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Team of sex assault victim support centres to oversee OHL's consent training to help with 'accountability'
Team of sex assault victim support centres to oversee OHL's consent training to help with 'accountability'

Yahoo

time31-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Team of sex assault victim support centres to oversee OHL's consent training to help with 'accountability'

A centralized team will now help Ontario Hockey League (OHL) squads enrol in the right mandatory consent and healthy masculinity training and ensure it's completed, under a new agreement between a coalition of sex assault victim support centres and the league. CBC spoke to parties involved in this move nearly a week after the Hockey Canada criminal trial in London ended with not guilty findings. The OHL made gender-based violence and consent training mandatory for all major junior teams about a decade ago. The league's Onside Program was developed for junior hockey teams by two sexual assault support centres in the province, with curriculum delivered to each team at the local level, by members of the Ontario Coalition of Rape Crisis Centres (OCRCC). Karley Doucette is manager of education and communications at the Sexual Assault Support Centre of Waterloo Region, which is part of the team of victim support centres that'll help oversee the Onside program. Previously, Doucette said, completion of the training wasn't tracked and about half of the 20 major junior hockey teams didn't actually participate every year or took different training not developed for OHL teams. "There have been gaps in accountability and there hasn't been any centralized oversight, so it's been impossible to ensure consistency and quality across the league," Doucette said. Importance of 'understanding consent' The two-hour Onside program was developed in 2008, with the OHL making it mandatory in 2016. The curriculum was distributed to OCRCC members, and each team was expected to connect with local centres, which would proceed to deliver the sessions every fall before the start of the junior hockey season. In recent years, however, some teams and resource-stretched sexual assault victim support centres said they have had trouble scheduling the sessions, which focus on healthy masculinity, relationships, power dynamics and bystander intervention consent. "I think it's critical that we're talking about this now and understanding consent, and how it's given and all the pieces of the program," said OHL commissioner Bryan Crawford. The Hockey Canada trial centred on the issue of whether there was consent between the complainant, E.M., whose identity is protected under a standard publication ban, and the men, who were charged in relation to what went on in a London hotel room in 2018 when they were players on the gold medal-winning world junior team. All five were found not guilty by Justice Maria Carroccia after an eight-week trial. That trial has started conversations that should keep going, said Crawford. "It's critical that we're talking about it and understanding what consent is. There are certainly differences between legality and morality, and understanding consent and how it is given." The Onside program links local sexual assault centres with junior teams, but some centres have had better luck getting their city's teams to participate than others, Doucette said. "Some teams have done the training, others have done other types of training. There hasn't been a consistency throughout the league." For example, the OHL's London Knight, this year's Memorial Cup champions, had been in a one-hour training course with an organization not accredited to deliver the two-hour Onside program developed specifically for players. Doucette said sexual assault centres met with the league in 2023 to propose more money for victim support centres that offer the training and a centralized co-ordination to expand the Onside program to ensure every team participated. But they did not hear back from OHL management at the time. "This summer, we went back to the OHL and had another meeting and proposed the same things we proposed in 2023, and we're pleased that they've responded and entered into a partnership with us," Doucette said. "We will now oversee the training across the province." More funding for training Sexual assault centres previously were given a $300 honorarium for the Onside training, but they said that did not properly compensate them for the staff time spent preparing and delivering the curriculum. The honorarium amount has now increased significantly, said Doucette, who would not provide specifics. The OHL remains responsible for ensuring each team follows through with the training and schedules it with their local centre. Doucette's centralized team will both help teams link up with the centres accredited to provide the training and track their participation. "We're hoping that because this trial was so publicly talked about, it will be a wake-up call," she said. Crawford called the changes a positive evolution of the program, and said he fully supports a more centralized oversight body to continue to tweak and make improvements. "It helps us achieve what we all want, which is administering this really beneficial, impactful programming that makes a difference and achieves the goals that we're setting up to achieve." If you're in immediate danger or fear for your safety or that of others around you, please call 911. For support in your area, you can look for crisis lines and local services via the Ending Sexual Violence Association of Canada database.

One hospital set to close when new acute care facility opens in Waterloo Region
One hospital set to close when new acute care facility opens in Waterloo Region

CTV News

time17-07-2025

  • Health
  • CTV News

One hospital set to close when new acute care facility opens in Waterloo Region

As Waterloo Region moves closer to making a new hospital a reality, another hospital is set to close. On Thursday, the province of Ontario reaffirmed a $10 million dollar commitment to support the planning and construction of a new Waterloo Regional Health Network hospital at the University of Waterloo. The new hospital will be built on lands west of Bearinger Road and Hagey Boulevard in Waterloo and focus on acute care. It will feature expanded cardiac clinics as part of the Regional Cardiac Care Centre, enhanced surgical spaces, modernized medical and surgical inpatient units and maternal, newborn and pediatric care. Officials hope to open the new facility by 2035. 'We continue at a pretty rapid pace to try to meet our original timelines,' Ron Gagnon, president and CEO of Waterloo Regional Health Network said. 'This funding helps us to do that. We are right about, I would say, halfway through the planning project at this point.' Part of the planning includes what comes next for the network's current hospitals: WRHN @ Midtown (formerly Grand River Hospital, KW Campus), WRHN @ Queen's Blvd. (formerly St. Mary's General Hospital) and WRHN @ Chicopee (formerly Grand River Hospital, Freeport Campus). WRHN @ Chicopee will remain focused on continuing care and rehabilitation. WRHN @ Midtown will transition into a high intensity outpatient care centre and urgent care facility. But the WRHN @ Queen's Blvd. is facing a different fate. 'Once we open the doors that are the new acute care facility, we will discontinue the use of our Queen's Blvd. site,' Gagnon said. Hospital network officials said at that point, it will be up to the St. Joseph Health Network, the group that owns the property, to decide what happens next.

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