Penticton Herald

Feds give $72 million in relief to sports groups

- By DONNA SPENCER

Gymnastics Canada laid off 70 per cent of its staff this week.

The organizati­on’s chief executive officer said he hopes emergency funding announced Friday by the federal government allows him to recall people soon.

“It’s harsh. This hasn’t been a pleasant week,” Ian Moss said. “I would love to be able to phone some of our staff tomorrow and say ‘you’re back.”’

Canada’s amateur sports system will receive $72 million to alleviate the financial pain of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Federal Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault recently announced $500 million in pandemic relief to cultural, arts and sport organizati­ons. The details were unveiled Friday.

The $72 million earmarked for sports will go to national and provincial organizati­ons, Canadian sport institutes and Indigenous sport groups.

Athletes whose monthly Sport Canada cheques are impacted by the postponeme­nt of the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympic­s to 2021 and the pandemic also receive financial aid.

“We will try to save all our organizati­ons and to help everybody,” Guilbeault said. “We may not be able to, but we will try.

“What we’re hoping to achieve out of this is once we’ve gone through that first phase of the crisis, our sports ecosystem is still intact.”

The Canadian Football League, soccer’s Canadian Premier League and the Canadian Elite Basketball League have asked for millions in pandemic relief money, but profession­al leagues were not eligible for the funding announced Friday.

“What’s important to say is all the money being announced today is for amateur sports and our Olympic athletes, so there’s nothing for profession­al sports,” Guilbeault said.

“It’s too early to be able to say whether we will be in a position to support these.”

National sport organizati­ons and institutes will receive $34.5 million, provincial and territoria­l sports federation­s $32.5 million and the Athlete Assistance Program $5 million.

The use of any remaining funds will be based on need, the Heritage Department said in a statement.

“The impact of the pandemic on the Canadian sport system is profound,” Canadian Olympic Committee CEO David Shoemaker said. “I believe this is a fair and right way to distribute funds because at its core, it’s based on need.”

National sports organizati­ons are eligible for up to 25 per cent of the total they received from Sport Canada in the last funding cycle. That number is a total of base, Own The

Podium and NextGen funding.

That translates to a top-up of roughly half a million dollars for Gymnastics Canada.

Moss estimates the organizati­on will lose between $1 million and $1.5 million in membership fees this year because of the pandemic.

He believes provincial and territoria­l associatio­ns who rely even more on club membership­s for revenue will take a substantia­l financial hit, so money provided for them in Friday’s announceme­nt is key.

“There’s almost the same level of funding available for provincial and territoria­l sport organizati­ons,” Own The Podium chief executive officer Anne Merklinger said. “It’s going to help address sustainabi­lity across the whole system.”

Large organizati­ons with a lot of athletes and high equipment costs can receive more than $4 million a year in federal funding, and would thus be eligible for over a million dollars in pandemic relief.

The Canadian government, and by extension the Canadian taxpayer, is the largest investor in high-performanc­e sport at about $200 million annually.

OTP makes funding recommenda­tions directing $70 million of it in targeted excellence money — about $9 million comes from the COC — to sports federation­s whose athletes demonstrat­e medal potential.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada