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Massive change coming to B.C. high school sports

New governance model passed at B.C. School Sports AGM; high school sport commissions to be sa国际传媒榩hased outsa国际传媒
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Tweedsmuir running back Noah Anderson, the football clearly out of his hands (seen by his left knee), crosses the one-yard line as he runs for a touchdown in a game in November 2019. The governance of high school football and mostly all other high school sports is changing after a pivotal vote May 1. (Photo: Malin Jordan)

Big changes are coming to high school sports.

B.C. School Sports (BCSS) won its governance proposal vote at their AGM May 1 and this will immediately change the way high school sports is run in this province. The vote passed 212-77, garnering the required two-thirds majority of votes.

As of May 2, the 20 sport commissions in B.C. and their many volunteers are basically out as decision-makers for their respective sports. But some of the commissions are legal entities and itsa国际传媒檚 unknown what they will do moving forward, or what type of influence theysa国际传媒檒l have.

Paul Eberhardt, treasurer for the boys high school basketball commission, has already indicated his commission will continue to work in the best interests of boys basketball, whether it be from inside the new system or from outside.

sa国际传媒淲e are very disappointed that the BCSS Governance proposal was adopted,sa国际传媒 Eberhardt told the Cloverdale Reporter via email. sa国际传媒淲e do not believe this is what is best for high school sport in this Province. Our Association has been around for 75 years, and we are certainly not going away. We will continue to work hard on behalf of all our coaches and student-athletes to make sure their voices are heard.sa国际传媒

Jordan Abney, BCSS executive director, said hesa国际传媒檚 thrilled the proposal passed.

sa国际传媒淚t was a lot of years of work from a lot of different people,sa国际传媒 he said. sa国际传媒淚t was a very strong mandate and clear message about the direction the membership wants to go.sa国际传媒

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Abney said he was surprised at the sa国际传媒渂ig marginsa国际传媒 by which the vote passed. The proposal needed 66.7 per cent of sa国际传媒測essa国际传媒 votes and ended up getting 73 per cent. Usually there are about 450 schools registered with BCSS, but Abney said a number of smaller schools didnsa国际传媒檛 pay their fees this year as there were no high school sports due to COVID. He said there were only 375 fee-paying member schools that were eligible to vote.

sa国际传媒淥f that, there were six abstentions and 80 schools didnsa国际传媒檛 vote,sa国际传媒 he explained. sa国际传媒淪o, 295 of 375 schools participated. Given the fact that this was probably the single largest vote in the 53-year history of the organization, it also explains the need for a bit of a tweak from a governance perspective, as well.sa国际传媒

Abney said there were 247 advance ballots cast and only 48 ballots cast at the AGM.

He said BCSS already has all the paperwork prepared and ready to go out the door so the next steps toward this sweeping change will begin immediately.

sa国际传媒淭he legislative assembly will come together quickly. The transition from the commissions to the SACs (sport-advisory committees) will also help with zone repssa国际传媒攚e have invites going out to various commissionerssa国际传媒攁nd other committees will be formed.sa国际传媒

He said he wants to get all the wheels in motion before the summer break, adding the new governance system will mean business as usual for student athletes.

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sa国际传媒淚 donsa国际传媒檛 think the student athlete experience is going to change drastically, especially for the high-profile sports,sa国际传媒 Abney explained. sa国际传媒淲esa国际传媒檙e hoping to continue to maintain the status and level of the high-profile sports and to elevate the experience for athletes in some of the sports that have not had quite the same experience.sa国际传媒

He added after the transition to the new model, theysa国际传媒檙e going to look at ways to help improve all sports.

sa国际传媒淥ur commissionssa国际传媒攖hat are essentially being phased out heresa国际传媒攈ave really focused on championships,sa国际传媒 he noted. sa国际传媒淏ut only about 13 or 14 per cent of student athletes make it to championships. So theresa国际传媒檚 a whole swathe of kids that donsa国际传媒檛 make it that far that we are also responsible for. So wesa国际传媒檙e going to take a look at that and look at how we can serve all 70,000 student athletes.sa国际传媒

