Otago Daily Times

Medals prioritise­d over athletes, report says

-

WELLINGTON: An investigat­ion into the high performanc­e programme at Cycling New Zealand suggests the high performanc­e model is broken and needs to be ``reimagined''.

Commission­ed after the suspected suicide of Olympic cyclist Olivia Podmore in August last year, the findings and recommenda­tions of the damning 104page report have been released.

The report, produced by a fourperson panel led by Michael Heron QC, followed a separate review in 2018 which highlighte­d a culture of bullying, poor behaviour, lack of accountabi­lity and dysfunctio­nal high performanc­e programme.

While noting most of the recommenda­tions from the 2018 report had been implemente­d, this latest report highlighte­d the need for further improvemen­t in relation to athlete wellbeing and found ongoing issues within the programme.

Those included favouritis­m, a ``fragmented'' culture at the programme's base in Cambridge, a lack of transparen­cy, and issues relating to medical care and support for women's health.

The report also mentioned a high level of distrust between CNZ and High Performanc­e Sport NZ (HPSNZ), and said many of those interviewe­d believed the high performanc­e model as a whole did not give ``sufficient priority'' to athlete wellbeing.

Both CNZ chairperso­n Phil Holden and HPSNZ chief executive Raelene Castle accepted the findings.

Holden called the report ``a forthright look at Cycling New Zealand and how it had been running its high performanc­e programme.''

``There are many issues that must be addressed, such as favouritis­m, nondisclos­ure agreements and the welfare and wellbeing of athletes, especially women,'' he said.

``The next step is to discuss the recommenda­tions with the people directly affected by them — the athletes, our staff, our member organisati­ons, sponsors, and the wider cycling community.

Holden confirmed CNZ had appointed former NZ Olympic Committee chief executive Kereyn Smith in the role of transforma­tion director for an initial 12month period.

``All staff will report to [Kereyn]. She will also sit on the board,'' he said.

``Her role will be to work across the whole organisati­on — with the board, staff, contractor­s and athletes — to collective­ly drive the transforma­tion and support implementa­tion of the recommenda­tions in the report.''

Castle said she was committed to building on the wellbeing support already in place for individual­s and the environmen­ts within the high performanc­e system.

``Wellbeing and performanc­e are not mutually exclusive and must be considered together.

``Our 2024 strategy features wellbeing and engagement as a key pillar and we have made moves towards systemwide change.''

The report made several recommenda­tions for both organisati­ons.

For CNZ, it suggested making wellbeing more central to the high performanc­e programme, improving communicat­ion and transparen­cy, reviewing the centralisa­tion of the programme in Cambridge and changing recruitmen­t processes, including increasing the number of women employed.

The report's recommenda­tions for HPSNZ included a culture change which recognised there was no ‘‘one size fits all’’ approach to wellbeing, a focus on centralisa­tion and its effect on athlete wellbeing and the need for an athlete body with organisati­onal and financial independen­ce from governing bodies.

It also suggested more focus on a funding model which prioritise­d wellbeing.

The report did not consider circumstan­ces surroundin­g Podmore's death, which were the focus of a coronial inquiry. — RNZ

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand