Sport Canada | |
Jurisdiction: | Government of Canada |
Headquarters: | Gatineau, QC |
Minister1 Pfo: | Minister for Sport |
Chief1 Name: | Vicki Walker |
Chief1 Position: | Director General[1] |
Parent Department: | Canadian Heritage |
Keydocument1: | National Sports of Canada Act (1994) |
Keydocument2: | Physical Activity and Sport Act (2003) |
Agency Type: | Canadian sports system |
Sport Canada is a branch of the Department of Canadian Heritage that develops federal sport policy in Canada, provides funding programs in support of sport, and administers special projects related to sport. Its mission "to enhance opportunities for all Canadians to participate and excel in sport."[2] [3]
The Government of Canada, through Sport Canada, provides financial support through 3 programs: Athlete Assistance Program, which gives direct financial support to selected national team athletes (CA$33 million/year); the Sport Support Program, which funds Canadian sports organizations (about $178.8 million/year); and the Hosting Program, which helps sport organizations to host the Canada Games and international sport events (about $21.6 million/year). Sport Canada special projects include research projects; projects aimed at increasing participation in sport;[4] the Long-Term Athlete Development Model; and Podium Canada, consisting of the Own the Podium and Road to Excellence programs, aimed at improving Canada's performance at the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games.[5]
In 1961, the Fitness and Amateur Sport Act came into force, whereby the Government of Canada made an official commitment to “encourage, promote and develop fitness and amateur sport in Canada.” Under this act, the now-defunct Department of National Health and Welfare, through its new Fitness and Amateur Sport Program, was responsible for making grants to any organization that carried out activities in the field of fitness or amateur sport. A few years later, the Canadian government created two new directorates: Recreation Canada, which was tasked with improving the lifestyle of Canadians, and Sport Canada, which was responsible for developing competitive sport.[3]
The Dubin inquiry proved to be a seminal event in Sport Canada's history, in the wake of the Ben Johnson doping scandal and national embarrassment.
Jean Charest was Minister of Fitness and Amateur Sport for a time during the Mulroney government, and he intended with his 1989 "Towards the Year 2000" policy statement "to elevate Canada to one of the top three positions in the world in the area of sport."[6]
Sport Canada controlled in 1991 sixty-five "national sport organizations" (NSOs), as the "pivotal agency in each category of sport in Canada". These NSOs were "incorporated non-profit agencies recognized by the federal government and eligible for federal financing through the Fitness and Amateur Sport Directorate."[6]
In the early 1990s, the role of the Fitness and Amateur Sport Program was split between the Department of Canadian Heritage, which would be responsible for Sport Canada from then onward, and the Department of Health. The Department of Canadian Heritage was initially created by Prime Minister Kim Campbell from parts of several other federal departments, combining amateur sport with a number of other departments.[7]
Sport Canada has since remained under the auspices of Canadian Heritage, while Health Canada continues its mandate of "encourag[ing] Canadians to take an active role in their health, such as increasing their level of physical activity and eating well."
For much of its existence, responsibility for Sport Canada was given to a junior Cabinet Minister reporting to the Minister of Canadian Heritage. In 2015 with the advent of the government of Justin Trudeau, Sport Canada became the responsibility of the Minister of Sport and Persons with Disabilities, a full Cabinet position that would eventually cease to be filled as of 2019.[8]
The Government of Canada is involved in sport primarily through programs and policies administered by the Department of Canadian Heritage. Pursuant to section 4(2)(f) of the Department of Canadian Heritage Act, the department is tasked with "the encouragement, promotion and development of sport."
There are three major sport funding programs that are run by Sport Canada which "provide financial assistance to our high-performance athletes, advance the objectives of the Canadian Sport Policy, and help Canadian organizations host sport events that create opportunities for Canadians to compete at the national and international level."[9]
The Government of Canada, through Sport Canada, invests funds and hard work into national level athletes and sporting events through the Sport Support Program (SSP). In order to provide "a role in supporting amateur sport or in promoting an active and healthy lifestyle for Canadians," Sport Canada provides help to three major types of sport organizations: National Sport Organizations (NSOs), National Multisport Service Organizations (MSOs), and Canadian Sport Centres and Institutes.[12]
National Sport Organizations (NSOs), or National Sport Federations (NSFs), are governing bodies that represent a specific national sport in Canada. Each NSO has a duty to oversee all that impacts its national sport, it selects and manages the yearly team roster and provides "professional development for coaches and officials in their sport."[13] There are currently 58 NSOs in Canada.
