Thank you very much for that excellent question. I'm honoured to answer it from my perspective as a survivor and an expert.
To start with, it has become very clear to us, and I mean this with all due respect to policy-makers and analysts in the world, that our sports system was built on a tick-the-box model. When I speak to organizations and I say clearly, because I am who I am, “What are you doing about safe sport”, they say, “We have a policy.” I say, “Does anyone know about that policy? Are you educating on that policy? If I walk onto your field of play right now and I ask a child if they know what bullying is, will they give me that answer?” What we're doing is thinking that policies prevent abuse, and that is the number one way that we are ticking the box.
The other thing that the sports system does is to say, “Your minimum standard is online training.” I will be the first to say I have the utmost respect for and have contributed to creating online training modules and I'm also the first to tell you that when I'm doing my online training of any sort, I usually look at what's left and I click my cursor as quickly as I can to get it done. That's why, when I say that we're doing the minimum standard, your online training will provide baseline, generalized information and awareness, and every organization must level that up with sports-specific and participant-specific education.
I also want to be clear to share that there is predatory abuse that we know about and then there's also, as Dr. Fowler mentioned, cultural norms abuse, which is behaviours that are ingrained in our coaches based on how they were coached. What I am sharing here is the complexity of the issue in that we need to put in a huge concerted effort to not lose faith in our coaches as people in positions of authority but rather to educate and, honestly, deprogram them out of the way sport has always been. This crisis is here right now because sport has always been this way, and we are actually getting ahead of the crisis because we're finally talking about it.
What we need, to get back to your question, is a massive investment—I know that's hard to hear—of resources around education and around policies that are not only put in place but forced to be taken off the paper and put into practice for auditing, compliance and independent mechanisms. The reality is we've only approached this issue from the top down. It is ridiculous to me. Since I started in this advocacy work four and a half years ago, I have been learning how our government works in this way, with respect to jurisdiction, and I cannot fathom why we would put in place safeguarding measures only at the national level. If I were to do it all over again, I would fight harder, to be honest.
The time is now. The children are what matter more than anything, in my opinion. I say that as a mother who sees every day issues in her children's sports still, and I just want to encourage everyone to step forward, get on the same page and play together on the playing field of preventing maltreatment. We can do it.