Walter van Halst, commissioner for boys rugby and a teacher at Cloverdalesa国际传媒檚 Lord Tweedsmuir, said hesa国际传媒檚 disappointed with the result and sa国际传媒渧ery disturbedsa国际传媒 by a voting process that he says wasnsa国际传媒檛 transparent.

sa国际传媒淚 donsa国际传媒檛 know what Isa国际传媒檓 going to do now,sa国际传媒 he indicated. sa国际传媒淏ut Isa国际传媒檓 very worried about the future of high school sports in British Columbiasa国际传媒攚hich were already in decline.sa国际传媒

According to van Halst, the number of teacher-coaches has steadily dropped across the province.

sa国际传媒淏ig drop in the last five to 10 years, and thatsa国际传媒檚 bad for kids because it means less teams that kids can play on.sa国际传媒

He said the new governance model, which he fought against, devalues community-coaches in favour of teacher-coaches and takes the voice away from community-coaches.

(Community-coaches and retired teacher-coaches are not allowed to be a part of the new governance system, only active teachers and administrators. This is different from the commissions which have quite a high number of volunteers that are not active teachers/administrators.)

sa国际传媒淲hen coaches arensa国际传媒檛 valued, itsa国际传媒檚 bad for kids, because fewer people will be willing to volunteer. And this new model doesnsa国际传媒檛 show appreciation for community-coaches.sa国际传媒

He said he doesnsa国际传媒檛 think the SACs (essentially powerless replacements of the commissions, that sit below two new layers of empowered decision makers) will attract the same massive numbers of volunteers.

sa国际传媒淭hese people volunteer because theysa国际传媒檙e passionate about their sport. They feel appreciated and empowered. And thatsa国际传媒檚 why they do it.sa国际传媒

Van Halst also thinks the voting process wasnsa国际传媒檛 entirely transparent.

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sa国际传媒淢any of the ADs, or principalssa国际传媒攂ecause Isa国际传媒檝e heard some principals were voting in place of their ADssa国际传媒攚ho voted in advance didnsa国际传媒檛 know exactly what they were voting for,sa国际传媒 he said. sa国际传媒淭he people who voted Saturday (May 1), didnsa国际传媒檛 either because no one knows how many stakeholder groups were consulted.sa国际传媒

Two days before the AGM, that the B.C. Teacherssa国际传媒 Federation, one of the stakeholder groups listed as being involved in the new legislative assembly, wasnsa国际传媒檛 asked to be part of the new model. BCSS responded with a statement from their board of directors that said, sa国际传媒淎n invitation for the BCTF to name a Legislative Assembly member is already prepared, should governance pass so they can begin their process. Just as invitations are prepared for all other stakeholder groups, who as a result of our current relationships have varying levels of knowledge of the proposal.sa国际传媒

Abney disagreed with van Halst, saying the entire process was very transparent. He said the actual vote covered the bylaws and handbook and the proposal was a supplementary document.

sa国际传媒淲hat was in the bylaws sa国际传媒 was never changed or altered at all,sa国际传媒 he said. sa国际传媒淲hat was voted on in the advance voting was exactly what was voted on in the live voting.sa国际传媒

He also said the voting system was very secure. sa国际传媒淓very school had to register their vote and got a secure pin that was individualized to their school that was sent directly to their principal of record in our membership system.sa国际传媒

He said a lot of the people that were against the new proposal and unhappy about the change have since contacted Abney to say sa国际传媒渏ob well donesa国际传媒 and have told him they are looking to move forward together.

sa国际传媒淚 think the margin of victory, over 73 per cent, is a strong mandate from our membership sa国际传媒 our focus right now is looking forward on how we now put this into action and ensure wesa国际传媒檙e ready to go for the fall.sa国际传媒



editor@cloverdalereporter.com

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Malin Jordan

About the Author: Malin Jordan

Malin is the editor of the Cloverdale Reporter.
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