More than 60 athletes have penned an open letter calling for resignation of the President of Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton Sarah Storey and high-performance director, Chris Le Bihan, citing issues with culture, safety, transparency and governance, claiming staff makes arbitrary decisions on matters like team selection based on biases, and has little concern for athlete safety.
Harping on the development in a chat with newsmen, the athletes all described a grim culture, one where they’re afraid to speak out for fear of retaliation from the organization — namely, losing their spot on the national team and thus their Olympic dreams. Those concerns are also reflected in the letter, signed by athletes who competed for Canada as far back as 2014.

The letter reads: “BCS’s leadership style feels authoritarian, and fear of retaliation silences athletes and prevents them from bringing forward any questions or concerns”.
“The athletes feel they have no voice on matters that directly affect them and face an organization that is unwilling to meaningfully address concerns and make improvements.”
It is important to note that Canada’s skeleton team competed at the Beijing Olympic test event this past fall without a coach present, which led to numerous bumps and bruises on the unfamiliar track.
Athletes on bobsled’s development team said they had no access to medical treatment at a camp at Whistler, B.C., including an athlete who was ejected from a sled.
Recently, several skeleton athletes told newsmen that they were almost completely self-funded.
The athletes’ letter said “systemic issues within BCS have adversely impacted both the sports of bobsleigh and skeleton and have become increasingly problematic.
Many athletes have suffered physically, mentally, emotionally and financially as a result of the organization failing to address these systemic issues, and the future of both sports are in jeopardy under the current administrative regime.
“The athletes believe that the immediate resignation . . . is required to shift the culture of this organization into a safe, supportive, functional athlete-centric model from which to build future world and Olympic champions.”

In its reaction, Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton said it will engage an independent, third-party mediator to help address the concerns of its athletes.
In an email statement, Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton’s board outlined a two-step process to remedy the athletes’ concerns.
According to BCS, the first step will be to convene meetings with athletes to identify issues of concern and opportunities for improvement within the organization’s high-performance program.
Step 2 is to convene a mediated meeting of athletes, the board, as well as representatives from Sport Canada, Own The Podium, and the Canadian Olympic Committee to review the issues and develop an action plan.
The call for mediation comes two weeks after the closure of the Beijing Olympics, where Justin Kripps piloted Canada’s four-man sled to a bronze medal and fellow Canadian Christine de Bruin claimed bronze in monobob.








