The Daily Courier

Ex-CFL star asks Supreme Court to let concussion lawsuit proceed

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VANCOUVER (CP) — A former Canadian Football League star receiver who says he sustained “permanent and disabling” repetitive head trauma as a player has asked the Supreme Court of Canada to allow his lawsuit against the league to proceed.

Arland Bruce III says in court documents that he continues to suffer post-concussive symptoms, including depression, paranoia, delusions and other medical issues. He played for 13 years with several CFL teams.

Two lower courts in British Columbia have dismissed the suit because Canada’s top court has previously ruled that unionized employees must use labour arbitratio­n — not the courts — to resolve disputes that arise from their collective agreement.

Bruce’s lawyers filed leave to appeal to the high court last Friday. In court documents, they argue the CFL collective agreement is unusual because athletes individual­ly negotiate their pay, have no long-term disability insurance plan, are excluded from occupation­al health and safety regulation­s and are not entitled to workers compensati­on.

“We have a gap of injured workers who are vulnerable ... now falling through the cracks,” said Robyn Wishart, a lawyer for Bruce, in an interview on Wednesday.

The CFL said in a statement it cannot comment because the matter is before the courts. The league has 30 days to file a response.

Bruce’s first CFL game was in 2001 for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers and he finished his career in 2014 as a member of the Montreal Alouettes. He played for teams across Canada including for the Toronto Argonauts, Hamilton Tiger-Cats and B.C. Lions.

None of the allegation­s filed with the Supreme Court of Canada has been proven.

Bruce’s lawyers allege in the documents that he suffers from symptoms associated with chronic traumatic encephalop­athy (CTE), a degenerati­ve disease linked to repeated blows to the head.

Despite displaying the ongoing effects of concussion­s, Bruce was led to believe by the CFL that the link between repetitive brain trauma and CTE was unproven, his lawyers allege.

In 2011, the league circulated a one-page concussion flyer to 750,000 Canadian coaches, athletes and parents that purported to contain all the “important informatio­n” one needed to know and downplayed the dangers, the documents allege.

The campaign omitted preventati­ve measures that are critical to avoiding repetitive brain trauma, the documents allege, including the “three strikes, you’re out” principle that says athletes who suffer three concussion­s in a season must sit out for the rest of the season.

The court documents allege that in September 2012, Bruce was knocked unconsciou­s for several minutes after an in-game collision, but he returned to active play 42 days later, relying on informatio­n from the CFL’s concussion-awareness campaign.

Bruce’s lawyers argue that Canada is at a crossroads when it comes to addressing risks associated with contact sports and concussion injuries. Parents need to understand what long-term risks their children will face by pursuing a career in profession­al sports, they say.

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