:
Good afternoon, everyone. I'd like to call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 88 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, as you know, pursuant to the House of Commons order of Thursday, June 23, 2022.
Now pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Tuesday, September 20, 2022, the committee is meeting to continue its study on safe sport in Canada. We have the Honourable Kirsty Duncan with us for the first round.
Before that, if you don't mind, Ms. Duncan, we do have a little bit of budget to look at.
We have the request in front of us here. In order to conclude the study of safe sport in Canada, a supplementary budget was drafted and distributed to members on Wednesday. You did get this yesterday.
Is it the will then of the committee to adopt the supplementary budget in the amount of $6,250?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: That's approved.
Go ahead, Ms. Gladu.
Welcome, then, to the Honourable Kirsty Duncan.
To be honest with you, we're very happy to see you. I'm sure it took a lot of courage for you today to come to committee instead of joining us by video conference. Thank you for coming in person. We did hug you. We did have some conversation.
If you don't mind, the floor is yours now, Ms. Duncan, and you have five minutes, please.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee and colleagues. Thank you for the kind and warm welcome.
I want to thank you all for undertaking this important study.
I must also thank not only the extraordinary athletes who made the year 2022 the year of athlete advocacy and courageously came forward with their stories of abuse, but also the athletes and their families who have come forward over decades. We owe them our gratitude, and we must do everything in our power to address the many years of abuse and the entrenchment of that abuse—emotional, physical, psychological, sexual and verbal abuse.
Canada's national sport system was never built to protect athletes and young people. It was built to have fit men for war. After Canada “failed” to win a gold medal at the 1976 Montreal Olympics, sport changed in our country. We felt it across sport and right down to the club level. The goals had changed, and the goals were to compete for Canada and to win medals for the nation.
In the 1980s, some sports federations and coaches put the health, safety and well-being of athletes far behind winning. Athletes were experimented on. They inserted fake bladders with clean urine and young athletes injected older athletes between their toes with performance-enhancing drugs to hide the drug use. The 1988 Dubin inquiry into the use of drugs and banned practices exposed the extent of the rot and made dozens of recommendations, which government implemented and which made Canada a leader in the war against doping in sport.
We need that same leadership now. Our athletes should not have to beg, for over a year now, for us to do the right thing and move forward with an inquiry into an outdated sport system. In 1988, an inquiry was called in less than two weeks, and it cost $3 million.
My first recommendation is that the government hold an independent, comprehensive, systematic inquiry focused on the health, safety and well-being of athletes.
My second recommendation is that a systematic inquiry needs to start with the athletes, be trauma-informed and survivors must be fully empowered to speak their truths should they so choose.
In the 1990s, hockey player Sheldon Kennedy bravely came forward with revelations of years of sexual abuse at the hands of his junior coach. His story should have been a wake-up call to the Canadian hockey community and to the entire sport system. It wasn't.
I come at this discussion from the perspective of a high-performance athlete. As a gymnast, I did double back somersaults in the air from the floor. I ran the Boston Marathon many times, and I competed in half Ironmans. I have been a coach, a dance teacher and a judge throughout my life. As you know, I also served as the Minister of Sport, and I made safe sport my number one priority.
In the year I served as minister, I put in place the first broad strokes of a safe sport system, including a national helpline, a third party investigator, an agreement from every sport minister across Canada to make safe sport a priority, 13 safe sport summits, mandatory prevention training and funding, and the development of a coaching code of conduct.
With regard to my third recommendation, the spoken and unspoken rules of each sport, the power differentials that exist among the national sport organization—coach, trainer, medical support, members and others—and the concept of owning athletes and prioritizing winning championships over athlete health, safety and well-being need to be investigated.
My fourth recommendation is that Sport Canada's safe sport measures, accountability and financial instruments developed to ensure compliance need to be examined.
Fifth, national sport organizations and their collective power need to be investigated, as well as governance accountability and finances and how sport leaders circulated among NSOs and reinforced relationships and protections.
My sixth recommendation is that an inquiry review data on all forms of abuse in sport on a sport-by-sport basis.
My last and most important recommendation is that a thorough investigation be undertaken about whether cases of abuse were effectively resolved and perpetrators removed from the system, or were there passive enablers in place who protected the sport and the organization over the protection of young people?
The time is now for a national public inquiry. If Canada gets it right, we can better protect our athletes. We can also be a catalyst for a long-overdue global conversation on athlete health, safety and well-being, as we were in the aftermath of Dubin 35 years ago.
