Sports abuse probe lacks teeth, critics say
Toronto Star|February 04, 2024
Federal minister rejects calls for a full inquiry, saying commission process will be better for victims
JOY SPEARCHIEF-MORRIS
Sports abuse probe lacks teeth, critics say

OTTAWA The federal government's commission to investigate abuse in the sports system lacks "teeth" and the power to hold national sport organizations and abusers accountable for decades of toxic culture, critics say.

The federal government announced The Future of Sport in Canada Commission on Dec. 11 after athletes testified before the Heritage and Status of Women committees in recent months about abuse in Canadian sport. Last week, five professional hockey players were charged following a London police investigation into an alleged sexual assault involving Canada's 2018 world junior hockey team.

But athletes, sport advocates and MPs are calling for a full public inquiry, which they say would have the judicial standing to hold sport organizations accountable and provide a stronger mandate for change.

Participation in the commission is voluntary, while an inquiry would allow witnesses, documents or organizations like Hockey Canada to be subpoenaed, which holds the process and any recommendations to a standard akin to a court proceeding.

When the Standing Committee on the Status of Women released its report in June, it recommended a national public inquiry into the issue.

But the minister of sport and physical activity has said the commission is "expressly" not a public inquiry under the Public Inquiry Act.

Rather, it will be modelled after the Truth and Reconciliation Commission which investigated the experiences of residential school survivors and be "trauma informed, victim-centred," and "forward looking" to provide solutions.

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