Yes, absolutely.
The coach has to be present, because we are all members of a big sports family. In theory, there should be no dividing line between the coach, who is very often a parent, and the children.
As Ms. Lafrenière said earlier, coaches' training involves ethics courses, among other things. I have taken an ethics course myself, through the National Coaching Certification Program.
Then we have to know how to train our organizations and follow up with parents. When it comes to ethics and abuse, you don't talk the same way to 6‑year-olds as you do to 14‑year-olds. Progressive instruction has to be provided for children and parents. There has to be continuous follow‑up.
Canadian amateur sport is based on volunteerism. Every three or four years, the composition of a local board of directors changes completely, and the result is a loss of expertise. So you have to start all over, but that is not what is given priority. Instead, the priority is registrations, jerseys, schedules and the like. The point is that we have to help Canadian volunteers, everywhere in Canada.