With your indulgence, Mr. Chair, I would like to say this very briefly to those who are living with cancer: Know that you're not alone and that I stand with you. I'm grateful for the life-saving medicine, science and compassionate and excellent care of our health care professionals.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
:
Thank you, Ms. Gladu. I hear that congratulations are in order for you and your family on the birth of a new granddaughter.
I am hoping that with an inquiry we will see what we saw 35 years ago with the precedent set by former chief justice of Ontario Charles Dubin. He took a systematic approach. He left no stone unturned. He looked at everything—athlete rights, multiple sports, policies, procedures and finances. He exposed the rot and the extent of that rot. He made dozens of recommendations. The government chose which ones to implement. He opened the world's eyes to doping in sport.
I think we have an opportunity here, as hard as it will be. You folks have all done the hard work this last year, listening to these brave and courageous athletes come forward and hearing their stories. It's hard. These stories are decades old. This has been going on for decades. If we do not have an inquiry, we will not get to the bottom of this. In sport, abuse is decades old. It's entrenched. It's complex. In some cases, it's athletes who are abused and harassed by coaches and judges and other support staff. In other cases, it's athletes who become predators and assault those only tangentially linked to the sport system. In other cases, it's athletes abusing other athletes. It's complex.
The only way to get to this complexity is through a national public inquiry. I think we are finally at a moment in time where we cannot lose this moment. There is an understanding that this is a problem, and we cannot afford to fail our children. The time is now.
Thank you, my colleague, Honourable Kirsty Duncan, for being here with us today.
You and I have spoken about these issues already, and I know that when you were named Minister of Sport, the key thing in your head was that it was about children. It was about protecting children, and they were always foremost in your mind.
You taught children. You were a dance teacher to children. That was your whole world.
You have talked to us a little bit about the things you, as sports minister, implemented. Tell us a bit more about those and about how you kept children and protecting children in the forefront the whole time.
:
Thank you, Ms. Hepfner. You and I have talked long about these issues.
Outside of teaching at the university, my life was coaching and teaching dance. My whole life was devoted to young people. I really believe that every athlete should go to practice excited and looking forward to practice, to being in the gym, on the field or on the rink, and that they should look forward to being physically fit, to being trained by good coaches who want to develop good athletes and good people, and that they should enjoy sport and share the love of sport.
I also know the darker side of sport. While I have not experienced the horrific abuse that you have heard about at this committee, I am a former gymnast and I know what it's like to be told to eat Jell-o, laxatives, toilet paper and water pills, and what it's like to be weighed and shamed. I wanted to do everything so that no young person would ever face that going forward. That's why I said that my number one priority was ending abuse and having safe sport, and I said to the sport community and to officials that we are drawing a line in the sand and the days of hear no evil, see no evil in sport are over. We have a duty of care to our athletes, and we need to make it easier for athletes to come forward. There is a responsibility to get the perpetrators and the enablers out of the system.
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It took a lot of work to get all ministers committed to taking action in their provinces to end abuse, discrimination and harassment.
What I'd like to see going forward, as I said, is that this be on every federal-provincial-territorial meeting. I'd like to see the data. I would like to know.... I know when I was able to put in the telephone line, the helpline, we started getting actual data on abuse in this country.
I think we need to see that from the provinces and territories. I want to see it by sport and what it looks like for emotional, physical, psychological, sexual, verbal.... I want to know if those cases are going up or down. Are they being effectively managed? Are we measuring whether these cases are being effectively managed? Do the claimant and the defendant feel that they were treated fairly? Has this been happening over time? How many of our families, coaches and support staff are going through yearly training on safe sport?
We need all of that information.
Ms. Duncan, I am very moved to have you joining us today and, especially, to hear your testimony. You have contributed greatly to the situation we know today, where there seems to be a virtually unanimous desire within the sports community. Organizations such as Own The Podium and the Canadian Olympic Committee are even in favour of launching an independent public inquiry.
During the discussions of a few months ago, we were somewhat alone in calling for an independent public inquiry, and you have advocated for it with the self-confidence that is your hallmark. I want to thank you for that.
I would like you to tell us about your experience. You were responsible for sports as the Minister of Science and Sport, and later as Minister for Sport and Persons with Disabilities. What is the greatest legacy that you have left in these roles?
Again, I want to thank you for your efforts. I want to thank everyone at this committee for their efforts.
I think the hardest thing, back in 2018, was literally drawing a line in the sand and starting a new conversation in this country about safe sport. This had been a taboo subject for many years. To start that conversation and to say that the days of hear no evil, see no evil were over....