National Multisport Service Organizations (MSOs) are organizations that focus on coordination, executing and conveying amenities to the sport community in Canada. These MSOs provide learning opportunities for Canadian coaches, and "support for Aboriginal peoples in sport and national coordination for the North American Indigenous Games (NAIG),"[14] as well as focusing on promotion to increase Canadian participation in sport, among other things. There are currently 24 MSOs that are granted funding from Sport Canada to date.
all Canadian national team athletes (including Aboriginal, Olympic, Paralympic, Pan and Parapan American, and Commonwealth Games) | ||
Aboriginal Sport Circle | Indigenous athletes | |
Canada Games Council | Canada Games | |
Canadian Women & Sport (formerly Canadian Association for the Advancement of Women and Sport and Physical Activity) | Women and girls in sport and physical activity | |
Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport | ethics in sport, including anti-doping | |
Canadian Collegiate Athletic Association | college athletics | |
Canadian Deaf Sports Association | deaf and hard-of-hearing athletes | |
Canadian Fitness and Lifestyle Research Institute | advocacy for physical activity and sport | |
Canadian Olympic Committee | Canada's involvement in the Olympic movement | |
Canadian Paralympic Committee | Canadian Paralympic athletes (for the Paralympic and Parapan American Games) | |
Canadian Tire Jumpstart Charities | financially-disadvantaged children in organized sport and recreation | |
Coaching Association of Canada | coaches | |
Commonwealth Games Canada | Commonwealth Games and Commonwealth Sport Movement in Canada | |
Grand défi Pierre Lavoie | advocacy for healthy life habits in young people | |
KidSport | kids (under 18) in sport | |
Motivate Canada | advocacy for healthy life habits in young people | |
Own the Podium | technical support for national sport organizations | |
ParticipACTION | advocacy for physical activity and sport | |
Physical and Health Education Canada | advocacy for physical education and healthy life habits in young people | |
Special Olympics Canada | Canadian athletes with intellectual disabilities | |
Sport Dispute Resolution Centre of Canada | dispute resolution | |
Sport for Life | physical literacy and long-term athlete development | |
Sport Information Resource Centre | sport education | |
U Sports | Canadian university sport |
Canadian Sport Institutes and Centres were developed in partnership between Sport Canada, the Canadian Olympic Committee (COC), the Coaching Association of Canada (CAC), and the provincial governments. The Canadian Olympic and Paralympic Sport Institute (COPSI) Network is a group of designated multisport training centres established in Canada recognized by Sport Canada and Own the Podium, and supported by national and provincial partners in partnership with 7 different provinces or regions across Canada.[15]
There are 4 Canadian Sport Institutes (located in Calgary, Quebec, Ontario, and the Pacific Region), and 3 Canadian Sport Centres (located in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Atlantic Canada). These organizations not only provide training facilities for Canadian athletes but also promote innovation, sport science, sport medicine and coaching within Canada.
The COPSI Network "supports the development of high performance sport in Canada through a network of training environments as well as through collaboration with National Sport Organization, national partners, provincial and local governments as well as the private sector to provide more opportunities for high performance athletes and coaches."
Canadian Sport Institute Calgary[16] | Alberta | Calgary |
Canadian Sport Institute Ontario[17] | Ontario | Scarborough (Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre) |
Milton (Mattamy National Cycling Centre) | ||
London (National Training Centre of Rowing Canada) | ||
Toronto (Athletics Canada's East Hub at York University) | ||
Canadian Sport Institute Pacific[18] | Pacific Canada | Vancouver |
Victoria (Pacific Institute for Sport Excellence) | ||
Whistler (Whistler Athletes’ Centre) | ||
Institut national du sport du Québec[19] | Quebec | Montreal (Olympic Park) |
Canadian Sport Centre Atlantic[20] | Atlantic Canada | Halifax, NS (Canada Games Centre) |
Fredericton, NB (U of New Brunswick Faculty of Kinesiology) | ||
Newfoundland and Labrador | ||
Wolfville, NS (Acadia Athletics Complex) | ||
Antigonish, NS (St Francis Xavier University) | ||
Canadian Sport Centre Manitoba[21] | Manitoba | Winnipeg (Frank Kennedy Centre, U of Manitoba) |
Canadian Sport Centre Saskatchewan[22] | Saskatchewan | Regina |
Saskatoon |