Solving safe sport crisis requires buy-in from all levels, says integrity commissioner

There are many stories in sport of coaches accused of abuse by one club or provincial organization moving to another club, province or even sport under the guise of jurisdictional boundaries, and nobody is smarter.
Abusive behavior can also go unchecked at the grassroots without universal rules of conduct, reporting, and suspension.
Six months after Canada’s new Office of Sports Integrity Commissioner began hearing cases, Sarah-Eve Pelletier said these are a few black holes in the fight against abuse in Canadian sport.
Pelletier, Canada’s first commissioner for sports integrity and a former artistic swimmer, testified on the safety of women and girls in sport at Monday’s meeting of the Standing Committee on the Status of Women.
Sports Secretary Pascale St-Onge said on Tuesday she plans to urge her provincial counterparts to speed up her efforts to investigate abuse in sports when she meets them at the Canadian Winter Games in Charlottetown on February 17-18.
“This must be done as soon as possible. I think we have an urgent matter before us,” St-Onge said. “We hear these stories of abuse and mistreatment at every level. It shouldn’t be a jurisdictional issue. All athletes should know who to turn to when faced with such situations.”
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Sports Secretary Pascale St-Onge says her office has made it mandatory for government-funded organizations to register with the Sports Integrity Commissioner’s office in order to receive government funding.
Provincial buy-in helpful
Pelletier said provincial buy-in will fill some of the gap.
“It’s really about making sure that all participants at all levels have consistent rules, consistent standards of behavior and then consistent ways to address them,” Pelletier said in an interview with The Canadian Press on Wednesday.
“Our services at the OSIC services are available to the provincial or territorial organizations that wish to use them. but that is not the point. It’s about making sure there’s a system in place that leaves no gaps. No gaps from the victims. No gaps for the survivors, and also no gaps for those looking for gaps in the system and looking for ways to do damage.
“My favorite word is ‘harmonized system’ because it doesn’t necessarily have to be just one solution, OSIC really hopes to be part of the solution.”
Quebec is the only province to have a provincial reporting mechanism, Sport’Aide, established in 2014 to address the growing problem of violence in sports there.
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“Time is running out”
Pelletier said OSIC had received 48 complaints as of Dec. 31, but only 25 percent had been admitted in the first quarter due to jurisdictional issues. That number rose to 33 percent in the second quarter, and Pelletier expects the percentage to increase as sports organizations become signers. St-Onge has set an April deadline to register before sports organizations risk losing federal funding.
“Time is of the essence and the sooner sports organizations join the program nationally, the better able we will be to handle cases relating to participants under that jurisdiction,” she said.
“Regarding our powers, we can impose sanctions on people who have allowed violations. We have the power to compel those who have joined our processes to participate. And we also have the mandate to keep a register [individuals who’ve received] sanctions.”
Pelletier said the entry point for athletes making a report is often through OSIC’s helpline. From there, she said, athletes receive legal aid and mental health referrals throughout the process.
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Four years ago, a CBC investigation found that more than 200 Canadian trainers had been charged with sexual offenses against minors in their care. Since then, at least 83 other coaches have been charged. CBC Sports’ Jamie Strashin describes the struggle the government and grassroots sports organizations are having to protect young athletes from abuse.
She added that when a complaint is inadmissible due to jurisdictional boundaries, OSIC is attempting to find an alternative avenue for complaint.
“In less than a third of those cases, we are able to find an alternative mechanism,” she said.
Because of this, Pelletier says she is “very passionate” about bringing about real change in Canadian sports culture.
“This cannot only happen on a national level. We really need prevention, education, starting with the young parents, starting with the young children who know their rights and their responsibilities, and that must be concrete and real at the association level, at the provincial level,” said Pelletier.
“It’s something that can be solved collectively if all levels of the system work together.”