Rachael is absolutely correct.
The coaches have to have the proper training, education and professional development, including clear policies that are in place, and this isn't just training that they get once and it's forgotten. In the military, I was trained every single year on safety, on terrorism and on whatever it was I needed to be trained on. It has to be continuing checks and balances and continuing training, and we don't have that.
There has to be an understanding of legal and ethical boundaries and the duty to report violations, including severe consequences for failures, and that includes criminal punishment, if needed. We have the same problem in the United States, where coaches are simply moved: They need to be removed. Then, if there is a violation that is found after an investigation, they need to be punished and not put back in sport. There needs to be an absolute ban, because when you keep putting the problem back, the problem gets worse, not better. They find new ways, new inroads, to harm the children they are supposedly there to help and to coach.
We have exactly the same problem, and we're having the same issues in terms of investigation, training and treatment. Rachael is absolutely correct, but you have an opportunity to be a leader here in how it's done right.