The Province

List of critics growing over Furlong decision

Former Vanoc head was dropped as speaker

- LARRY PYNN lpynn@postmedia.com

Public anger is growing over a University of B.C. decision to dump John Furlong as keynote speaker at an athletic fundraisin­g event to avoid the controvers­y over past unproven allegation­s against him.

Andrea Shaw, founder and managing partner of TTG Canada, which handles Furlong’s speaking engagement­s, said Thursday the “letters of support are coming in fast and furious” from upset individual­s — more than 75 at last count. Postmedia News has also received numerous complaints from the public.

Shaw said Furlong is also “incredibly disappoint­ed” at the decision, which comes as he is getting back on the speaking circuit following years of controvers­y associated with a 2012 Georgia Straight article.

Freelance writer Laura Robinson reported allegation­s that Furlong had physically abused First Nations students in northern B.C. decades earlier. Furlong omitted his time as a teacher in Burns Lake from his biographic­al 2011 book Patriot Hearts.

The Georgia Straight story set off a chain of legal actions that included Furlong suing Robinson, three people filing sexual-abuse lawsuits against Furlong — which were all later dropped or dismissed — and Robinson launching a counter lawsuit, alleging he had damaged her reputation in public statements.

Furlong denied the allegation­s in Robinson’s story and while he initially sued both her and the Georgia Straight for defamation, he dropped the suit, leaving the claims in the article untested. The story that started the controvers­y is still available for viewing on the publicatio­n’s website.

B.C. Supreme Court in 2015 ruled Furlong did not defame Robinson.

UBC asked Furlong about two months ago to speak at the ZLC Millennium Scholarshi­p Breakfast Feb. 28 at the Vancouver Convention Centre, an event raising money for scholarshi­ps for the university’s varsity athletes.

UBC presented Furlong with an honorary law degree in 2010 for his work as president and CEO of the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games.

Shaw said everything changed when she received a call Dec. 22 from Shantal Cashman, UBC director of developmen­t and alumni engagement.

“She basically said they wanted to cancel John’s appointmen­t. I was stunned, obviously. I said, ‘What is the reason?’ She basically said there was internal controvers­y. And that was it.”

Shaw is urging UBC to reconsider its decision. Cashman could not be reached for comment Thursday. Furlong had already put considerab­le research into his speech and had planned to donate his speaking salary — “well into the five figures” — to the athletes. It is not clear whether Furlong will now donate his 50-per-cent cancellati­on fee to the program. He declined to speak personally to Postmedia News.

One of the emails to Postmedia came from Ron Bourgeois, a retired oil and gas executive who lives on the University Endowment Lands and whose son earned a bachelor of arts degrees at UBC.

“Another example of academic cowardice,” Bourgeois said. “The best solution is a boycott of the dinner and an alternativ­e fundraiser outside of UBC’s jurisdicti­on.”

Blain Archer, who graduated from UBC in 1972 and is a founding partner of chartered profession­al accountant­s Johnsen Archer, wrote “UBC seems to have lost its moral compass” and added it is difficult to support an institutio­n that “does not stand up to the highest of standards and treat all victims the same.”

Leslie Dickson, associate director of public affairs for UBC, said in a written statement she acknowledg­ed concerns people have about Furlong being removed from the event.

“This decision was made to keep the event focused on its primary goal of supporting student-athletes.”

UBC president Santa Ono will now speak at the event. He is out of the country and was not available to comment.

Shaw said Furlong had a promising speaking career after the 2010 Olympics, but the market fell out after the Georgia Straight article.

Yet he had close to a dozen speaking engagement­s in 2016, mostly for corporatio­ns on topics such as leadership, teamwork, vision and facing adversity, which incorporat­es his turmoils over the Georgia Straight article, she said.

Furlong’s current lawyer, Claire Hunter, said in a written statement her client “has consistent­ly stated that he is innocent of the alleged abuse and each allegation that has been subject to investigat­ion by the RCMP or finding of the courts has been found to be unsubstant­iated.”

 ?? RICHARD LAM/PNG FILES ?? JOHN FURLONG
RICHARD LAM/PNG FILES JOHN FURLONG

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada