overedge
Mayor of Carrot City
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Skate Safe is Skate Canada's online reporting site for allegations. It's run by a Vancouver company named Whistleblower Security.
The poster on X is right that the domain for the site is owned by Skate Canada. That information shows up when you put the address into Shopify's domain search. The person named as the registrant for the site is a Skate Canada employee who works in IT. So the site is not entirely independent of Skate Canada.
Whistleblower's speciality is providing ethics reporting for companies. The list of clients online includes a few other sports organizations, but it doesn't appear to be one of their major areas of business. I don't see any public record of a call for proposals from SC for this third-party work, so I don't know how Whistleblower was chosen.
When the online Skate Safe reporting first started, I heard complaints that Skate Canada, or Whistleblower, had apparently just taken a standard template for corporate reporting and put it online. Apparently the forms that complainants were supposed to fill out had instructions that mentioned "employers" and "employees" - which wouldn't be relevant e.g. if a skater wanted to complain about a coach's behavour. I don't know if that has been fixed now.
ETA: ITP Sport is a consulting company that specializes in Safe Sport. It's run by the guy who was responsible for Skate Canada's first version of a "safe sport" program. But I don't know if it currently has any connection to Skate Canada or Skate Safe, or where it stores its data.
Again, I don't know if this is still the case, but storing Canadian data in the US can be a security issue. It used to be, and maybe still is, a lot easier in the US than in Canada for law enforcement, investigators, etc to get full access to data, including information that identifies individuals. (Thank you, Homeland Security Act.) That could be a concern with a safe sport complaint.
The poster on X is right that the domain for the site is owned by Skate Canada. That information shows up when you put the address into Shopify's domain search. The person named as the registrant for the site is a Skate Canada employee who works in IT. So the site is not entirely independent of Skate Canada.
Whistleblower's speciality is providing ethics reporting for companies. The list of clients online includes a few other sports organizations, but it doesn't appear to be one of their major areas of business. I don't see any public record of a call for proposals from SC for this third-party work, so I don't know how Whistleblower was chosen.
When the online Skate Safe reporting first started, I heard complaints that Skate Canada, or Whistleblower, had apparently just taken a standard template for corporate reporting and put it online. Apparently the forms that complainants were supposed to fill out had instructions that mentioned "employers" and "employees" - which wouldn't be relevant e.g. if a skater wanted to complain about a coach's behavour. I don't know if that has been fixed now.
ETA: ITP Sport is a consulting company that specializes in Safe Sport. It's run by the guy who was responsible for Skate Canada's first version of a "safe sport" program. But I don't know if it currently has any connection to Skate Canada or Skate Safe, or where it stores its data.
Again, I don't know if this is still the case, but storing Canadian data in the US can be a security issue. It used to be, and maybe still is, a lot easier in the US than in Canada for law enforcement, investigators, etc to get full access to data, including information that identifies individuals. (Thank you, Homeland Security Act.) That could be a concern with a safe sport complaint.
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