Skip to main content

Bankrupt Buffalo Diocese Cuts Spending on Schools as Its Legal Bills Rise

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

The Buffalo (N.Y.) Diocese dramatically cut spending after filing for bankruptcy, eliminating most of its funding of Catholic elementary schools while paying lawyers millions of dollars over the past year, the Buffalo News reported. Court records show the diocese spent $3.8 million on lawyer fees and other bankruptcy-related expenses in the first year of bankruptcy — an amount nearly equal to the subsidies it used to provide to 34 Catholic elementary schools. Most of the schools ended up being able to absorb the loss of the diocese aid in large part because of the COVID-19 pandemic, which led to an enrollment boom and a windfall of taxpayer-funded Paycheck Protection Program loans and grants for parishes and schools. Operational diocese spending between March 1, 2020, and Feb. 28, 2021, was down by 113% when compared with the diocese’s most recently published financial statement, according to an analysis of court records and financial statements. Spending on regular operations, such as pastoral costs, central support ministry and religious personnel development for the 12 months of bankruptcy was $8.5 million. It was $18.2 million in the diocese’s 2019 fiscal year, which ended Aug. 31, 2019.