I'm going to take you back to October of 2017. The #MeToo movement was making headlines around the world. In January of 2018, the U.S.A. gymnastics team's Larry Nassar received an effective life sentence after abusing over 150 gymnastics over two decades. I was appointed minister a month later. I did receive surprise that I was going to tackle safe sport. There was push-back.
As I said, I couldn't have come from the background I come from, with what I have witnessed and having spent my life protecting children, without starting that conversation. I think what your committee has done is that you have raised this conversation to the national level. I think the time is right to have this national public inquiry.
Thank you, Mr. Lemire.
:
Thank you for the question. It's an important question to ask.
I had one goal, which was to put in as many protections as I could in the time available to me. When I came in, we started at needing to have a policy and needing to have a third party investigator. We were starting from zero.
I was literally building the start of a safe sport system. We've made progress. We have many kilometres to go to build that safe sport system in this country. That's why that inquiry is going to be so important. I think it's really the next step.
My job was to put in the protections. When I looked at what happened in the United States, I knew that should have provoked a national conversation on numerous sports. It didn't happen. It looked like it was always going to be a sport-by-sport reckoning. My job was to put in place those protections.
We're at the right place. It's the right moment in time now for that inquiry. Let's not fail our children.
:
When I came in, in 2018, there was no mandate for safe sport.
I chose to do this. I chose to do this, because as much as I love sport.... I live sport. It's where I come from. It's where I get to twist and somersault through the air, and it's where I get to marvel at the talent, commitment and dedication of our athletes. But I also know a darker side, so I was determined that I would work on this.
It was not always easy. I was lucky to have someone from outside of government who was very committed to safe sport. When I went to Korea for the Olympics about two weeks after being appointed and I was asked what I wanted to do and I said, “safe sport”, from officials there was surprise. I sort of took us through it. We've had #MeToo. We've seen Larry Nassar. I'm a former gymnast. I know this world, but there was surprise and there was push-back.
As I said, there was also push-back from some corners of the sport community. I think, again, that this is why the inquiry really matters. We have to shine a light on the darkest recesses of the sport system if we're going to make change, and the only way to do this is through an inquiry.
:
Ms. Duncan, it's so good to see you. We miss you. We wish you all the best and a speedy recovery. Thank you for being with us today.
I want to talk to you about what you endeavoured to bring to the sports ministry. We came into this study looking initially at just Hockey Canada, and then, over the course of the past year, the further we looked, the more serious things became. I note that you really made a serious attempt to address these issues well before they were part of the public domain. I thank you for that.
I want to quote from CBC news going back to January 27. You said, to quote the article, that the government failed to build momentum behind your efforts to prevent harassment, abuse and discrimination, and you even faced “push-back” from people within your own government when you made tackling abuse a top priority in your time as sports minister.
Could you describe that a little bit more? You've talked about NSOs and their push-back. Could you talk a bit more about push-back from the government?
:
Thank you, Mr. Julian, for your kindness. It's good to see all of you too. It's nice to be back with you.
To your point, it has been sport's dirty secret for decades. This was not a well-known issue unless you came from sport or had lived through this. For some people who were from sport, they felt that my doing safe sport could damage sport. We saw this back in 1988. There were people who thought that the Dubin inquiry would damage sport, but sport continued. The Paralympics and Olympics continued. Sport got stronger. Our athletes were stronger because of that inquiry.
I think there has been fear in some corners about going forward with a national public inquiry because it could damage sport, but I think we have a real opportunity here. Yes, it's going to be hard. This past year has been hard. It's been really hard. You're going to hear, whoever does the inquiry, should there be one, more hard stories, but ultimately sport will be better for it.
:
We have a well-known hockey coach here and a much-loved hockey coach. I'd like to recognize that.
When I met with Hockey Canada, I addressed hard issues with them. I addressed not only abuse, but I also addressed lack of funding for women in hockey. I addressed the lack of funding for persons of all abilities in hockey. I was clear at the time: The culture of entitlement and toxic masculinity is not new in hockey in Canada.
When I was an athlete, in my teenage years and early twenties, we heard about the Junior A hockey players and the drugs and alcohol away from the arena. We heard, and pardon my language, the bragging about how many “puck bunnies” some guy bagged on the weekend. Where were the adults in charge? Where were the leagues, the provincial and national associations, demanding of their members principles of common decency?
