Mr. Speaker, it is a real honour to stand in the House this morning to talk about an issue that is so close to my heart. I have been an athlete my whole life, although, when I was a young boy, I did not believe in myself. I did not think that I could become an athlete. The great coaches at the Burloak Canoe Club gave me the skills and the confidence necessary to achieve my dreams in athletics. Thanks to them, I am able to stand in the House. I honestly do not think I would be here in the House of Commons if it were not for all the institutions that support athletes across this country. It is a huge honour and privilege for me to be able to continue to support those institutions to make sure they are even better.
Today, I would first like to thank all the members of the committee, who have helped the government create such progress over the last four years. I was first asked to work on the safe sport issue by the then minister of sport, the member for Etobicoke North. That was back in 2017, a year after I retired from the national kayak team after 18 years.
I am very proud to have joined a woman whom we celebrated last night at the Order of Sport awards, Dr. Guylaine Demers. She is a researcher, an advocate, an athlete, a coach and a professor at Laval in Quebec. Dr. Demers has empowered generations of students, coaches, athletes, administrators and people like me to make sports a safer, more equitable and more welcoming place. She is a former high-performance basketball player and coach, and she has become a driving force for gender equity and safety in sport, right across Canada and around the world. She typically works as a volunteer. She was the chair of the gender equity task force for the then minister of sport when I joined in 2017. She is currently the president of Égale Action, Quebec's association for the advancement of women in sport, and she is an active member of the Canadian Olympic committee's Sport Inclusion Task Force. Last night, very deservedly, she was inducted into the Order of Sport, Canada's only sports hall of fame.
I would also like to take a moment to thank every single witness for their brave testimony at the heritage committee over this very challenging period of time; some old wounds were reopened, and some very important conversations were had. I know it was challenging for a lot of people, including members of Parliament who joined those committees. On behalf of the government and the sport movement here in Canada, I would like to offer our deep thanks to every single witness; the witnesses were brave in coming forward and courageous in giving testimony.
This past summer, Canadians from coast to coast to coast tuned in to cheer on team Canada at the Paris Olympic and Paralympic games in Paris. They cheered on athletes such as Nicholas Bennett, also there last night at the Order of Sport awards, who made history by securing Canada's first gold medal of the games, then followed it up with another gold and a silver medal; Brent Lakatos, with his incredible speed on the tracks, who secured multiple podium finishes; and Aurélie Rivard, who continues to make a big splash and secured three medals at the Paralympic Games.
Team Canada athletes are the pride of their communities. When Canadians come together to celebrate their hometown heroes, we see a testament to the unifying power of sport. These athletes show us what is possible and inspire the next generation of Olympic and Paralympic heroes. It is not just that; rather, when athletes come home with medals, we also see a rise in the registrations at clubs right across the country. It is an inspiring thing to watch Canadians perform on the world stage. I can speak from experience. Down at the Burloak Canoe Club, whenever we had success at the Olympics, registration was always through the roof in September.
These moments of triumph and perseverance unite us as a country. While Conservatives seek to divide us and destroy the institutions that support Canadians, Canadians of all political stripes unite to cheer team Canada on.
However, more than being just a unifying force, sport must be grounded in human rights. This means making sure that everyone, regardless of ability, gender, identity or background, has the same access to safe and welcoming sport experiences. Unfortunately, that is not the case everywhere across the country or around the world. Back in 2006-07, I started working in sport development with organizations such as Right To Play. It uses sport to unify people and to rebuild after countries and communities have been affected by war, poverty and disease.
Our challenges here in Canada are different, but they are important to address. I would like to single out some organizations, such as Spirit North, which brings sport to first nations communities, primarily in western Canada. I am proud that our community sport initiative has helped to fund some of that great work. I would give Beckie Scott, a former Olympic champion in cross-country skiing, a shout-out. She is the founder of that organization, which brings sport to many kids, and they enjoy it very much.
Back in 2022, Canadians were shocked and dismayed to hear revelations of alleged sexual assaults by members of the 2017-18 world junior hockey team. Over time, more survivors came forward to speak about various types of abuse at all levels of sport, in other sports and across other sport disciplines.
