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Diocese of Santa Rosa in California
Latin Catholic ecclesiastical jurisdiction in California, USA From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Diocese of Santa Rosa in California (Latin: Diœcesis Sanctae Rosae in California) is a Latin Church diocese, or ecclesiastical territory, of the Catholic Church in the northern California region of the United States. It is a suffragan diocese of the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archdiocese of San Francisco.
The mother church of the Diocese of Santa Rosa in California is the Cathedral of Saint Eugene in Santa Rosa[1] As of 2023, the current bishop is Robert Vasa.
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Territory
The Diocese of Santa Rosa in California comprises Del Norte, Humboldt, Lake, Mendocino, Napa and Sonoma Counties.
History
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1820 to 1962
The first Catholic presence in the area was the establishment of the Mission San Francisco Solano in present-day Sonoma in 1823 by Jose Altamira. The area was then part of the Province of Alta California in the Spanish colony of New Spain.[2]
In 1828, a Native American woman was listening to Juan Amoros preaching to a group by a creek near present-day Santa Rosa, now part of Mexico. She stepped forward and asked to be baptised a Christian. Since it was the feast day of Rose of Lima, Amoros baptised her as Rosa and named the creek and its surrounding area as Santa Rosa. The Asistencia Santa Rosa de Lima was established there.[2]
Over the following decades, parishes were established in these communities:
- St. Vincent in Petaluma (1857)
- St. Bernard in Eureka (1858)
- St. John the Baptist in Napa (1859)
- St. Teresa of Avila in Bodega (1861)
- St. Anthony in Mendocino (1864)
- St. Helena (1865)
- St. Patrick in Loleta (1868)
- St. Joseph in Crescent City (1869)
- St. Peter in Kelseyville (1870)
- St. Mary in Lakeport (1871)[2]
1962 to 1987
Pope John XXIII erected the Diocese of Santa Rosa in California on February 21, 1962, with territory from the Archdiocese of San Francisco and the Diocese of Sacramento. He named Monsignor Leo Maher of San Francisco as the first bishop of the new diocese.[3]
During his seven-year tenure as bishop, Maher established seven parishes, one mission, three high schools, four elementary schools, and several rectories and convents.[4] He also elevated three missions to parish status and oversaw major renovations of four existing parish churches. Maher became bishop of the Diocese of San Diego in 1969.[3]
Auxiliary Bishop Mark Hurley from San Francisco was the second bishop of Santa Rosa, named by Pope Paul VI in 1969.[5] Hurley established terms of office for pastors and associate pastors, opened a low-income senior residence, and created the Priests' Retirement Fund, Project Hope, and the Apostolic Endowment Fund.[6] He founded the Centro Pastoral Hispano and re-dedicated Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha Mission.[6] Hurley established two new parishes in his last five years as bishop, and ordained over a dozen priests and deacons in his last three years.[6] Hurley retired in 1986.
1987 to present
Pope John Paul II named Auxiliary Bishop John Steinbock from the Diocese of Orange as the third bishop of Santa Rosa in 1987.[7] He became bishop of Fresno in 1991. To replace Steinbock, John Paul II appointed Auxiliary Bishop George Ziemann of Los Angeles.[8] Ziemann submitted his resignation as bishop of Santa Rosa to the Vatican in 1999 after admitting a sexual relationship with a man and being sued by him.[9]
To replace Ziemann, John Paul II appointed Bishop Daniel F. Walsh of the Diocese of Las Vegas in 2000. In 2011, Bishop Robert F. Vasa from the Diocese of Baker was appointed as coadjutor bishop to assist Walsh.[10] When Walsh retired later that year, Vasa automatically succeed him as bishop. As of 2023, Vasa is the current bishop of Santa Rosa.
