The Standard (St. Catharines)

Cash coming for Canadian athletes

Consortium to provide $5M to help Olympic and Paralympic competitor­s

- DONNA SPENCER THE CANADIAN PRESS

Canada’s athletes face increased manpower and facility costs, plus regular testing, when they return to the pool, track, gym and pitch.

The purpose of the $5 million jointly announced Monday by the Canadian Olympic and Paralympic committees and Own The Podium is to cover those extra costs imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The money will come from cutbacks to other programs, COC chief executive David Shoemaker said.

“We want to make sure, if our athletes across the country are returning to training, that they’re doing so in a way that’s not just safe for them, but is also safe for their families and safe for their communitie­s,” he said on a conference call.

“Just as public health was our North Star when Canadian athletes decided to stop training back in March, public health will remain our North Star as we begin a phased-in approach to return to sport.”

The Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games scheduled to open in July were postponed until 2021.

Canadian athletes, particular­ly those in indoor sports, have been largely confined to training at home since March.

The federal government announced last month a $72-million injection into the amateur sport system to try to keep organizati­ons afloat.

“While the government’s investment was focused and aimed at the viability of sport, for us, this investment is aimed at the return to sport and they’re slightly different focuses, but important,” Shoemaker explained. “Our role as spor tperforman­ce partners nationally and specifical­ly for the Canadian Olympic Committee, is to invest in putting Canadian athletes and Canadian teams on podiums.”

Swimming Canada released guidelines Friday on what training groups must look like when pools get the green light from public health officials to open.

The four pools where the national team trains in Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver and Saanich, B.C., are currently closed.

One swimmer per lane in the early phases means smaller training groups in the pool over several hours, thus increasing hours for coaches, staff and facility rental.

“Our norm is to have a full training squad all in the pool at the same time,” Swimming Canada CEO Ahmed El-awadi said.

“Definitely the costs will increase in the short term. These funds come into play and are supercriti­cal in kick-starting the high-performanc­e program.”

Paralympic athletes requiring physical assistance to pursue their sport may face extra challenges upon return, according to Canadian Paralympic Committee CEO Karen O’neill.

“If an athlete needs some care with transfer, how do we look at all elements in that environmen­t to make sure it’s safe and healthy, with equipment transfer either into a chair or a canoe/kayak or a sport chair?” O’neill asked.

Own The Podium makes funding recommenda­tions distributi­ng $70 million annually to national sport organizati­ons based on medal potential, and also provides technical advice to those bodies.

A return-to-sport task force, chaired by OTP head Anne Merklinger, has yet to determine how the $5 million will be distribute­d.

“This is our next conversati­on at the task-force level,” said Merklinger.

“When you look at outdoor sport, their ability to return to sport will vary greatly compared to an indoor aquatic sport, for example, where you have more sophistica­ted protocols, sanitizing and cleaning methodolog­ies required.”

Shoemaker was hopeful, but not certain, that all Canadian sport bodies will survive the pandemic.

“The COVID-19 pandemic and the postponeme­nt of the Olympic and Paralympic Games has had very significan­t impact across sport in Canada,” he said. “Certain national sports organizati­ons are suffering severely from it.

“The government announced a $72-million investment that was designed in large part to make sure our sport organizati­ons remain viable going forward. I like to think that will be the case. The story is not completed on COVID-19. We don’t know how this all finishes yet. We can’t be certain as we sit here today that will solve the problem.”

As with pro athletes, Olympians and Paralympia­ns will require regular testing as they mix with staff and other athletes upon return to training.

“It’s certainly within our contemplat­ion that this investment could go toward having the capacity with machines and test kits to test Canadian athletes, coaches and support systems in institutes and other training centres for COVID-19 and other infectious disease,” Shoemaker said.

 ?? JASON FRANSON
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Penny Oleksiak wins the 100-metre freestyle event at the 2018 Team Canada finals in Edmonton on July 19, 2018. Testing, extra coaching and facility rental are costs the people who run Canadian high-performanc­e sport anticipate in getting Olympians and Paralympia­ns back to training.
JASON FRANSON THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Penny Oleksiak wins the 100-metre freestyle event at the 2018 Team Canada finals in Edmonton on July 19, 2018. Testing, extra coaching and facility rental are costs the people who run Canadian high-performanc­e sport anticipate in getting Olympians and Paralympia­ns back to training.

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