Home CANADA Report: Kaillie Humphries preparing to compete for U.S., sues Bobsleigh Canada

Report: Kaillie Humphries preparing to compete for U.S., sues Bobsleigh Canada

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Face of Nation : Kaillie Humphries says it’s become clear Bobsleigh Canada no longer wants her competing for the team and has asked to be released. This comes more than a year after Humphries filed a harassment complaint with the national sport organization.

However, the 34-year-old from Calgary claims she’s been waiting to be released from Bobsleigh Canada for weeks, so that she can begin training for the U.S. Team — and she can’t wait any longer. “I want to say ‘thank you’ to Canada, who has been a huge support. It’s really hard. It’s hard. This has been my life,” Humphries told.

“This has been a 15-year career. It’s been everything I’ve dreamed of since I was a kid. To know that a country has supported me so strongly and the people in the country have been so great — that I have to either consider being forcefully retired and having somebody else dictate what happens to my career.”

Humphries is suing the national governing body for blocking her release from the team and breaching their contract relating to athlete and coach code of conduct.

Last August, Humphries filed a harassment complaint with Bobsleigh Canada, telling CBC in January she was in “a position where my workplace environment was impaired and I couldn’t compete.” Humphries has been waiting for more than a year for the national sport organization to complete its internal investigation.

“I can confirm that I am seeking a full release from Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton. Last August, I filed a harassment complaint with Bobsleigh Canada. I was in a position where my workplace environment was impaired and I couldn’t compete,” Humphries said.  “It has been over a year and they have not completed their internal investigation. I have done everything I can but cannot return to a work environment that I do not believe is safe.”

“I want to be clear that I am not choosing to leave Canada. I love this country!” the statement went on. “This has been the most difficult ordeal of my life and I want Canada to know that competing for you, and winning for you at the Olympics, will always be the highlight of my career.”

“Being put into an environment that is unsafe. It’s not okay, let alone I’m going to be punished just for stating that those facts are existing to me,” Humphries said. 

“It was a very hard decision, it still is a very hard decision to get to this point. At the end of the day, I have to be who I am, I have to be strong.” Humphries says once she secures her release from Team Canada, she will begin her process to become eligible to compete for the United States.

International Olympic Committee (IOC) requirements dictate that an athlete changing countries “may participate in the Olympic Games to represent his new country provided that at least three years have passed since the competitor last represented [their] former country.” She plans to attend a U.S. bobsleigh training camp in Lake Placid as a guest next week.