Football BC's The Huddle Newsletter
October 2009 | Issue #9  Governing Body for Amateur Football in BC

Technical Difficulties

Football BC would like to apologize to all our e-mail subscribers and to our website visitors for the difficulties they may have experienced last week.

Due to technical difficulties relating to our server that was out of our control, our website at playfootball.bc.ca was inaccessible from Wednesday until Saturday and e-mails to communications@playfootball.bc.ca were also not delivered.

The server issue also prevented us from being able to send out The Huddle last week as regularly scheduled.

We apologize for the inconvenience and thank you for your continued support of Football BC and The Huddle.

Sincerely,
Football BC

 

Support minor sports concussion education by voting for Football BC

Football BC has submitted an entry for the Aviva Community Fund and we are asking all our members to help support our bid by visiting the Aviva Community Fund website and voting for Football BC’s idea.

Should Football BC receive grant money from the Aviva Community Fund, the intention is to use the money to develop resources that would inform and educate on concussion-safety as well as develop reporting methods so that statistics can be kept and used for further studies that will benefit future generations of football (and other sports) players.

To search for Football BC’s idea, simply visit the www.avivacommunityfund.org and search for idea ACF1756. You must register on the website in order to vote. Registration is simple and free.

Thank you in advance for your support.

Support Football BC with a donation to the National Sport Trust Fund – BC Chapter

Football BC would like to encourage members and supporters who have the financial ability to make a contribution to support Football BC with a donation through the National Sport Trust Fund (NSTF).

The NSTF is a philanthropic gift-giving program established through the Canadian Council of Provincial and Territorial Sport Federations (CCPTSF) for the development of amateur sport on a national level. The CCPTS is Registered Canadian Amateur Athletic Association (RCAAA) with the Canadian Revenue Agency (#88938 6868 RR0001) and, as such, as the NSTF is able to issue an official tax receipt for all qualifying donations of $100 or greater. Sport BC is the National Sport Trust Fund Manager in British Columbia.

To support Football BC, simply visit the NSTF webpage on Sport BC’s website and click on Cash Donations. Fill out the information as required and select “Football BC – SR Bowl Program” under the Select a Project drop down menu.

While you are there, you can also help support the Cloverdale Football Club Development Program and the Renfrew Trojans Football Association Flag Football Program. Associations interested in joining the program as a recipient should visit the Sport BC website.

Thank you in advance for your support. To discuss different methods that you can help support Football BC, contact us at communications@playfootball.bc.ca or by phone at 604.677.1025.

Clash of the titans set for BCFC Cullen Cup Final

The best dream match-ups in any sport inevitably feature the best-on-best and that’s exactly what the British Columbia Football Conference will be offering up on Halloween night this Saturday when the undefeated Vancouver Island Raiders (11-0) clash with the South Surrey Rams (8-3) to determine the 2009 BCFC Cullen Cup Champions.

It was not an easy road to the Final for either the Raiders or the Rams. The Raiders, who looked unflappable over the course of the regular season, were given a run for their money by the visiting Okanagan Sun last Saturday at Caledonia Park. The Raiders had to rally from a 16-12 third quarter deficit before eventually taking the game by a final 25-16 score.

The Rams and Victoria Rebels put on a barn-burner of a show at the South Surrey Athletic Park in a game that was all about the offence. The Rams managed to outlast the Rebels 52-46 and will be making their second consecutive trip to the BCFC Final where they will look to avenge last year’s 48-8 loss to the Raiders.

The BCFC Champion will host this year’s Canadian Bowl Final so there will be a lot of extra motivation for both these teams going into Saturday’s meeting. The BCFC Cullen Cup Final will be held at Caledonia Park with kickoff slated for 1pm. Tickets are just $15 for adults, $12 for students/seniors/children, and free for children aged six or under.

The Canadian Bowl Final will take place on November 14th (time and location TBA) and will pit the winner of the Raiders and Rams versus the winner of the InterGold Cup between the Edmonton Wildcats and the Ottawa Sooners.

For ticket information to this Saturday’s Cullen Cup Final, visit the VI Raiders website.  

      

Shrum Bowl Rewind: Football BC tweets SFU’s dominating victory

The sun peaked at Terry Fox Field on the Burnaby campus of Simon Fraser University during the second quarter of the 32nd Shrum Bowl and so did the SFU Clan Football Team who posted 21 unanswered points in the quarter en route to a dominating 30-1 victory over the UBC Thunderbirds two Saturdays ago.

The win gave SFU the all-time lead in the Shrum Bowl series with a record of 16-15-1. The future of the Shrum Bowl has been in doubt with the Clan planning to enter the GNAC of the NCAA Division II beginning next season. Clan head coach Dave Johnson is among the more optimistic individuals telling the Vancouver Sun (published on Monday, October 19th) that, “there will be more Shrum Bowls, including next year.”

