John Furlong (sports administrator)

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John Furlong
OC, OBC, LLD (hc), D.Tech (hc)
150px
Chief executive officer of Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games
In office
February 21, 2004[1] – December 31, 2010
Leader Jacques Rogge
Preceded by Valentino Castellani
Succeeded by Dmitry Chernyshenko
Personal details
Born (1950-10-12) October 12, 1950 (age 73)
Tipperary, Ireland
Nationality Irish Canadian
Spouse(s) Margaret Cook (m. 1970–76)
Dayle Turner (1978–82)
Gail Robb (m. 1984–2011)
Deborah Sharp (m. 2012–her death 2013)
Renee Smith-Valade (2014)
Residence Vancouver
Occupation Sports administrator
Religion Roman Catholic
Website johnfurlong.ca

John Furlong, OC,[2] OBC[3] (born October 12, 1950)[4] is a Canadian sports administrator. He is the executive chair of the Vancouver Whitecaps FC. He was the president and CEO of VANOC which oversaw the preparation and execution of the 2010 Winter Olympics and 2010 Winter Paralympics Games. Prior to his appointment as the CEO of VANOC, he chaired the Vancouver 2010 Bid Corporation (2001–2004), president of Arbutus Club, a members-only family club, member of the Canadian Olympic Committee, chair of the BC Summer Games and BC Winter Games, and Sport B.C.[3]

Arrival in Canada

While Furlong's biographical memoir, Patriot Hearts, claims he and his family came to Canada from Ireland in 1974,[5][6] it is now established that he lived in Burns Lake, British Columbia in 1969 as a Frontier Apostle. During his time in Burns Lake he married Margaret Cook, a kindergarten teacher at Immaculata Catholic School. In June 1970 Furlong and Cook moved from Burns Lake to Prince George, British Columbia where their first child was born.[7][8][9]

Athletic background

Furlong participated in international level basketball, European handball, and squash. He became Canadian Squash Champion in 1986. He was schooled at St. Vincent's C.B.S., Glasnevin, Dublin.[10]

Olympic and Paralympic Games

In the lead-up to the 2010 Winter Games, Furlong chaired the Vancouver 2010 Bid Corporation (2001–2004). After becoming president and CEO of the Organizing Committee, he was responsible for preparing and marketing the events. Hours before the formal opening of the Olympic Games, Furlong had to begin managing the crisis regarding the controversial death of Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili. Furlong had been involved in directing improvements to the luge track construction.[11][12][13]

Post-Olympics

In the aftermath of the 2011 Vancouver Stanley Cup riot, Furlong was appointed, along with Douglas Keefe, to independently examine the incident and to offer recommendations. The report, The Night the City Became a Stadium: Independent Review of 2011 Vancouver Stanley Cup Playoffs Riot, was published on September 1, 2011.[14]

On April 11, 2012, Vancouver Whitecaps FC announced the hiring of Furlong as executive chair of the club, a position he currently holds.[15]

Abuse allegations

Georgia Straight newspaper

On September 26, 2012, the Georgia Straight newspaper published an article by journalist Laura Robinson, reporting that that Furlong physically and mentally abused children during his time as a physical education teacher at Immaculata Catholic School in Burns Lake.[16] The article claimed support from over 45 statements, including eight sworn affidavits, from former students.[16] Furlong held a press conference and released a written statement denying the article's abuse allegations.[17]

Additional allegations

In 2013 civil actions, three former students alleged that Furlong abused them sexually, physically, and verbally and that school officials, the diocese, and archdiocese did nothing to intervene.[18][19]

Robinson added to the allegations in her response to Furlong's defamation action. A woman, understood to be a former wife, gave a statement alleging forced sex, verbal abuse, and emotional abuse during their marriage. Robinson also cited statements that reveal that Furlong had physically and emotionally abused another former wife.[20]

