (News, 5 February). He urged Synod members to carry their nerve, and pass safeguarding into the hands of fully independent structures.

In an unscripted speech, the Bishop of Leicester, the Rt Revd Martyn Snow, said that he had previously backed Model 3, but had recently modified his mind, and was now of the view that Model 4 was the one solution to effect a “cultural reset” and rebuild trust. He didn’t support Mr Sewell’s amendment, as he thought that it was too vague, but confirmed that he could be voting for Model 4, “counter-intuitively” going against the recommendation of his diocesan safeguarding staff.

The Bishop of Chester, the Rt Revd Mark Tanner, said that “simplicity and transparency” needs to be at the guts of the Church’s ambitions, and that this was articulated within the amendment. He was cautious about how change could be delivered, but the controversy was in regards to the direction of travel and never detail, and so he supported the amendment.

The Revd Joy Mawdesley (Oxford) spoke against the amendment, saying that it could by default support Model 4 and cut off further debate. No other organisation had placed all safeguarding functions into an external body: “It is untried and untested, and subsequently dangerous.” Model 4 would also undermine the mantra “Safeguarding is everybody’s responsibility,” which was starting really to vary the culture of the Church, she said.

The amendment fell by large margins in all three Houses.

The Archbishop of York spoke against Model 3, arguing the Church needed a “step change in the best way we do safeguarding” — though he pledged to support whichever option was eventually chosen. It wasn’t a matter of selecting between supporting safeguarding teams or listening to victims and survivors, he said: as a substitute, Synod should do each.

Huge improvements had little question been made within the a long time since he first entered ministry, but he had first-hand knowledge of the “inadequacies of our processes”, he said.

In a reference to the David Tudor case when he was Bishop of Chelmsford (News, 20 December), he said that he knew “greater than most how unsatisfactory that is”.

The Vicar-General of York, the Rt Worshipful Peter Collier, warned that Model 4 presented governance and legal challenges. He quoted the lead auditor from the INEQE Safeguarding Group, Jim Gamble, who had said on Monday: “Don’t tamper an excessive amount of with what is definitely working now, based on what didn’t work before.”

The Bishop of Winchester, the Rt Revd Philip Mounstephen, also cited Mr Gamble and the INEQE audit programme. Its first annual report, published on Monday (News, 10 February), had not received the eye that it deserved, he said, because the audit programme amounted to probably the most substantial body of evidence available to the Church. That evidence should inform the Synod’s decision, he said, and it favoured Model 3 — although he remained “open to persuasion”.

James Wilson (Manchester) invoked one other safeguarding expert in Professor Alexis Jay In her report last yr, Professor Jay had suggested that the diocesan model was incompatible with a high-quality and accountable safeguarding system, he said. He called for the Synod to endorse Model 4 and resist the amendment.

The amendment was lost by a show of hands.

Bishop North then moved his ultimately successful amendment, which endorsed Model 3 “as the best way forward within the short term” while further work took place on the “legal and practical requirements” of Model 4. He said that this approach offered a way out of the binary debate that the Synod had been having, and meant that change wouldn’t be lost if, as some feared, Model 4 proved to be not possible to implement. “In an try and change our fame, we’ll make it worse” if, in pursuing Model 4, change took too long, he said, whereas a hybrid model meant that change could get under way immediately.

The Bishop of London, the Rt Revd Sarah Mullally, spoke against the amendment. It gave no guarantee of swift motion, she said, and concerns in regards to the complexities of Model 4 could possibly be overcome. Model 4 was the one answer to inconsistency between the dioceses, she said, supporting it strongly.

Geoff Crawford/Church TimesThe Bishop of London, the Rt Revd Sarah Mullally, speaks against the amendment

Bishop North found support, though, from the Revd Paul Langham (Bristol), who argued that what mattered was not “giving the looks of radical change, but achieving the correct radical outcomes”.

The Bishop of Bath & Wells, Dr Michael Beasley, also spoke in support of Bishop North’s amendment. He asked whether it was “judicious” to adopt an untested safeguarding model, and warned that there was a danger that, if it failed, the Church could be left in an excellent worse position.

The Revd Robert Thompson (London), nevertheless, spoke against the amendment. Even under Model 4, safeguarding would remain the responsibility of everyone within the Church, however the people delivering it could not be open to the danger of being manipulated by senior staff. The Church needed to send a robust signal that it was serious about change, he said.

When it got here to the vote, Bishop North’s amendment was carried in all three Houses: Bishops 23-14, with one recorded abstention; Clergy 114-65, with two recorded abstentions; Laity 106-86, with three recorded abstentions.

An extra amendment, moved by Mr Margrave, was carried, adding an expression of lament and repentance for the Church’s failures in safeguarding, and a recognition of the harm suffered by victims and survivors.

Speaking after the controversy, Bishop North conceded that he could offer no guarantees on timelines when it got here to further work on Model 4. But he argued strongly that some parts of Model 3 could begin almost immediately, while the remaining legal and regulatory concerns around full independence were worked out.

 

The full motion, as amended:

That this Synod:

(a) thank all those involved in Church safeguarding, particularly the victims and survivors who give so generously of their wisdom and experience, often at great personal cost, and parish safeguarding officers who ensure that that safeguarding is a priority in every level and all those that support them in dioceses;

(b) affirm its commitment to greater independence in safeguarding within the Church of England;

(c) thank the Response Group for its work for greater independence in safeguarding within the Church of England, and, noting the numerous reservations around model 4 in paragraph 62 of GS 2378 and the legal advice from VWV dated thirty first January 2025, endorse model 3 as the best way forward within the short term and call for further work as to the legal and practical requirements needed to implement model 4;

(d) lament and repent of the failure of the Church to be welcoming to victims and survivors and the harm they’ve experienced and proceed to experience within the lifetime of the Church

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