Football BC was on-location during the 32nd Shrum Bowl and provided live Twitter updates throughout the afternoon on our Twitter page. Re-live the best moments of the Shrum Bowl XXXII by following Football BC on Twitter and checking out our tweets from the day by searching “#shrumbowl”. 

Football BC hopes to be on-location and tweeting live at future championship events. If you are interested in having Football BC tweet at your upcoming championship event, contact us at communications@playfootball.bc.ca and include the phrase “Twitter Live” in the subject.

        

Sport Law Feature: Conflict of Internet – The Sport Organization’s ‘Achilles Heel’

By Steven J. Indig, BRec, LLB

About the author: Steven Indig is a lawyer based in Vaughan and is also a certified sports agent representing professional athletes. Steven works with Football BC providing consulting services relating to governance, contracts, policies, disputes, investigation, and privacy. To read more of Steven’s work, visit the Centre for Sport and Law website. 

Many times in this column we have written about a dimension of fairness – a concept that is central to the integrity of sport and also central to how individuals ought to act and interact in sport. What does fairness mean in the context of athlete selection? How do we allocate AAP cards fairly? What fair treatment should a coach expect when subject to a discipline investigation? What is a fair contract for coaching employment?

The Oxford Dictionary defines “fair” as “just, unbiased, equitable, in accordance with the rules”. To expect fairness in personal conduct is a reasonable request. Athletes and coaches should be treated justly, equitably and without bias, and we should follow the rules. This is an expectation that no right-minded person would take issue with. If this standard is not met, we have recourse to remedies in the form of protests, appeals, the Sport Dispute Resolution Centre of Canada (SDRCC), even the courts. 

Yet, let’s extend this concept of fairness further – to the organization as a whole. In addition to its duty to the individual member, a sport organization also has a duty to its collective members. The board of directors of an organization acts in a fiduciary role – a legal term not unlike trustee or steward. In fact the origin of this word is fides, or Latin for “faith”. The members have faith that the board and directors may be entrusted with the well-being of the organization as a whole. The board serves all the members, and in the non-profit world, they are also said to be guardians of a public trust. 

This relationship of trust with the members in their collectivity is seldom put under the microscope and seldom challenged. Yet in my view it is as important as the contractual relationship that the organization has with each of its individual members. Having worked for over 15 years to help sport organizations be more successful, I have encountered breaches of this trust relationship too numerous to mention. In fact, I would suggest that many organizations are not succeeding because they have never understood the importance of this fiduciary role. 

To quote Paul Jurbala in a recent communication, “To [build organizational capacity] we need leadership from funding agencies. Sport Canada, P/T ministries, and sport federations have been abdicating their responsibilities in this area. Massive screw-ups, bankruptcies and odious practices are swept under the rug. We need a second LTAD revolution”.

If readers are still confused where I am going with this – let me make it plain. Odious practices abound – and the greatest of them is the failure of directors and boards to understand their role and responsibility. This failure manifests itself in directors being so conflicted that they cannot make any meaningful contribution to the governance, capacity and effectiveness of the sport organization they purport to serve. 

Here is the essential legal background. Being a director is in many ways like being called to serve a higher purpose – the responsibilities are significant. Directors have the following legal duties:
  • The duty of diligence, meaning the duty to act reasonably, prudently, in good faith and with the best interests of the organization in mind,
  • The duty of loyalty, meaning the duty to not use the position of director to further private interests, and
  • The duty of obedience, meaning the duty to act within the laws and rules that govern the organization. 

These duties are in legislation and also in common law. Individuals who step up to serve on a board are called to this high standard – yet many either don’t realize or don’t willingly accept it. It is the duty of loyalty, in particular, that is most difficult to fulfill. To quote an earlier publication of ours, “Directors are required to put the interests of the organization first. These interests will always take precedence over any other interest, including a director’s personal interest. As well, directors who are involved in more than one organization may find that they cannot be loyal to both.” ("Legal Liability and Risk Management: A Handbook for Directors", 2002, prepared for Volunteer Canada).

I do not think that I have ever encountered a governing board of a sport organization that was not troubled by conflict of interest to some degree. The sport community is small in Canada and it is not uncommon for sport leaders to hold more than one leadership position in Canadian sport. In fact, it is the norm. I am not advocating the elimination of conflict of interest, because that would be impossible – but I do advocate strongly that organizations must be aware of this particular odious practice, and must take firmer steps to manage it. 

Here are some all too common examples of situations that are tainted by conflict of interest:

  • Parents of athletes who are members of a provincial or national team are also on the board of directors of an organization,
  • Presidents or directors of provincial/territorial sport organizations are also directors of national organizations,
  • Coaches of teams or at clubs are directors of a provincial board or a national board,
  • Employees of provincial branches also sit as directors of a national organization,
  • Individuals who have business dealings with a sport organization (such as a through a sponsorship or supplier contract) also sit on its board of directors.