I think that Hockey Canada has failed over and over to see the abuse, discrimination and harassment in hockey and to take sufficient action on issues that have played out over decades in the media.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I'm going to speak on behalf of Sail Canada, at least in the opening remarks.
Thank you for this invitation today. Thank you for the work this committee is doing to create a better safe sport system. Thanks to Honourable Minister Duncan for leading this process and getting it under way. Her leadership within the sport community has been critical. This is a very important topic for us to address.
Sail Canada was established over 90 years ago. We've always been a driver in developing safe sailing practices in Canada. We welcome Canadians of all ages, all abilities and all interests, from recreational sailing to competitive sailing. Our tag line is “Sail for All, Sail for Life, Sail to Win”. We're very proud of our world-class athletes, but we're also very proud of every other sailor within the system. We have, over time, achieved nine Olympic and Paralympic medals.
Sail Canada works with 380 independent member organizations from coast to coast, including provincial sailing associations, sailing clubs, schools and class associations, each with unique needs and each committed to providing a safe sailing experience.
On the competitive side, the international racing rules of sailing have always emphasized reporting and disciplinary actions for maltreatment in sport, including penalties as far-reaching as lifetime bans from the sport. Sail Canada feels it is a leader in safe sport. We were charting the course of best practices even before we signed on with the Office of the Sport Integrity Commissioner last December.
In following Minister Duncan's lead, we have taken her recommendations seriously. We modified our harassment, bullying and discrimination policy in 2019. The same year, Sail Canada formed an inclusivity, diversity and equity committee. It also created policies to address that area.
We've also, under Minister Duncan's lead, created the hotline. We hired an independent third party investigator. A lot of work is being done in this area, but obviously a lot more can be done.
Sail Canada is an international safe sport leader. Recently we witnessed some world sport federations making decisions, including hosting competitions in countries that do not protect all communities. Sail Canada took action and sent a letter to World Sailing. We called upon them to ensure that we are working together to support, protect and include all communities that take part in sailing competitions.
Sail Canada supports the federal government's push for better safe sport environments, and last December Sail Canada announced that it would be one of the first to join the abuse-free sport program. We signed in December and put that in place on March 1.
Sail Canada went beyond the requirements of the Government of Canada in terms of scope. We worked with our provincial partners to create a harmonized safe sport policy for the whole sailing community and not just those at the national level. Sail Canada hired a safe sport officer to update and implement our safe sport package and to work with and assist our provincial partners, sailing clubs and schools in implementing these policies.
Sail Canada requires all staff, national community volunteers, certified officials, certified registered coaches and instructors, and all participants of Sail Canada regional and national championships to consent to our new code of conduct and the UCCMS and to be subject to OSIC if a complaint is lodged.
Sail Canada has set the tone for safe sport training across the country, for years providing seminars about safe sport to staff, volunteers, officials, and provincial sailing association staff and presidents. We require all staff, instructors, coaches and officials to complete safe sport training.
We recently presented a three-hour training session, which included participation by our national team athletes, development squad coaches and support staff, at which they focused on how to protect themselves from any safe sport issue and how to file a complaint if they felt they were being abused in any way. As of today six provincial sailing associations—not including Quebec, which has its own system—have passed the safe sport policy package and are in the process of rolling it out to their member organizations. Over half of the member clubs and schools have adopted safe sport policies, and the rest are working to do so.
There's still a lot of work to do to make sure safe sport objectives are efficient, attainable and able to guarantee an environment free of harassment, abuse and any other harmful conduct. We see that the following key objectives will ensure success for all NSOs.
First is to ensure there is a harmonized safe sport system in place for the whole system—at the club, provincial and national level—to avoid duplication and confusion with regard to which system is to respond, depending on the jurisdiction.
Second is to support sporting coordination from all levels of government—Minister Duncan referred to this, in terms of the Red Deer agreement—to achieve these safe sport objectives.
Third is to conduct cultural audits to confirm the effectiveness of our system and explore opportunities for improvement—
:
Thank you very much for the opportunity to speak to you regarding the very important topic of safety in sport.
My name is Wendy Smith. I'm the newly selected chair of the board of directors for Gymnastics Canada.
GymCan is fully committed to providing a safe sport environment that is inclusive and free from maltreatment, discrimination and potential harm for all of our community—most importantly athletes, but also including coaches, judges, administrators and volunteers. Providing a safe experience is viewed not as an option but a necessity to ensure a positive environment for the growth of athletes and other participants.
