Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

SFU's athletics director leaves university months after football controversy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Aug, 2023 12:43 PM
  • SFU's athletics director leaves university months after football controversy

B.C.'s Simon Fraser University says its athletics director has left the institution.

The departure of Theresa Hanson, the university's director of athletics and recreation, comes four months after controversy erupted over the school's elimination of its varsity football program followed by the hiring of a lawyer to investigate claims made by one of its sports teams.

The Burnaby, B.C., university announced the dissolution of the football team on April 4 of this year after their affiliation with an NCAA conference was ended.

Simon Fraser University president Joy Johnson says the decision to eliminate the program wasn't financially based, but rather on the Texas-based Lone Star Conference's announcement it would not renew its football affiliation with Simon Fraser past the 2023 campaign.

SFU joined the Lone Star Conference in 2021 for a two-year term and the budget allocated to running the team in the upcoming season would have been $950,000.

The university retained a Vancouver-based lawyer who specializes in investigating sports-related matters in May 2023 after concerns were raised by student-athletes.

A full and independent assessment of the future of SFU football remains ongoing, with a final report expected this September.

"After careful consideration and discussion, Theresa Hanson, Senior Director, Athletics and Recreation, and SFU have come to mutual agreement that the time is right for a change in direction within Athletics and Recreation," said Rummana Khan Hemani, vice-provost, students and international, in a statement.

The program's players previously argued for a reinstatement of the program as well as exhibition games in the fall, seeking an injunction in court that was denied.

Bob Copeland, an independent adviser appointed in May to review the possibility of the university's cancelled football program playing exhibition games in the fall, concluded doing so posed safety and logistical concerns.

His review's conclusions were accepted by the university, with the school adding that the recommendations were in the best interests of student-athletes' safety and academic performance.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Budget to include rebate to help with groceries

Budget to include rebate to help with groceries
The NDP had called on the federal government to extend the measure. In the lead up to the budget, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland has promised targeted inflation relief for low-income Canadians.

Budget to include rebate to help with groceries

PM stayed in $6k London suite for royal funeral

PM stayed in $6k London suite for royal funeral
The stay at the Corinthia London hotel became the subject of public debate last fall when media honed in on the details of the $400,000 trip, after obtaining documents through access-to-information requests.

PM stayed in $6k London suite for royal funeral

Kamloops nation gets $12.5M for healing centre

Kamloops nation gets $12.5M for healing centre
Indigenous Services Minister Patty Hajdu told a crowd in Kamloops, B.C., that the nation has led the way in opening the eyes of the country to the truths that were always known to Indigenous Peoples.

Kamloops nation gets $12.5M for healing centre

B.C. boosts funding to train more veterinarians

B.C. boosts funding to train more veterinarians
The college has been training B.C.'s veterinarians for five decades, and she said the multi-year funding boost will give students "certainty," while addressing the need to train and retain vets in communities essential to B.C.'s food security.

B.C. boosts funding to train more veterinarians

Minister stands by B.C. salmon farm closures

Minister stands by B.C. salmon farm closures
A statement from the office of Fisheries Minister Joyce Murray says her decision last month against renewing the licences for the farms off Vancouver Island near Campbell River was difficult but necessary.

Minister stands by B.C. salmon farm closures

B.C. LNG facility maps plan to early net zero

B.C. LNG facility maps plan to early net zero
Woodfibre LNG says in a statement it plans to meet net-zero emissions by the time operations start at the south coast export facility in 2027. Company president Christine Kennedy says emission reduction opportunities are a priority for the project as it implements a strategy that will result in the world's first net-zero facility.    

B.C. LNG facility maps plan to early net zero