These scenarios seem innocent enough until one realizes that the parent of an athlete should not participate in any debate or vote on a matter relating to high performance, teams or carding; directors of provincial organizations should not participate in any debate or vote on matters relating to provincial dues, fees or hosting opportunities; coaches should not participate in any debate or vote on matters that relate to team funding, athlete or coach selection or club incentives, etc. 

The most curious conflict of interest situation I encountered was one where a director was also a coach who was the supervisor of a paid assistant coach who was also the athlete representative director on the board. This did not automatically create a conflict for the coach-director, but created a perpetual conflict for the athlete-director, who found himself permanently conflicted as a director and muzzled as a voice for athletes at the board table. 

When I raise the concern of conflict of interest with a director or with a board, the usual response is one along the lines of: “Don’t be concerned, I would never behave in a biased fashion” or “I can multi-task and manage all these portfolios without getting my priorities confused”. These responses are reflective of a lack of understanding of what bias and conflict of interest mean. The test for bias is an objective test: it is not what the person accused of bias or conflict might think, or what the person alleging bias or conflict might think, but what a reasonable third party looking at the situation might reasonably perceive. An allegation of conflict of interest is not a condemnation of a person, it is a rightful concern with a situation. 

Until more sport organizations understand the duties of directors and are prepared to take steps to ensure that directors are supported to meet these duties, not fail them, the quality of debate and decision-making at the board table will continue to be mediocre. There are some promising practices emerging among progressive organizations: Swimming Natation Canada promotes independence of directors by requiring that any elected director resign from other swimming related positions, and the Royal Canadian Golf Association has recently modernized its governance model and nominating procedures to ensure the best possible people are recruited, well in advance, to seek board positions.

One thing that every organization can do immediately is to change bylaws and nominating procedures to ensure that nominees for election to the board are recruited and screened in advance by a nominating committee. A nominating process done in advance with timelines, with a prohibition against last minute nominations, will go a long way to ensuring that conflicts are avoided. And to the good individual who may have a conflict but nonetheless wants to contribute to the good work of a sport association, I would suggest that there are many opportunities to do that – but they involve serving on the organization’s various committees, not on its board of directors. 

We have written about this topic once before in this space (Spring 2006, Volume 12 Number 4): in that column we outlined the duties of a director in detail and cautioned those coaches who find themselves in a dual role. It is common in small sport clubs for the coach to also be a member of the Executive – I would suggest that these two roles are not compatible and such a coach will frequently find himself in a conflict situation. 

Sport has come a long way in recent years – and sport organizations now find themselves dealing with more legal issues than ever before. Managing conflicts of interest, and being transparent about directors’ respective affiliations and interests, is not only good risk management but also good business practice. It certainly represents a big step towards fairness and accountability, two values that many sport organizations profess to hold dear. 

      

Reminder: Nominate the 2009 Community Coach and Scholastic Coach of the Year

Football BC is asking supporters of a Football BC member organization to send in nominations for this year’s Community Coach of the Year and/or Scholastic Coach of the Year. The winning coaches will be honoured at the 2010 BC Lions Orange Helmet Awards Dinner.

Fully completed nomination forms and citations must be received by Friday, December 11, 2009. Nominations will not be accepted verbally or by phone. For detailed information and to download the nomination form, visit the Football BC website. 

      

Reminder: Order your tickets for the 2009 Subway All-Star Banquet Today!

Support and celebrate the 2009 BC High School Football season in style by purchasing a ticket or a table for the upcoming 2009 Subway All-Star Awards banquet.

The banquet will take place on Wednesday, December 2, 2009 at the Delta Burnaby Hotel & Conference Centre. Tickets are only $60 each or $600 for a table of 10.

To order tickets, contact:
Lui Garcea
Banquet Co-Chairperson
Cell: 778.990.9299
E-mail: lgarcea@telus.net

Mark Nykolaichuk
Banquet Co-Chairperson
Cell: 604.868.0394
E-mail: nykol@shaw.ca

      

Reminder: BC Lions present Football 101

The BC Lions will be holding their popular Football 101 program once again on Wednesday, November 4th at the BC Lions Training Facility located in Surrey from 6:30pm to 8:30pm.

For just $50 (plus GST), you will also receive a ticket to the BC Lions final regular season home game versus Edmonton on November 6th and a chance to watch the Lions pre-game warm-up from the sidelines. Must be 19 years or older to participate.

To register, call Jennifer at 604.930.5466.

       BC Lions Football 101

Reminder: True Sport Foundation Grant

The True Sport Foundation is accepting applications for the True Sport Community Sport Fund and all eligible organizations are encouraged to apply before the deadline of October 31st. Grants are in the amount of $5,000 or $25,000. For more information and to complete an application form online, visit the True Sport Foundation website.

Reminder: The Home Depot NFL Youth Coach of the Year

Football BC would like to remind all CIS players that nominations for The Home Depot NFL Coach of the Year are now being accepted. For more information or to nominate your high school or community coach, visit www.nflcanada.com and look for the nomination form under the ‘Programs’ section of the website. The deadline for submissions is November 5th.

      

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