This abuse should never have happened. It has no place in our sport system, any system or our country. Nowhere does abuse have a place: not on our fields, not in our rinks, not in the locker rooms, not in corporate Canada, not in education, not in the arts and not in politics. Abuse is wrong.
Those systems and those abuses of power resulted from a lack of accountability, from a culture of silence and, too often, from a desire to win at all costs. The reckoning that we now see in hockey and across the sport system is the result of brave survivors coming forward to share their lived experiences. It takes a lot of strength to stand up and share those horrifying experiences. Once again, I thank them for their courage.
Because of that courage, we can learn. We can better protect children. We can work to improve Canada's sport systems. We can believe them. We are listening to them every single day, and we are supporting long-term, meaningful changes that make our sport system safer.
Many stories were shared at the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage or at the Standing Committee on the Status of Women. I thank the members of both committees for their work in terms of all the recommendations that they have made. We support these reports. Indeed, the government has already acted on the majority of the recommendations.
We are standing with survivors to implement long-term, meaningful changes to improve governance, enhance accountability, increase transparency and apply funding. This is a really important thing. We cannot expect a system to develop and implement new practices and policies without properly funding those organizations. We are demanding increased transparency and, ultimately, delivering a safer sport system for all Canadians. We have made remarkable progress over the last six or seven years.
I would like to take a moment now to highlight some of these actions. Most recently, in June 2022, the Sport Dispute Resolution Centre of Canada launched its abuse-free sport program. This program prevents and addresses maltreatment in sport by offering a wide range of resources, mental health supports and services for sport participants.
Since April 2023, our government has required all federally funded sport organizations to be signatories of the abuse-free sport program, including services of the Office of the Sport Integrity Commissioner. This flies in direct contravention to what my friend and colleague from the Bloc Québécois has said.
It is not optional. This is a mandatory system. This is obligatory for all national sport organizations that receive federal funding. The commissioner administers the Universal Code of Conduct to Prevent and Address Maltreatment in Sport, or UCCMS. They oversee a complaint management process. They regularly commission independent investigations. They maintain a registry of sanctions, and they monitor compliance of sport organizations.
Once again, I would like to say that this is mandatory, obligatory for all national sport organizations. This has been a process of learning and implementing a brand new system. This institution has integrity, funding and the resources necessary to implement these new policies, and they are working.
If sport organizations do not participate, they simply do not get federal funding. That is how it works. It is as simple as that.
Just now, the Conservatives recommend that we burn it all down, that we weaken and destroy institutions and systems that are currently protecting athletes. I was a part of that sport system for two decades. There were times when I found it frustrating, when I wrote letters to Sport Canada and to my member of Parliament. To be honest, I did not see progress for decades. I did not see progress when I wrote to my member of Parliament in 1999, when I was 17 and had problems with the selections committee, or in 2008.
Recently, because we have athletes in the government and in other parties who know the sport system and want to collaborate with athletes from across the country, we have made tremendous progress. I am not the only one saying that. Dr. Guylaine Demers has been doing this work for 25 years. Last night, she was directly asked what she has seen. Her response was that we must keep going, but we have seen remarkable progress.
When we see headlines about athletes being protected by a system that now has integrity, strength and resources, the progress is something to acknowledge and, at times, even celebrate. Again, the Conservatives want to burn it all down.
Through these funding agreements, we have also prohibited national sport organizations from restricting the rights of athletes and sport participants under the UCCMS. We also prohibit any contract, policy, procedure or action from restricting athletes under this code of conduct. This is a new code of conduct. It has been developed. It is rigorous. It is world class. Other countries are following suit. That is good because a lot of these athletes compete internationally and train internationally. It is important for us to ensure that this system is adopted by other countries, particularly peer nations with similar challenges.
The process is a bit complicated, but the bottom line is that athletes can no longer be muzzled by non-disclosure agreements. This is essential. Every athlete needs to sign an agreement when they get funding from their national sport organization or through Sport Canada. I will be honest that in the past, as a two-decade national team athlete, sometimes it seemed a bit burdensome. Sometimes it seemed as though we were being told what we could and could not say, and that is over. I am very proud of the government for taking action on that.
