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Sport minister applauds Wrestling Canada sex-abuse probe

- LORI EWING

TORONTO Canada’s Sport Minister Kirsty Duncan said her mandate from Day 1 has been the health and safety of athletes.

Duncan applauded Wrestling Canada on Tuesday for being transparen­t about unhealthy and unsafe training environmen­ts in the sport after the national sport organizati­on commission­ed an independen­t review to investigat­e reports of sexual abuse.

The minister’s comments came a day after Canadian wrestlers penned an open letter to Duncan to stress the importance of an independen­t body to handle cases of harassment or abuse.

“We want to get it right,” Duncan said. “From Day 1, protecting the health and safety of our athletes has been my priority.

“Wrestling Canada, would there have been a report before? Now have a report from Wrestling Canada and that’s encouragin­g that that sport is looking inward. On social media, I was clear thanking them for the report being done, but said, ‘Now I expect change.’”

Whether or not Duncan will heed the athletes’ request for an independen­t third-party investigat­ing body remains to be seen.

“We find it concerning that National Sporting Organizati­ons (NSOS) are left to self-regulate complaints pertaining to safety, harassment and abuse,” the wrestlers said in their letter to Duncan. “Regardless of the intentions of the NSO, the current system of NSO led investigat­ions contain conflicts of interest that either directly bias the process or create the perception of bias. This has contribute­d to a strong sense of mistrust from athletes and a fear of reprisal that prevents adequate disclosure and reporting.”

The letter stemmed from an independen­t review by lawyer David Bennett that was commission­ed by Wrestling Canada after anonymous complaints of sexual abuse. Bennett’s Report Concerning Independen­t Review of Coaching Culture for Wrestling Canada Lutte outlined unhealthy and unsafe coaching practices.

“As athletes, we believe that an independen­t body is needed to review these complaints ... an independen­t body would demonstrat­e the federal government’s support of Safe Sport and would begin the process of restoring athletes’ trust in their governing bodies,” the letter said.

Safe sport has been governed through the Sport Canada accountabi­lity framework since it was implemente­d in 1996 in the wake of a sexual abuse scandal involving former junior hockey coach Graham James. National sport organizati­ons must have a safe-sport policy — and a designated individual to handle complaints — in place to receive government funding.

Critics have claimed policies aren’t always satisfacto­rily applied. And depending on the size and budget of an NSO, harassment officers can be anyone from a volunteer to the organizati­on’s CEO.

“At times it doesn’t feel safe or comfortabl­e for an athlete to come forward because we don’t want to put our goal, our lifelong dream of making an Olympic Games, in jeopardy,” Olympic gold medallist Erica Wiebe told The Canadian Press. “Sometimes it’s this fear of keeping the status quo rather than shifting the boat because there’s been no independen­t body that we can go to and feel safe.”

Retired skier Kelly Vanderbeek tweeted her support Tuesday, writing: “NSOS protecting the coaches (and public optics) over the athletes is something I’ve witnessed & experience­d throughout my athletic career. A third-party body to handle cases of harassment & abuse is a needed step in structurin­g change.”

Duncan, who’s also Canada’s minister of science, assumed minister of sport and persons with disabiliti­es duties in January. With the ongoing #Metoo movement plus sexual harassment and assault cases linked to Alpine Canada, the Canadian Olympic Committee and Gymnastics Canada, plus the high-profile sexual assault sentencing of U.S. gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar, her tenure comes during a watershed moment in sport.

“From Week 1 in this job, my priority has been putting athletes at the centre of the system and there is nothing more important to me. There’s nothing more important than protecting the health and safety of our athletes,” Duncan said. “My two priorities that I went to the department with, one was abuse, discrimina­tion and harassment and the second one was concussion­s.”

Duncan announced in June tougher measures to eliminate harassment, abuse and discrimina­tion in sport. To be eligible for government funding, each NSO must disclose any incidents of abuse or harassment to the minister, must provide — within its framework — access to an independen­t third party to address abuse and harassment and must provide mandatory training on harassment and abuse to members by April 2020.

“I’ve been clear from the beginning that this is a start. It is going to take all of us working all together. It’s going to be the coaches, the athletes, the families, government­s, all of us, to ensure a safe-sport environmen­t,” Duncan said.

The 2018 federal budget also committed $30 million toward gender equality in sport by 2035. With that aim, Duncan establishe­d the Working Group on Gender Equity in Sport in April, an illustriou­s collection of sports minds that includes hockey star Hayley Wickenheis­er, soccer coach John Herdman and Waneek Horn-miller, an Olympian in water polo and an advocate for First Nations rights.

“What I said to them when I called them (was), ‘I’m not looking for another report. We know the issues, we know the problems. What I’m searching for is actions that I can implement,’” Duncan said.

The non-partisan subcommitt­ee on concussion­s will also reconvene next month. The subcommitt­ee, chaired by Liberal MP Peter Fonseca, has been tasked with delivering recommenda­tions on how to make sports safer and protecting youth from concussion­s.

It is going to take all of us working all together. It’s going to be the coaches, the athletes, the families, government­s ... to ensure a safe-sport environmen­t.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? While applauding Wrestling Canada’s review into reports of sexual abuse, federal Sport Minister Kirsty Duncan has yet to respond to athletes’ calls for an independen­t investigat­ive body.
JUSTIN TANG/THE CANADIAN PRESS While applauding Wrestling Canada’s review into reports of sexual abuse, federal Sport Minister Kirsty Duncan has yet to respond to athletes’ calls for an independen­t investigat­ive body.

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