![With its leadership gone, what's next for Hockey Canada?](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6613094.1665523106!/cpImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/hko-world-jr-canada-finalnd-20220820.jpg)
With its leadership gone, what's next for Hockey Canada?
CBC
Most of the major sponsors are gone — at least for now. The CEO and entire board of directors are stepping down. And the organization's reputation is in tatters.
How can Hockey Canada be rebuilt as an effective and trusted governing body for one of the country's most popular sports?
The solution, experts say, starts with the rather mundane (but crucial) task of selecting a new board.
"They just need to broaden where they're looking for people to come in, and that will help them rebuild this brand," said Paloma Raggo, an assistant professor at Carleton University's school of public policy and administration.
She says an organization the size of Hockey Canada needs experts who understand how a non-profit should operate, rather than simply having a passion for the sport.
The outgoing board, in her view, didn't know about or chose not to use the powers it had to police the organization, which might have helped prevent so much scandal.
"We're talking about one of the most important — if not the most important — sport in our country and a sport that deals with minors … families that bring their kids at five in the morning and the hockey rink. So people do care about what happens to the organization," she said.
Assembling new leadership also gives Hockey Canada an opportunity to carve a path as a leader in the sports world, says Sheldon Kennedy, a victims rights advocate and former NHL player. Hockey Canada has been under scrutiny over how it handled an alleged group sexual assault involving members of the 2018 men's national junior team.
Other similar allegations have surfaced, and Hockey Canada executives revealed the organization had paid $8.9 million in settlements to 21 sexual assault complainants since 1989, using a slush fund fed in part by membership fees from young players.
Kennedy says the organization must play a role in ensuring hockey is an inclusive sport from the grassroots level on up.
"Every time that a family, a young child — a young boy, a young girl — shows up at the rink, they have to be able to want to be coming back to that rink the next day," he told CBC News Network.
"This is about creating a healthy sport, this is about creating a healthy game, and I think we can get to the place where we can all be proud of this game again."
Hockey Canada functions as an umbrella organization for 13 member branches — many of which have also distanced themselves or cut ties — and establishes guidelines for hockey across the country. It also arranges for national teams to play in international tournaments.
Kennedy says the organization serves an important role, but that day-to-day activities at rinks across the country will go on while Hockey Canada sorts itself out.