The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

U.S. to WADA: ‘Sorry state of affairs’

- By Eddie Pells

DENVER » The U.S. government paid its remaining $1.3 million in dues to the World Anti-Doping Agency but delivered a brusque message along with the check, calling its absence from the regulator’s top decision-making boards a “sorry state of affairs.”

WADA announced having received the money Jan. 6, and President Witold Banka called the release of the funds a sign of support from the U.S. government.

But a pair of letters written by the director of the White House drug control office, Rahul Gupta, and obtained by The Associated Press, revealed the money was given despite major misgivings about both the way WADA operates and America’s standing within the agency.

The government has been critical of WADA

for not moving urgently enough to reform itself in the wake of the Russian doping scandal that has upended internatio­nal sports for most of the past decade. Gupta also highlighte­d the United States’ absence from WADA’s executive committee and foundation board, the two bodies that make the biggest decisions, despite the country’s outsized financial impact on the Olympic movement.

“Frankly, as I have learned more about the

Americas distributi­on of WADA Board seats I have become more and more concerned by this sorry state of affairs,” Gupta wrote this week in a letter to Banka.

Gupta noted that the U.S. is absent from the 38-person foundation board for the first time since 2000, the year after WADA was founded. It has not had a seat on the executive committee, which shapes the decisions that the foundation board generally approves, since 2015.

Decisions about North American government­s’ representa­tion on the boards are made not by WADA but by a North American sports council. Gupta didn’t let that bureaucrat­ic detail stifle his disdain with WADA’s role in the arrangemen­t.

“This situation — in which the world’s largest sporting country, the source of much of the funding generated for the Olympic

Movement through the sale of broadcast rights and sponsorshi­ps, and the largest government­al dues payer to WADA does not have a significan­t role in WADA decision making — is very problemati­c,” Gupta wrote in the letter to Banka.

In another letter, this one written last month to leaders in Congress, Gupta acknowledg­ed his office was releasing the final $1.3 million of a $2.93 million commitment for 2021, but not without serious reservatio­ns. When Congress appropriat­ed the money, it gave Gupta’s office power to withhold it.

“As the largest sporting nation in the Hemisphere and a key funder of WADA, paying half the dues of all of the Americas, it is not appropriat­e for the U.S. Government to be excluded from WADA’s key decisionma­king bodies,” Gupta wrote.

 ?? CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? World Anti-Doping Agency President. Witold Banka, in 2019.
CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE World Anti-Doping Agency President. Witold Banka, in 2019.

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