US players say ‘deep flaws’ in how SafeSport handles abuse claims

Football
Published 19.07.2023
US players say ‘deep flaws’ in how SafeSport handles abuse claims

The US Center for SafeSport is failing to deal with abuse claims appropriately, United States nationwide soccer workforce gamers stated, asking Congress to alter how the physique operates days earlier than the ladies’s workforce launches its bid for a fifth World Cup title.

The gamers’ issues have been outlined in a letter to House members on Wednesday that included the signatures of all 23 athletes on the US girls’s World Cup squad and comes after revelations of widespread abuse throughout the ladies’s recreation within the United States.

SafeSport, an impartial non-profit organisation, was fashioned in 2017 and directed by Congress to reply to and forestall abuse throughout the US Olympic and Paralympic motion.

“SafeSport is the only formal mechanism to keep bad actors out of our sport, and we are reliant on it as we work towards reform,” the letter, despatched by the U.S. Soccer’s Athletes’ Council, reads.

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“SafeSport was created with noble and important intentions, but we believe that as it stands today, SafeSport is failing in what it was meant to achieve.”

The letter, which pointed to “deep flaws” in SafeSport’s processes, was signed by present and former members of each the boys’s and ladies’s nationwide groups.

The name for motion comes months after an impartial investigation discovered abuse and sexual misconduct spanned a number of groups within the top-flight National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) and that US Soccer, the game’s nationwide governing physique, did not put in “basic measures” to safeguard gamers.

“Some of us were teammates who played alongside the brave women who spoke up, and some of us read painful echoes of our own personal stories in the report,” the gamers stated.

“US Soccer and the NWSL have been hard at work to reform our sport, but we need your help to create real change.”

Among the issues outlined within the doc have been an appeals and arbitration course of that gamers say may be “damaging and retraumatizing for victims of abuse.”

Also at challenge is SafeSport’s so-called “exclusive jurisdiction,” which the athletes stated leaves U.S. Soccer “without an avenue to pursue its own investigations against suspected abusers” when SafeSport administratively closes a case.

“US Soccer wants to do the right thing and take proactive steps against suspected abusers,” the gamers wrote.

“Our federation has tools and resources to investigate reports of abuse, but SafeSport is preventing them from participating in any way.”

The letter known as for members of Congress to cross laws to alter SafeSport’s processes.

The US girls are kicking off their bid for an unprecedented third consecutive title in Auckland this week, days after receiving the ESPYs Arthur Ashe Award for Courage in recognition of their equal pay combat.