I don't believe athletes trust this system that has been set up. There are a number of reasons for that. It is still very deeply embedded within the sports system, which, as you've been hearing this morning, athletes do not trust.
A good example is that the Office of the Sport Integrity Commissioner is overseen by the SDRCC, the Sport Dispute Resolution Centre of Canada. On the SDRCC board, appointed earlier this year, is a person who also sat on the board of Gymnastics Canada. When he was initially appointed to the SDRCC board, he in fact was still an active board member of Gymnastics Canada. That is the body that oversees the Office of the Sport Integrity Commissioner. How does any gymnast have any trust in an office that is being overseen by the very people who would need to be investigated?
There are a number of different ways in which we are concerned that this office is not equipped to investigate these matters. There's no subpoena power, as Kim was alluding to. There's no ability to compel these NSOs to participate in any sort of review. There's no ability to enforce any recommendations that come out of a report from the Office of the Sport Integrity Commissioner.
We understand that the office is working hard to try to shore up some of those gaps, but at the moment it is not equipped to investigate the types of abuses we are seeing come forward.