NYS Childhood Sex Abuse Victims Given More Time to File Claims

intersex-surgery-minors-consent-brad-hoylman-kimberly-zieselman2019-11-11-gcn02_z
State Senator Brad Hoylman.
Matt Tracy

The coronavirus pandemic has forced Governor Andrew Cuomo to extend the deadline for filing new childhood sexual abuse claims under New York’s Child Victims Act.

The legislation enacted last year allowed for sex abuse survivors in cases that had been time-barred or expired to file a claim by August 14 of this year. But the pandemic led to a reduction in court service, thus limiting the ability for survivors’ attorneys to file and prepare cases.

“Because of the reduction in court services, we want to extend that window and we’ll extend it for an additional five months until Jan. 14, [2021], because people need access to the courts to make their claim,” Cuomo said during his Friday daily briefing. “Justice too long delayed is justice denied, Martin Luther King, Jr., said. So we will extend that window for people to bring their case.”

Out gay Manhattan State Senator Brad Hoylman applauded Cuomo’s decision, but noted that the dire state of New York’s economy will further hinder the ability of many sex abuse survivors to make their claim even under the extended deadline.

Hoylman and Assemblymember Linda Rosenthal are sponsoring legislation that would extend the look-back window for the Child Victims Act by a full year.

“As the unemployment rate spikes above 14 percent, it’s unreasonable to expect survivors of child sexual abuse to do the emotional and legal work necessary to file CVA lawsuits while simultaneously fighting to pay rent and put food on the table,” Hoylman said in a written statement. “Survivors need the assurance that New York will stand with them, even after the pandemic ends. That’s why we must pass my legislation with Assemblymember Linda B. Rosenthal to extend the Child Victims Act’s look-back window by a full 12 months.”

The Child Victims Act allows individuals who were sexually abused to file claims against not only their attacker, but also public and private institutions with whom the attacker was affiliated. It took more than a decade for the act to become law, as the New York State Conference of Catholic Bishops and other organizations opposed it year after year due to feared repercussions from the expanded liability.

Hoylman and Rosenthal were among the key sponsors of the Child Victims Act enacted in February 2019.

This story was first published in amny.com. To sign up for the Gay City News email newsletter, visit gaycitynews.com/newsletter.