Last March we also launched the abuse-free sport registry. It provides a searchable database of participants subject to the UCCMS whose eligibility to participate in sport or to coach has in some way been restricted due to provisional measures and sanctions. It is a tool for athletes, parents and organizations to make informed and safe sport choices.
Looking to longer-term solutions, last spring we launched the Future of Sport in Canada Commission. Through a trauma-informed approach, this independent commission is seeking to learn from the experiences of victims, survivors, experts, academics, parents and coaches. The process will bring these experiences to light. It will help identify the causes and impacts and will help determine how to move and how to improve the sport system in Canada.
I can say right now that it will not be by burning it all down and applying some cowboy approach to the sport system in Canada. We know that is what the Conservatives want to do with broadcasting by burning down the CBC and selling it off for parts. We know that they are against the Public Health Agency of Canada. We know that they, just like Doug Ford, want to burn down institutions, resulting in weakening Canada and making it poorer.
That is not what we are going to do. We are going to keep trying to strengthen our institutions. We are going to ensure that there is more rigour in the system. We are going to properly fund our institutions and we are going to make sure they have the resources, because if nothing is measured, then nothing will be managed. That is what the Conservatives do not understand: If we do not measure something, we cannot manage something. Therefore we are measuring the challenges, applying resources and putting in place leadership and expertise to confront the challenges head-on; we are not ignoring them, which seems to be what the Conservatives want to do.
I want to clarify briefly our decision to launch a commission rather than a public inquiry. Our government spoke to survivors, athlete groups, external experts, the Canadian Women's Foundation and the Canadian Centre for Child Protection, among many other experts. We looked at other commissions in Canada and around the world, and at other public inquiries, to inform the structure this one would take on. We chose the commission because it prioritizes the voices of survivors to improve safe sport.
A public inquiry would have retraumatized victims by requiring testimony under oath or by subjecting them to subpoenas and cross-examination. That is not productive. It is not helpful, not trauma-informed and not the type of progress we need. We will not force people to relive their trauma. We believe survivors. We do not need to question them or call into question their integrity. We want to make the system better; we do not want to reopen old wounds.
Given that sport is a shared jurisdiction between municipal, regional, territorial and provincial governments and jurisdictions, a public inquiry would have required months of negotiating with provinces. I have been to a couple of FPT meetings, and they can be really, really challenging to develop consensus in. Canada is a great country, but we have a lot of various jurisdictions and sometimes it is challenging to get everybody at the table at the same time agreeing on one thing; therefore we would probably still be waiting for it to start, but with the commission, the work is already under way.
With that in mind, I encourage anyone with experience in sport who wishes to participate in the commission to do so. It is currently open to input. We want to hear from people. We want to make the system better and we know they do too. We know that Canadians love sport, physical activity and recreation. This is not a partisan issue; it is about building the Canada we love and about making sure that sport, physical activity and recreation are available to anybody who wants to participate. We want an open-door policy and we want to ensure that everybody has an opportunity to engage with the commission.
Despite all these efforts, we know that there is still more work to be done. Like a country, a sport system is never complete. We have to lay bricks every single day to ensure that our sport system improves, encourages people to get involved and is as safe as possible. This past summer, the minister launched the ministerial athlete advisory committee to put athletes at the heart of decision-making about sport, and I could not be more proud of this effort.
The minister is also establishing an international integrity work group to promote a unified approach to sport integrity globally, including safe sport, because, like I said, sport is an international concern. Coaches are coming in from other countries. Our coaches are going to work in other countries. Our athletes are going to compete in other places and train elsewhere, and we want to make sure that the global community is following suit.
Our government is in the process of developing a sport integrity framework; through these efforts, we are working with sport organizations and also holding them accountable. I would like to reiterate that none of these things are optional whatsoever, as my friend and colleague from the Bloc pointed out; they are mandatory and obligatory. They are challenging. The system has rigour. Organizations have to do training and adopt new policies. They have to ask all of their coaches, participants, umpires and every single volunteer to do that training.
