Penticton Herald

Hockey Canada throws support behind CEO

- By The Canadian Press

Hockey Canada’s board of directors says it is supporting president and chief executive officer Scott Smith and his executive team amid calls for leadership change at the organizati­on.

Interim board chair Andrea Skinner announced the backing of the organizati­on’s executive in a statement posted Monday on its website.

The statement did not detail a reason for the show of support, but said the board is undertakin­g “ongoing efforts to restore the trust of Canadians in hockey and Hockey Canada,” which include a governance review.

Canada’s governing body of hockey is under intense scrutiny for its handling of sexual assault allegation­s against members of previous men’s junior teams.

The federal government froze Hockey Canada’s funding after it was revealed the organizati­on had quietly settled a lawsuit with a woman who alleged she was sexually assaulted by members of the 2018 men’s junior team at Hockey Canada gala in London, Ont., that year.

Several of Hockey Canada’s corporate partners suspended their support of Hockey Canada after executives were grilled by MPs during a Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage meeting about the organizati­on’s response to the alleged assault. The results were evident at the world junior championsh­ip earlier this month in Edmonton, where the ice and boards at Rogers Place were almost completely free of advertisin­g.

Hockey Canada later said members of the 2003 junior team are under investigat­ion for alleged sexual assault in Nova Scotia.

Sheldon Kennedy, an advocate for sexual abuse survivors and one of James’s victims, has called on Hockey Canada’s leadership to resign. There has been cross-partisan support

for that sentiment from MPs on the heritage committee, which has twice heard testimony from Smith and other executives on their handling of the allegation­s.

So far, the only change at the top has been the resignatio­n of previous board chair Michael Brind’Amour, who stepped down Aug. 6 before his term ended in November.

Rob Koehler, the director general of Global Athlete, an internatio­nal athlete-led movement founded to address the balance of power between athletes and administra­tors, said he wasn’t surprised the board is publicly supporting Smith.

“Sport cannot self-regulate. Sport, like every industry, needs oversight, accountabi­lity and transparen­cy. Sport has none of these. Until the Canadian government demands these principles, sports will continue to be a breeding ground for abuse,” Kohler said.

The scrutiny on Hockey Canada tightened when it was revealed that the organizati­on

used its multimilli­on-dollar National Equity Fund, which comes from player fees, for uninsured payments including the settlement of sexual abuse claims.

Hockey Canada said at a heritage committee hearing on July 27 that it has paid out $7.6 million in nine settlement­s concerning sexual assault and sexual abuse claims since 1989, with $6.8 million of that related to serial abuser Graham James.

The organizati­on has said since that the fund will no longer be used to settle sexual assault settlement­s.

Smith has said he believes he is “the right person” to lead Hockey Canada but said he would respect the findings of the governance review.

The review, led by former Supreme Court judge Thomas Cromwell, is expected to provide interim recommenda­tions before Hockey Canada’s annual general meeting in November.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Witnesses Scott Smith, Hockey Canada president and chief operating officer, middle right, and Hockey Canada chief financial officer Brian Cairo, middle left, join fellow witnesses as they appear at the standing committee on Canadian Heritage in Ottawa last month.
The Associated Press Witnesses Scott Smith, Hockey Canada president and chief operating officer, middle right, and Hockey Canada chief financial officer Brian Cairo, middle left, join fellow witnesses as they appear at the standing committee on Canadian Heritage in Ottawa last month.

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