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Articles - General
Centre for Sport and Law assists amateur athletes across Canada
The Lawyers Weekly
By
Rachel Corbett
May 27, 2005
With a few exceptions, clients organizations come to the Centre for Sport and Law without a clear ideas of what they want or need. All they know is that they have a problem.
The
Centre for Sport and Law is a small company of four professionals
who work exclusively in the Canadian amateur sport community.
I started the company with a partner in 1991, and today we provide
a range of legal and quasi-legal services to sport organizations
throughout Canada. Such services include risk management consulting,
policy development, governance management and all forms of dispute
resolution, as well as more typical legal services such as contract
drafting for employment and intellectual property matters, and
advocacy before administrative tribunals.
Lawyer Hilary Findlay and I started the company because we perceived
that the sport community needed greater access to legal information
and in these early years, our focus was educational programs
and services. From 1993 to 2000, we published a best-selling
series of ten reader-friendly handbooks on topics ranging from
waivers to bylaws, and over this time traveled to every part
of the country delivering hundreds of presentations on legal
issues. Hilary and I also pen a quarterly column in the national
magazine Coaches Report, now in its 13th year. Through
the 1990s we became nationally recognized for being able to deliver
practical legal information in formats, both written and oral,
that sport audiences could readily understand and apply.
In the mid
1996 we relocated the Centre to Ottawa, where our work expanded
into dispute resolution. Starting at this time we assumed a
coordinating role in Canada’s
national anti-doping program, managing all appeals and reinstatement
applications on behalf of the parties involved in doping disputes
(athletes, sport governing bodies, Sport Canada and the Canadian
Centre for Ethics in Sport). From 1996 to 2003, we also operated
the ADR
Program for Amateur Sport, a voluntary arbitration mechanism
for the sport community, which served as precursor to the present
day Sport Dispute Resolution Centre of Canada.
People often ask if the Centre for Sport and Law is a law firm.
While we have capability to provide standard legal services like
any law firm, we have found that such a format is not well-suited
to our clientele. Sport governing bodies seldom need traditional
legal services, but they have ample need for legal and quasi-legal
analysis and problem-solving. The term ‘legal consulting’ might
be a better description of what we do to meet our sport clients’ business
needs.
With a few
exceptions, client organizations come to the Centre for Sport
and Law without a clear idea of what they want or need. All
they know is that they have a problem. Our job at the Centre
is usually to help them better define and understand the problem,
and then explore ways to solve it. It is not uncommon for us
to also oversee the implementation of solutions – with
the result that the Centre builds lasting relationships with
clients. Some organizations have been using a broad range of
our services for well over a decade.
Dispute resolution
represents about half of the Centre’s
work today. We conduct investigations, assist clients in dealing
with disputes by coordinating internal appeal mechanisms, on
occasion help sport bodies in negotiation and mediation efforts,
and represent sport governing bodies in arbitrations and other
tribunal proceedings. The months leading up to major international
games or important world championships have always been busy
times for the Centre for Sport and Law – last summer, before
Athens, we acted on behalf of sport federations in eleven disputes
relating to selection to the Canadian Olympic and Paralympic
teams.
The Centre
for Sport and Law has also done consulting work on the international
scene, most often in Commonwealth countries that share Canada’s legal framework as well as amateur
sport structure. Historically, Canada has been a global leader
in anti-doping efforts and in promoting independent arbitration
of sport disputes, and the Centre’s expertise in these
two areas has created opportunities to contribute to international
dialogue. As well, through her teaching and scholarship at Brock
University where she is an Associate Professor of Sport Management,
Hilary is rapidly gaining an international reputation as an expert
on sport-specific dispute resolution systems in sport.
Today, the Centre consists of myself as Managing Director and
Hilary Findlay (partner), both in St. Catharines, Steve Indig
(partner) in Toronto and David Lech (Associate) in Ottawa. The
three lawyers all bring to the Centre solid backgrounds in amateur
sport: Hilary as a former varsity field hockey coach; Steve as
a former nationally ranked swimmer, masters swim coach and basketball
referee; and David as an elite alpine ski racer and former national
level coach who has remained active in whitewater paddling and
X-country skiing. My own personal connection to sport is through
my daughter, current national high school champion (single sculls)
and candidate for the 2005 U19 Junior National Rowing Team.
There is
no shortage of the specialized consulting work that the Centre
does, and over our 15-year life there has not been much direct
competition either. The work we do requires creativity, planning
and problem-solving skills, as well as an in-depth knowledge
of the sport system and sport issues. Some of what we do is
straightforward legal work, but quite a lot isn’t. Readers
should also know that amateur sport is not a field of endeavour
that makes anybody rich. But it is very satisfying for sport-minded
people like ourselves to be able to work in the sport sector
exclusively, and to see our contributions making an appreciable
difference.
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