The Hamilton Spectator

Canadian sport ‘can’t be all about medals’

- DONNA SPENCER

Canadian sports minister Pascale St-Onge says emphasis on athletes winning medals needs to change because of the recent explosion of abuse and maltreatme­nt complaints across the country.

“It can’t only be about medals and podiums,” she told a parliament­ary committee hearing Monday in Ottawa. “We have to talk about the safety of athletes and their wellbeing as a whole.”

Redefining the term “excellence” in the national sport policy would represent a shift away from the high-performanc­e mandate establishe­d ahead of the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver and Whistler, B.C.

The performanc­e of the host team was considered integral to the success of the those Games, so Canadian taxpayers would feel they got bang for their Olympic buck.

Canadian teams posted large medal hauls in 2010 and at subsequent Summer and Winter Olympic Games, but pressure to perform and reach the podium has also been cited as a reason for a toxic culture of silence around abuse of athletes.

“The discussion is truly about how do we define excellence. In previous mandates, I would say it was about medals and podiums,” StOnge said. “Now, we need to take into account the excellence of the organizati­ons themselves, how they take the well-being of athletes into a holistic approach.”

Taxpayers are the largest funder of Olympic and Paralympic sport in Canada at over $200 million annually.

St-Onge, who was appointed sports minister two years ago, was grilled by the Standing Committee on the Status of Women as part of its hearings into women and girls in sport.

Among those who have appeared before the committee and given harrowing testimony, Canadian cyclist Genevieve Jeanson said in December her coach first hit her at the age of 14, sexually assaulted her at 15 and gave her performanc­e-enhancing drugs at 16.

“There is simply no reason, no justificat­ion for sport to be synonymous with abuse,” St-Onge said Monday.

The minister was questioned about a national public inquiry into abuse in sport, a registry of coaches to prevent abusers from moving to other jurisdicti­ons and how StOnge intends to use her power to fund and defund sports organizati­ons as a means to stop abuse.

Her department oversees 70 national sport organizati­ons among the 94 bodies under its umbrella.

St-Onge establishe­d the office of the sport integrity commission­er (OSIC) last year with former artistic swimmer Sarah-Ève Pelletier appointed its first commission­er.

All organizati­ons must be signatorie­s to that office by April 1 or risk losing their federal funding.

Forty-three have signed on so far, St-Onge said, but Pelletier’s reach so far doesn’t extend to the provincial or club level.

Some complaints have been rejected because they’ve been deemed outside of the commission­er’s jurisdicti­on.

“Even if all national sports organizati­on sign on, there will still be a huge gap, one we cannot ignore,” St-Onge said. “While the federal government and national sports organizati­ons are responsibl­e for about 3,700 athletes, the vast majority of cases of abuse and maltreatme­nt happen outside the federal scope.

“They happen in local clubs, leagues and gyms, all of which are within the responsibi­lity of provincial territoria­l and local authority.”

St-Onge will meet with territoria­l and provincial sport counterpar­ts Saturday and Sunday in Prince Edward Island at the start of the Canada Winter Games.

She will urge them to either sign onto OSIC or establish their own independen­t safe sport reporting mechanism as Quebec and New Brunswick have done.

“There’s a huge gap in the system,” the minister said. “It needs to be closed as soon as possible. Regardless of the level, a child entering this sports system should know where to turn if they’ve experience­d situations that are unacceptab­le.”

New Democratic MP Bonita Zarrillo accused St-Onge of “passing the buck” and Bloc Québécois MP Sébastien Lemire didn’t believe StOnge was doing enough fast enough for safe sport.

“Time is of the essence,” Lemire said. “You’ve had your mandate for over a year and I don’t believe that sports have been safer since. We can see that things only move when they’ve been made public. If not, the machine just protects itself.

“We need an independen­t inquiry so we can understand so we can understand the mechanisms.”

Lemire echoed calls from various quarters, including athletes, for a national public inquiry.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Canada women’s national soccer team goalkeeper Stephanie Labbé holds her gold medal from the Tokyo Olympics. Pressure to perform and reach the podium has been cited as a reason for a toxic culture of silence around abuse of athletes in Canada.
DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Canada women’s national soccer team goalkeeper Stephanie Labbé holds her gold medal from the Tokyo Olympics. Pressure to perform and reach the podium has been cited as a reason for a toxic culture of silence around abuse of athletes in Canada.

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