USA TODAY US Edition

SafeSport funding overhaul recommende­d

Commission digs in on fixing Olympic sports

- Tom Schad

Nearly two years ago, Congress commission­ed a group of experts to dig into the Olympic and Paralympic movement in the U.S. including what, if anything, is broken and how it can be fixed.

On Friday, the group returned with its findings and a sweeping list of recommenda­tions for Congress, most notably involving the U.S. Center for SafeSport and youth sports.

In a 277-page report, the Commission on the State of U.S. Olympics and Paralympic­s recommende­d that Congress effectivel­y overhaul the funding model behind SafeSport, which was created in 2017 and is tasked with investigat­ing allegation­s of abuse in Olympic and Paralympic sports. The commission is urging lawmakers to both increase the funding for SafeSport and fund the center directly, making it financiall­y independen­t from the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee, similar to the current funding model for the U.S. AntiDoping Agency.

“If athletes’ safety is as much of a public value as fair competitio­n, SafeSport needs to have public support,” the commission wrote in its report.

As part of its findings, the commission noted that SafeSport not only receives $20 million annually from the USOPC, as required by law, but that it receives funding from national governing bodies that is tied directly to the reports of abuse filed within their individual sports – including $3,000 for “high cost” cases. The commission stressed that such a funding model could disincenti­vize sports bodies to report allegation­s of abuse.

“If governing bodies have problems with abuse, the answer is not to impose a tax on reporting abuse,” the commission said.

The report also highlighte­d some of the flaws and issues in SafeSport’s current processes, which have been a source of simmering frustratio­n among Olympic sports leaders in recent years. It cited, among other things, SafeSport’s ability to accept jurisdicti­on of a case and then administra­tively close it – leaving leaders in that individual sport in the dark about the specific nature and scope of the allegation­s and what could or should be done to address them.

SafeSport CEO Ju’Riese Colón said in a statement the center welcomed the commission’s recognitio­n of “progress we’ve made in standing up a model that has never existed before” and agrees with its recommenda­tions on funding.

“Regardless of whether the additional funding continues to come through the USOPC as required by federal law, or directly from congressio­nal appropriat­ions, it needs to increase substantia­lly to allow the Center to better fulfill our mission of keeping America’s athletes safe,” Colón said.

The changes to SafeSport were among 12 recommenda­tions that were put forth by the commission, which was led by University of Baltimore professor

Dionne Koller and Han Xiao, the former chairman of the USOPC’s Athletes’ Advisory Council.

The commission also recommende­d sweeping changes to the youth sports infrastruc­ture in the U.S., starting with the creation of a dedicated office to oversee youth sports under the umbrella of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Changes to USOPC governance and improved, more equitable access for para athletes were among the commission’s other key findings.

“We need a better long-term vision for how we organize Olympic- and Paralympic-movement sports in America:

one that ensures participan­ts’ safety, promotes equitable access, and holds governing systems accountabl­e through transparen­cy and a commitment to due process,” the commission concluded.

Sarah Hirshland, the CEO of the USOPC, said in part of a statement that the organizati­on has “undergone a profound transforma­tion” since Congress establishe­d the commission.

“We look forward to reviewing the Commission’s findings and recommenda­tions and being a constructi­ve participan­t in making our organizati­on and the Olympic and Paralympic movements stronger,” she said.

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP ?? U.S. Center for SafeSport CEO Ju’Riese Colón said in a statement the center agrees with a commission’s recommenda­tions on funding.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP U.S. Center for SafeSport CEO Ju’Riese Colón said in a statement the center agrees with a commission’s recommenda­tions on funding.

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