This I know nothing about or almost nothing about…. but I think it’s something like more than half of US states exempt clergy from reporting crimes including child abuse from an obligation to report it.
As far as a law goes that if you know about child abuse you have to report it….I assumed such a thing (assume, I know) existed…& if not legally then morally this would be a necessity and obligation to a mentally balanced human being.
Again, I’m assuming here, those individuals operating in a professional capacity would or should have to report child abuse (Teachers, Nurses, Doctors, Law Enforcement, Social Workers, Clergy?, etc…), but do they?
To report suspected child abuse, the law requires that individuals need to have reasonable grounds, based on an honest belief that harm is being done, or could be done, to a child. A decision to report abuse can even be based on partial or incomplete information, or on mere suspicion. Provincial...
www.legalline.ca
Provincial child protection laws require every person, including those who perform professional or official duties with children, to report suspected abuse to the appropriate authorities. The law requires that suspected child abuse is to be reported each time that a person has grounds to believe that abuse is occurring, even if the suspected abuse was reported in the past. To help ensure that people report child abuse, those who do so based on reasonable grounds are protected from liability in the civil courts.
In many provinces, professionals who work with children may be fined for failure to report reasonable suspicions of abuse.