I agree that it is vile that people who presumably are Catholics think that it is OK to express glee at people being made redundant. It is very clear that Hare's motives were entirely honourable. There is a part of the modern church that I want nothing to do with - I don't read certain blogs or certain newspaper columns.
The departmental closure should now be a legal process (civil). The next stage will be for the diocese to implement the statutory consultation procedures and to try to find posts elsewhere in the diocese for those affected. If they are wise, the diocese will obtain full and final signatures to the extent that those made redundant relinquish their right to sue for wrongful dismissal. This will, of course, cost the diocese more: they will need to pay the costs of individual's solicitors and add to the redundancy package.
So far there is little or no recognition by the diocese for the work done by the department over the years. The question arises as to whether anyone would wish to work or volunteer for this particular diocese in the future: with their record of making people redundant and trying to weasel out of their legal responsibility for the behaviour of some of their priests.
This week's Tablet announces that there are job cuts planned at Leeds as well. Six jobs will be made redundant. Affected employees are given the choice of taking voluntary redundancy or of applying for one of the few jobs left! They are also considering asking schools to contribute to the diocesan office for education and schools - and pigs might fly!
Paragraph 112 of the Bishops Conference document "The Common Good and the Catholic Church's Social Teaching (1996) said:
112. Employers need reminding that their employees as a body constitute a form of "social capital", a reservoir of human effort, wisdom and experience. Accountancy methods which have to disregard such assets in the valuation of a commercial concern or in drawing up a balance sheet are inevitably guilty of false accounting, for they fail to make visible the resources of human skill and judgement which that company has at its disposal. This dumping of human " social capital", which the Catholic Church must deplore, is a prevalent cause of social injustice in modern society. It often occurs in company "downsizing" operations associated with takeovers, closures and mergers.
Not a lot of point in Catholic Social Teaching if the Church doesn't follow it.