In March 2023, after facing nearly 200 sex abuse lawsuits, the diocese filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.[11][12]
Sex abuse
Bishop Steinbock suspended youth minister Reverend Donald Kimball in 1990 after Kimball admitted to having sex with six girls. However, his actions did not become public until a 1997 lawsuit was filed against the diocese by four victims, both males and females. He was laicized in 2000. Kimball was convicted in 2002 of molesting a 13-year-old girl, but the conviction was overturned by the US Supreme Court in 2003.[13]
In 1996, Reverend Gary Timmons was convicted on charges of committing lewd or lascivious acts with children and sentenced to four years in prison. Ever since the 1960s, the diocese had transferred Timmons to new parishes and then a summer camp whenever charges of child sexual abuse had been reported.[14]
Bishop Ziemann was sued for sexual battery and defamation in 1999 by Reverend Jorge Salas. Salas claimed that Ziemann forced him into a sexual relationship in return for not prosecuting him for his theft of funds from a parish. Ziemann denied the charges, but admitted to having a personal relationship with Salas.[13]
In August 2006, the Sonoma County, California, Sheriff's Office recommended criminal charges against Bishop Walsh for not reporting multiple child molestations by Reverend Francisco Ochoa. Ochoa had confessed sexual abuse crimes to Walsh. Walsh immediately suspended Ochoa but failed to report these crimes to police during the five-day time period mandated by law. This delay enabled Ochoa to flee to Mexico to avoid prosecution.
The Sonoma County District Attorney's Office eventually approved a plea agreement for Walsh, which called for four months of counseling in lieu of prosecution.[15][16] In 2007, the diocese settled a lawsuit by ten individuals who alleged being sexually abused by Ochoa. The diocese paid them a $5 million financial settlement, including $20,000 donated by Walsh himself.[17]
In 2019, Bishop Vasa published a list of 39 clergy connected with the diocese who had credible accusations of sexual abuse of minors.[18]In March 2023, the Diocese of Santa Rosa filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy amid numerous sex abuse cases.[19]
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Bishops
Bishops of Santa Rosa in California
- Leo Thomas Maher (1962–1969), appointed Bishop of San Diego
- Mark Joseph Hurley (1969–1986)
- John Thomas Steinbock (1987–1991), appointed Bishop of Fresno
- George Patrick Ziemann (1992–1999)
- Daniel Francis Walsh (2000–2011)
- Robert Francis Vasa (2011–present)
Coadjutor bishop
Robert Francis Vasa (2010–2011)
Deaneries
As of 2025, the Diocese of Santa Rosa includes 40 parishes and 22 mission churches served by 37 active diocesan priests and 12 religious priests.[20]It is divided into five deaneries:
- Humboldt/Del Norte – Del Norte and Humboldt Counties
- Mendocino/Lake – Lake and Mendocino Counties
- Napa – Napa County
- Sonoma North – northern Sonoma County
- Sonoma South – southern Sonoma County
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Education
As of 2023, the Diocese of Santa Rosa has a student enrollment exceeding 3,000.[21]
Elementary schools
As of 2025, the Diocese of Santa Rosa has the following Catholic elementary schools:
- St. Apollinaris School – Napa
- St. Eugene School– Santa Rosa
- St. Francis Solano School – Sonoma
- St. John the Baptist School – Healdsburg
- St. Rose School – Santa Rosa
- St. Mary of the Angels School – Ukiah
- St. Vincent Elementary School – Petaluma
- San Jose Sanchez Del Rio School – Fort Bragg[22]
High schools
As of 2025, the Diocese of Santa Rosa has the following Catholic high schools:
- Cardinal Newman High School – Santa Rosa, independent private school
- Justin-Siena High School – Napa, operated by the LaSallian Brothers
- Kolbe-Trinity School – Napa, independent private school [23]
- St. Bernard's Academy – Eureka, operated by the diocese[24]
- St. Vincent de Paul College Prep – Petaluma[22]
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Health care
As of 2025, the following Catholic hospitals are in the Diocese of Santa Rosa. They are all operated by Providence, a health care network:
- Queen of the Valley Medical Center – Napa[25]
- Redwood Memorial Hospital – Fortuna[26]
- Petaluma Valley Hospital – Petaluma[27]
- Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital – Santa Rosa[28]
- St. Joseph Hospital – Eureka[29]
See also
- Catholic Church by country
- Catholic Church in the United States
- Ecclesiastical Province of San Francisco
- Global organisation of the Catholic Church
- List of Roman Catholic archdioceses (by country and continent)
- List of Roman Catholic dioceses (alphabetical) (including archdioceses)
- List of Roman Catholic dioceses (structured view) (including archdioceses)
- List of the Catholic dioceses of the United States
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Notes
External links
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