Legal problems

Abandoned legal actions

In November 2012, Furlong filed and eventually dropped defamation suits against the Georgia Straight newspaper and Laura Robinson.[21] Georgia Straight and Robinson were awarded legal costs.[22] Robinson's article remains live and unaltered on the Georgia Straight newspaper's website.[23]

In July 2013, two former students filed civil lawsuits in British Columbia Supreme Court against Furlong, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver, the Roman Catholic Prince George Diocese, and the Catholic Independent Schools Diocese of Prince George. A third former student filed suit in September on similar grounds.[19]

Jason Gratl, the Vancouver lawyer who had represented all three accusers, withdrew his services before the collapse of two cases.[24][25] The final complaint was withdrawn.[26]

Robinson versus Furlong

On January 28, 2014, Robinson filed a notice of claim for defamation against Furlong and TwentyTen Group in BC Supreme Court.[27] The trial took place in June 2015. In her September 2015 decision, B.C. Supreme Court Justice Catherine Wedge dismissed Robinson's defamation claim citing Furlong's qualified privilege to make statements "that might otherwise meet the legal definition of defamation."[28]

That decision has come under scrutiny by Furlong's accusers who were excluded from the trial and by some members of the media, who felt the judge disregarded a journalist's right to report on issues of public interest.[29] Furlong's accusers filed a complaint January 8, 2016 with the Canadian Judicial Council identifying examples of incorrect information in the written decision.[30][31]

Personal life

In 1970, Furlong married Margaret Cook, a teacher at Immaculata Elementary School in Burns Lake. Their first child was born in Prince George.[32] Furlong and Cook are parents to five grown children.[33]

Furlong lived with Dayle "Dee" Turner in a three-year common law marriage from the late 1970s. Turner has claimed Furlong physically and sexually abused her.[34]

Furlong and third wife, Gail Robb, married in 1984 and divorced in 2011.[35]

Furlong and Deborah Sharp were married from 2012 until her death in 2013.[36]

In late 2013 Furlong and former employee Renee Smith-Valade became romantic partners.[37] Furlong and Smith-Valade have shared a home in Vancouver since early 2014.[38]

Autobiography

Furlong recounts his experience leading up to and throughout the Games in his book, Patriot Hearts: Inside the Olympics That Changed a Country. Co-authored by Globe and Mail journalist Gary Mason, this autobiography describes how he led the Games through difficulties such as the death of Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili, a global recession, and the washed out snow at Cypress Bowl.

Furlong claims in Patriot Hearts that he arrived to Canada in 1974. No mention is made of his time in Burns Lake (1969–70) where he met his first wife[39] and is alleged to have abused First Nations students.[40] His book also excludes his time in Prince George (1970–72) where his first child was born. Furlong has stated that his time in Burns Lake was "fairly brief and fairly uneventful."[41]

In response to the Georgia Straight revelations, Gary Mason, Furlong's Patriot Hearts co-author stated, "I have been asked if John Furlong ever mentioned working in Burns Lake for several years before 1974 during the course of our interviews for Patriot Hearts. I can say he did not. As for the rest of the allegations in a Georgia Straight article about John, I have no knowledge and can't speak to them. Patriot Hearts was John Furlong's Olympic memoir. Any questions about it arising from the article written by Laura Robinson are best directed to John."[42]

Awards

Ribbon of the Order of British Columbia
File:Skytrain Mk II In The Olympic Spirit Of John Furlong.jpg
Skytrain Mk II in the Olympic Spirit of John Furlong

Published works

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References

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  6. Patriot Hearts: Inside the Olympics That Changed a Country Archived November 22, 2010 at the Wayback Machine
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  48. BCIT Convocation 2010 Archived September 27, 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  49. JIBC News Release Archived December 17, 2010 at the Wayback Machine
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External links

Preceded by President of Organizing Committee for Winter Olympic Games
2010
Succeeded by
Russia Dmitry Chernyshenko