I will give an example. This past summer, I competed at the national canoe kayak championships. I was on the national team for 18 years. I could not get into the boat until I had done a 15-minute survey online. I sat down in a chair and did the survey. I learned some stuff. I completed the training and submitted it with my signature, and then I was allowed to compete at the national championships.
It was my 25th national championships, but because of the new rigorous measures, every single participant needs to be accountable. They have to demonstrate that they have the interest and the willingness to learn. I have been participating in sport my whole life, and I learned something through that process. I am proud of that work. I showed my coach my phone afterward and said it is really cool that I have been working on safe sports since 2017, and I am really glad the survey exists for every single person, the 2,000 participants at the national championships.
I was just going to paddle a war canoe with a couple of 17-year-olds from my club. I had a great summer, and it was great to see that everybody has to do the training.
We are putting our money where our mouth is through budget 2024, which, I will say as a casual observer of budgets for the last 25 years in Canada, is the most sport-forward budget I have ever seen. I am proud of that. The federal government recently committed $16 million to prevent and address maltreatment, support people with concussions and mental health challenges and advance inclusion, diversity, equity and accessibility in sport. We have made specific investments in athlete mental health that did not previously exist.
I will be a bit vulnerable here. When I retired from the national team in 2016, we did not have a mental health package. I did not have benefits, so I had to go to an external agency to get a counsellor and sit down to talk about some of my challenges and problems. Athletes do not have to do that anymore; there is funding for them. There are applied funding and investments in athlete mental health. They can go to Game Plan, work with their safe sport advisers or work directly with their national sport organization or outside their national sport organization. It is up to them, and it is so much better than it used to be.
We have also made investments in athlete well-being. We have invested in the sport institutions right across the country. I am very proud to have one in Milton, the national cycling centre at the Mattamy Athletic Centre. It is fantastic. Our track cyclists are amazing. Kelsey Mitchell is an Olympic champion, and another young guy just won a medal at the world championships. I am so proud of our investments, whether they come from big games like the Pan Am Games or the 2010 Olympics, or from the community sport initiative that I am going to talk about in a moment.
We also did something that athletes have been demanding since 1999. The current government has done it twice. I want to acknowledge that we increased the athlete assistance program. Many people ask me, almost as a weekly thing, whether we fund our athletes and whether we support our athletes enough from a financial perspective. I am proud to say that we have given them a more than 20% raise in the current budget. In 2017 we gave them the largest-ever raise they had received up until that date, and recently we have done it again.
Athletes still do not make enough money in Canada. I still do not think that Olympians and Paralympians are properly funded, and I am going to continue to make sure we fund them even more, but we have basically paid for grocery money every single month, and they will be getting that money in short order; it is with the Treasury Board. I am really proud of the athlete assistance program boost. Every national team athlete is asking me in my DMs when it is coming, and it will be there soon.
The Community Sport for All initiative is a hallmark of the government's action on making sure that sport is inclusive, available, equitable and safe for everybody across Canada. It has ensured that over a million Canadians have gotten more active through the power of sport, physical activity and recreation over the last couple of years. I am extremely proud of the Community Sport for All initiative, reinvested in budget 2024 with an incremental $15 million.
We are making the investments and it is making an impact. Canadians are healthier and our communities are more connected. They have better mental health services. Whether someone is playing in the sandbox or playing beach volleyball at the Olympic Games, team Canada is supporting our athletes. Unlike the Conservatives, we refuse to let Canadians go it alone. The Conservatives want to burn down our institutions. They want everyone just to be a cowboy and figure it out on their own, but our Liberal approach is to invest in the things that make our community stronger, like sport.
Our approach is to work to strengthen our institutions that serve Canadians instead of tearing them all down. Our approach is to invest in the things that support strong communities, like affordable child care, dental care and local community sport programs, and to invest in the things that unite us, such our athletes. Our approach is about making sure that everyone, regardless of ability, gender or identity has the same access to safe and welcoming sport activities, and our government's quick action to create a safe sport experience for all Canadians makes me proud to stand on this side of the House.
By investing in sport and athletes and by building a safer sport system, we are making Canadians safer, stronger, healthier and more united.