Hockey Canada's toxic secrecy has come to light
CBC
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The start of a new NHL season is bringing excitement and optimism to Canadian hockey fans this week. Connor McDavid's hat trick in Edmonton and the Habs' dramatic win over the Leafs in Montreal last night were two quick examples of the joy the pro game can deliver. Meanwhile, boys and girls around the country are getting back on the ice and reuniting with friends on their own teams. Hockey is back. And it feels good. At the same time, the darker side of the nation's favourite sport has been painfully visible this week as well. On Tuesday, Hockey Canada announced that CEO Scott Smith and its entire board of directors would step down, finally capitulating to months of pressure from sponsors, politicians and the public. The angry calls for the national governing body to clean house stemmed from its controversial handling of a young woman's $3.5-million lawsuit alleging a 2018 group sexual assault involving players from Canada's world junior championship team. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau reflected the country's frustration with the organization's leadership when he said last week: "If these individuals continue to be deluded enough to think there is a pathway forward for them to continue to run Hockey Canada, then Canadians will have no choice but look for another structure to run our national winter sport."
The main cause of Canadians' outrage toward Hockey Canada is its use of an opaque reserve fund — funded partly by kids' registration fees — to settle that lawsuit and others where Hockey Canada either couldn't or wouldn't get its insurance provider to cover the payments to claimants. Excluding the lawsuit over the 2018 alleged group sexual assault, which was settled this year for an unspecified amount, Hockey Canada has paid $8.9 million to 21 complainants since 1989. About three quarters of that money was tied to the case of Graham James, the former junior hockey coach accused of sexually abusing players on his teams. Hockey Canada officials told a parliamentary committee that it took $7.6 million out of the so-called National Equity Fund to make those payments, while the other $1.3 million came from insurance. In the wake of these revelations, Hockey Canada hired former Supreme Court justice Thomas Cromwell to review both its governance structure and its use of the National Equity Fund. Cromwell's final review isn't due until the end of the month, but an interim report was made available to the public today by Hockey Canada after CBC News published a story summarizing its main findings last night.
The common thread here is secrecy. That's what sparked the initial moral outrage from hockey parents and politicians and led to all those corporate sponsors abandoning ship. Now we have Cromwell picking that lack of transparency apart in a colder, more mechanical way, itemizing and detailing the exact nature of the shoddiness in some of Hockey Canada's practices. The election for a new board of directors has been delayed a month, to Dec. 17, so everyone can have time to digest Cromwell's full report once it's delivered. The fact that Hockey Canada released the preliminary report today and pledged to implement Cromwell's recommendations regarding the fund "as soon as possible" are promising signs that the organization is interested in repairing its reputation and regaining the public's confidence. But that's a pretty low bar, and it'll take a lot more changes to ensure Hockey Canada steps out of the shadows for good. Read more about Cromwell's findings and what's next for Hockey Canada here. You can read Crowmell's report here and read his memo here.