Daily Press (Sunday)

Shadowed by controvers­y

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HALIFAX, Nova Scotia — The world junior hockey championsh­ip will be held in Canada the next two weeks, shadowed by Hockey Canada’s handling of explosive sexual assault allegation­s.

The national hockey governing body has been mired in controvers­y for months after it was revealed in May that it settled a lawsuit with a woman who says she was sexually assaulted by several members of the 2018 world junior team. In July, Halifax Regional Police began investigat­ing allegation­s that members of the 2003 team sexually assaulted a woman and filmed the attack during that tournament.

No charges have been filed. Within the past week, police in London, Ontario, said they have grounds to believe a woman was sexually assaulted by five players on that Canadian 2018 team.

Hockey Canada executives in July also revealed that they paid out $8.9 million in sexual abuse settlement­s since 1989, excluding the 2018 deal. The organizati­on elected a new board of directors Dec. 17 and is still searching for a new chief executive officer. The previous board resigned and president and CEO Scott Smith was ousted as a result of the controvers­ies.

Kyle Wagner of Halifax said the scandals have sparked discussion­s in the dressing room of his eightyear-old son’s team ahead of this year’s world junior tournament hosted jointly by Halifax and Moncton, New Brunswick. The event begins Monday.

“An eight-year-old is smart, because my son knows that there’s controvers­y this year in hockey, and while he doesn’t know a whole lot of the details, he knows that some things were done that were wrong and horrible,” Wagner said.

The revelation that Hockey Canada maintained a fund drawing on minor hockey membership fees to pay for uninsured liabilitie­s, including sexual abuse claims, fueled an uproar earlier this year. Sponsors withdrew, the national sports minister stripped Hockey Canada of federal funding and the governing body’s leaders were sharply questioned by parliament.

Hockey Canada’s new board chairman, retired judge Hugh L. Fraser, felt it was his duty to step up and help heal the sport with eight new directors.

“Very dispiritin­g, very discouragi­ng,” Fraser said of his reaction to Hockey Canada’s disastrous 2022 in a recent interview with The Canadian Press. “I had the same question everyone asked: ‘How could this happen?’”

The backlash from the public and politician­s was swift.

“It’s hard for anyone in Canada to have faith or trust in anyone at Hockey Canada,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said July 19. He also said there needed to be a “real reckoning” at the organizati­on.

Now it falls to Fraser, who has nearly three decades of experience at the Ontario court of justice in Ottawa, and the board to pick a new CEO and chart Hockey Canada’s future.

“When I look at some of the things that happened — the allegation­s of abuse and even racism, misogyny — you really feel that if you have an opportunit­y to get involved, to do something, to help make a change, that it’s one you shouldn’t let pass,” he told CP.

 ?? RON WARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The world junior hockey championsh­ip will be held in Canada over the next two weeks amid fallout from Hockey Canada‘s handling of explosive sexual assault allegation­s tied to its world junior team in 2003 and 2018.
RON WARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS The world junior hockey championsh­ip will be held in Canada over the next two weeks amid fallout from Hockey Canada‘s handling of explosive sexual assault allegation­s tied to its world junior team in 2003 and 2018.

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