To that end, GymCan has made a number of changes in the past several years to address safe sport matters in a more coordinated and transparent manner. Specifically, GymCan has worked with our provincial and territorial organizations to update and align all safe sport policies and procedures. We've implemented a reciprocity agreement across the country to ensure that all member provincial and territorial gymnastics associations are reporting and sharing information related to the outcome of safe sport complaints. This includes the publication of a suspended or expelled members list.
We've collectively worked with other sports leaders, the SDRCC and Sport Canada toward the implementation of independent case management systems across the country. We've worked together with our provincial and territorial partners on safe sport education initiatives at all levels of the sport.
At the national level, GymCan has signed on to the OSIC abuse-free sport agreement, which provides for a nationally coordinated and fully independent complaint management process. We've identified a full-time staff role dedicated to leading safe sport programming. We've hired Dr. Kacey Neely, who is an individual with significant experience and knowledge in the area of safe sport, to fulfill this role. Dr. Neely has a proven ability in the improvement of safe practices and safe environments.
We've initiated meetings and educational webinars for all national-level participants, which focus on a greater awareness of a safe and welcoming sporting environment. This education is ongoing and is being expanded to include administrators and officials.
We've continued to update our policies and procedures as they relate to the implementation of all safe sport programming, including case management. We've signed on to the true sport movement, which promotes fairness, inclusion, excellence and fun in all sporting activities.
We've worked closely with the Coaching Association of Canada in updating our coach education materials to properly reflect the latest safe sport research and methodologies. We've engaged the McLaren group to provide an independent review and a cultural review road map for gymnastics. We've reviewed and structured our internal practices, from hiring to evaluations to relationship with the community.
We have implemented many of 's recently announced measures for accountability—specifically but not limited to board diversity, term limits, athlete inclusion and financial transparency.
GymCan is dedicated to separating the past from the future to make sure that history doesn't repeat itself. In addition to the previously mentioned actions, GymCan is recruiting a new board that is designed for changing the future, with an emphasis on change management, communications and strategy and with the intent to support both the sport and the business of gymnastics. We're in the process of hiring a new CEO with experience in strategic change and a demonstrated ability in implementing cultural change. We're embarking on addressing the McLaren group's report recommendations.
Finally, GymCan would welcome a public inquiry into safe sport practices in Canada. At the current time, national sports organizations are undergoing significant change to address safe sport practices and culture. However, these changes are happening largely in silos, with little shared experience among the sports. A national public inquiry would help to align sports organizations and leverage learnings and effective policies to hasten the improvement of all sports environments.
Thank you once again for the opportunity to address this committee.
In the interest of time here, my first question is going to go to Ms. Smith.
Ms. Smith, I'm curious. Of course, we know that there were some pretty significant allegations that came against Scott McFarlane, a coach for Gymnastics Canada. That happened in 2018. He was charged. We know that he was acquitted; nevertheless, there were significant allegations that were brought against him.
He's not the only one. There's a whole history of allegations being brought forward against Gymnastics Canada and the way that abuses have taken place and the way that complaints have been handled, so my curiosity is this. As an organization that receives substantial funding from Sport Canada, I'm wondering if there's ever been a phone call from them or accountability in any way when these complaints have come forward from athletes.
This is my last question on that.
You understand, of course, it's not that Sail Canada has many allegations against it, and I don't want to, again, make allegations. For all of my understanding, you're a very well-run sports federation for the size that you are.
I do think that, of course, symbolically, this was a major issue. I encourage your board to look at the question of having a woman coach for high-performance athletes and to look at how you might be able to reverse the bad publicity you got with that decision.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
First, I have a point of order concerning Ms. Smith.
I would like to know why Gymnastics Canada refused to give us a copy of the report on the inquiry conducted by the Shearer Parnega law firm, which was submitted to the organization in April or May of 2018.
Gymnastics Canada was ordered to give us a copy and must do so. I call on Ms. Smith to submit to the clerk, before the end of the day tomorrow, a document with the sections she would perhaps like to see redacted. Agreements exist for that. The document must be submitted to us as soon as possible. This procedure must be respected; lawyers are usually familiar with it.
Ms. Smith, I appreciate your collaboration in this matter.
As for my turn to speak, Mr. Chair, I would like to ask Ms. Smith questions on the role played by Karl Balish within Gymnastics Canada.
:
There are two things that are false.
First, because of our financial situation, we terminated Lisa's contract, which cost us—in terms of her salary, benefits and travel—about $120,000 per year. We've contracted a female coach to provide similar services for $20,000 a year. We're effectively saving about $100,000 in our budget, which really allowed us to balance our budget this year but still provide the services that we need to provide to our athletes.
