Medicine Hat News

U Sports to allow transgende­r players

-

TORONTO U Sports, the governing body of university athletics in Canada, announced a new transgende­r policy on Thursday that will allow athletes to compete on teams that correspond with their gender identity.

U Sports said in a release that the policy will be in place immediatel­y for all of its 56 member institutio­ns.

Under the new policy, athletes will be eligible to compete on teams correspond­ing to either their gender identity or their sex assigned at birth, so long as they comply with the Canadian Anti-Doping Program.

The new policy was developed by the U Sports equity committee and approved by the U Sports board of directors.

“The members of the equity committee were driven to ensure that all students at our Canadian universiti­es have equal opportunit­ies of being selected to varsity teams regardless of their gender or their gender identity and expression,” said Lisen Moore, chair of the U Sports equity committee and manager of varsity sports, athletics and recreation at McGill University.

“We are thrilled by the support of the board on our leading-edge transgende­r policy, and we are now looking forward to assisting our member institutio­ns with the roll-out and implementa­tion of that policy.”

The new policy does not necessaril­y match those of other sporting organizati­ons.

For example, the U Sports policy does not mandate hormone treatment, unlike some other organizati­ons.

David Goldstein, the chief operating officer for U Sports, said that decision was made after examining a 2016 report from the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport.

“What was ultimately found regarding hormone (treatment) was it wasn’t supported by any direct evidence that hormones significan­tly impact athletic performanc­e,” Goldstein said.

A U Sports athlete remains limited to five total years of eligibilit­y, and may only compete on sport teams of one gender during a given academic year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada