Diocese of Fall River
The Anchor
F riday , April 30, 2010
‘Bathroom Bill’ attached to Massachusetts budget By Christine M. Williams Anchor Correspondent
BOSTON — In an effort to enact the Transgender Rights Bill into a law, supporters attached the measure to the Massachusetts budget. Opponents discovered the move last week while combing through the more than 800 proposed amendments to the fiscal year 2011 budget. Kris Mineau, president of Mass. Family Institute told The Anchor that Rep. Joseph Driscoll (D-Braintree) and Rep. Jason Lewis (D-Winchester) took the language of the so-called “Bathroom Bill” and created Budget Amendment 764. Mineau said the move was made to circumvent the normal legislative process because supporters knew the bill could not pass a straight up or down vote on the House floor. “This is a backroom sneak attack,” said Mineau. “It was a stealth operation.” Mineau called the move an effort to deceive many legislators and the public who could have missed the one amendment among hundreds. The many amendments are
separated into batches and if legislators want to vote down one, they must vote down all the rest. If the batch passes, it is attached to the budget and voting against one amendment would require voting against the entire budget, according to Daniel Avila, associate director for Policy and Research for the Mass. Catholic Conference. On April 26, the Legislature began considering all the filed amendments. At press time, there was no way to determine when they would consider the transgender rights amendment. It was unclear whether the possibility existed that the amendment could still be withdrawn. The measure had been rolled into a batch of amendments entitled “Constitutional Officers and State Administration.” Bill H1728, the Transgender Rights & Hate Crimes Bill was first introduced two years ago. The legislation would add “gender identity of expression” to the state ban on sex discrimination. It has been dubbed the “Bathroom Bill” because it would open up all public facilities to Turn to page 13
2010 Catholic Charities Appeal begins this weekend FALL RIVER — Putting a “face” or a “name” to those who are helped by the various agencies funded by the Annual Catholic Charities Appeal is not easy while respecting the privacy and dignity of those assisted. Making the thousands of parishioners across the Diocese of Fall River aware of those assisted on as personal a level as possible, however, is a task that is central to the success of the Catholic Charities Appeal
that begins tomorrow. “As we develop our materials to promote our yearly endeavor here at the Catholic Charities Appeal Office, we attempt to expose our parishioners to as many ‘real people’ as we can whose lives have been impacted by an Appeal-funded agency. Our motive is pretty basic: to have our parishioners in the 91 parishes get a true sense of the need that Turn to page 19
UPON THIS ROCK — Bishop George W. Coleman uses sacred chrism to anoint the 6,000-pound granite altar that was quarried and carved in Barre, Vt., during the Mass of Dedication inside the new St. Mary’s Church in Norton last Sunday. The altar was designed and conceptualized by Father Marc P. Tremblay, pastor of St. Mary’s Parish. (Photo by David Levesque)
Newly-dedicated St. Mary’s Church built on Norton parish’s faith By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff NORTON — It was standing room only within the confines of the glorious new St. Mary’s Church on West Main Street, Route 123, Sunday. Not because the newlyconstructed building wasn’t designed to accommodate the growing number of Catholics within the Norton parish, but because those joyful parishioners were joined by many more
friends, family members and faithful from throughout the Fall River Diocese in celebrating the blessing and dedication of their new church. Bishop George W. Coleman celebrated the 3 p.m. Mass of Dedication, which was concelebrated by Father Marc P. Tremblay, pastor of St. Mary’s Parish, Msgr. Stephen J. Avila, V.F., and some 20 diocesan priests. “It is a joy and a great pleasure for me to be here,” Bishop
Coleman said in his homily. “I express my gratitude to Father Tremblay for the invitation to dedicate this church and, in addition, I express to him my thanks for taking on the project of building a new parish church. I also want to thank all the members of St. Mary’s Parish who supported the effort of building this beautiful and much-needed church.” The culmination of a nearly Turn to page 12
Fall River to host national Teams of Our Lady Conference in July By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff FALL RIVER — The Fall River Diocese will twice be honored on a national level this summer. First, the Teams of Our Lady — a Catholic marriage support group that has thrived within the diocese for the past 25 years — will hold its biennial national conference July 20-23 at Espirito Santo Parish in the city. Then, Espirito Santo parishioners Joe and Inez Varao will be installed during the conference as the new super regional couple for the United States, representing the Teams of Our Lady to all 50 states. While it may seem that the conference and the
Varaos’ installation were conveniently planned to coincide, Inez Varao — a parishioner at Espirito Santo for the past 40 years — said the honors were totally independent of each other. “The national conference was already going to be held here,” Varao said. “We haven’t had a national conference on the east coast in about 11 years or so. It’s been mainly held in Texas and on the west coast, and so we thought it would be nice to hold it here. We were hoping to get more people involved and grow the Teams of Our Lady in this area.” The four-day conference, which begins on a Tuesday and ends the following Friday, will open and close with Mass; include a renewal of marriage Turn to page 18