Second, as I said before, the decision to terminate Lisa was made in February. Regarding the decision about when to inform her, we picked the date of March 17 because she was doing some coaching internationally. In the meantime, we had those two dates. We had the termination letter.
We decided that we were going to give her notice after the European championships, which were going to take place on March 17. On March 8 she announced to us that she was pregnant, but we had the termination letter. We had all the documents in place. We made the decision between the high-performance director and myself that the best time to do that with the least disruption to our team would be March 17.
As I say, in the meantime, she announced that she was pregnant. We respected that, but it had nothing to do with the termination. We have many practices.... We've had within our own staff many who have had maternity leave, five in the last five years. There's no way we discriminate between women. Half of our staff are women.
The second in command is a woman, and we've had various maternity policies. We have one person who has just come back from maternity leave. We have one currently on maternity leave. There is absolutely no way that this had anything—zero—to do with her pregnancy, and all of our records will show that.
Thank you, Mr. Lemire.
Ms. Smith, we've been around this table for a year. I will say this: Gymnastics Canada has had more complaints than any other sport. That's why some of these questions have been directed to you. I know you're brand new as the chair, but we would like some answers.
I've been around this table for a year, and gymnastics is right at number one for complaints. That's why you're here today. We are disturbed with what we have seen in the past from your organization. Unfortunately, I only have one round here, but let me just say that as the vice-chair here today I wasn't too happy with some of your answers. You have to come here better prepared. We've been studying safe sport here for a year, and gymnastics is one of the sports that we are very concerned with in this country.
I will leave it at that. Our final question will go for six minutes to the NDP with Peter Julian.
Mr. Julian.
:
Thanks very much, Mr. Chair. I would like reiterate your comments to Ms. Smith.
We want to see the documents that we've requested, Ms. Smith. We want Gymnastics Canada to be fully accountable. Gymnasts for Change has been extraordinarily brave in stepping forward. We've had members of that organization, including Kim Shore, testify before this committee, and Canadians are expecting answers.
I think it's fair to say that we have been very disappointed with the lack of transparency so far, and the lack of responses to the legitimate questions that are being asked. This comes from all members of this committee. We want, in the same way that Hockey Canada initially was unable or unwilling to answer questions.... We have the ability to ensure that we get those answers, and we want to see the organization change.
I wanted to start off by asking a very simple question. Does your organization maintain a list of banned or suspended coaches?
:
Yes, that would be helpful, as well as the nature of the complaint and how it is being investigated. That would also be very important. This is information Canadians need to have, as well, to restore confidence in the organization.
Again, I would like to commend the work of Gymnasts for Change in bringing to light many of these abusive practices and helping us, as a committee, try to navigate the recommendations we'll be bringing forward to the federal government, so we can ensure safe sports in this country, including gymnastics.
I would like to move on to you, Mr. Adams.
What happened looks very bad on Sail Canada. Could you share with us what the total budget was for Sail Canada last year, and what it is for this year?
:
A couple of things.... One was that when we made the decision, we still had some athletes who Lisa was coaching. Her trip was already planned for the European championship. That's why, as I mentioned before, even though the decision to terminate her was in February, we made the decision that we would actually give her notice the moment the European championship was over, which was on March 17.
Because she was still in Europe and we didn't want her to go on to another competition at that point in time, we arranged the phone call. We arranged the meeting on March 17. That was the day that we said we would give her notice. That's all the documentation that we had. We had a meeting with her, and please respect that this was not an easy decision. We realize that the optics don't look good. That's all part of it, but all of the records will show that the decision to do this was in good faith.
When I had negotiated a contract with Lisa, she demanded that the termination clause in her contract be increased from what the Nova Scotia labour laws required, which was six weeks. She demanded that she be given another week for every year that she worked, which I abided by. She also wanted her probationary period taken out of her contract, which I also was.... She was very clear that the funding came from the gender equity fund, having emails to that effect. She knew that this position could be terminated. She negotiated a termination clause in her employment contract, which I honoured, and gave her the extra notice.
March 17 was the day that we were going to notify her. We arranged a meeting with her. It's one of the most difficult decisions I've ever had to make in my 40 years involved in sport. Firing someone who had a family, who had done some service for us, but I think that.... You know, Lisa still has a career in sailing. She will be hired by other groups. I mean, she's a good coach, so—