Ottawa, ON – The Inclusion in Canadian Sports Network (ICSN) proudly hosted the second annual Black Leaders in Sport Day (BLSD) on February 23 and 24, 2026 in Ottawa. Building on the success of the inaugural event in 2025, this year’s gathering expanded into a two-day national convening on Parliament Hill focused on advancing inclusion in Canadian sport.
BLSD 2026 brought together more than 75 emerging and established Black leaders from across the Canadian amateur sport sector. Participants included administrators, coaches, officials, researchers, sport medicine professionals, and community advocates working across the sport system and beyond.
Together, they gathered to strengthen collaboration, share lived experience, and advance dialogue on the future of sport in Canada.
Day One: Engagement with the Senate
The first day featured a visit to the Senate of Canada, where Black sport leaders met with Senators to discuss the current landscape of inclusion in Canadian sport and the barriers that continue to affect Black and racialized participants.
The discussions focused on representation, accountability, and the need for sustained systemic change. Senators Paulette Senior, Dawn Arnold, Bernadette Clement, Marty Deacon, Marilou McPhedran and Tony Inca welcomed participants and created space for open dialogue on how sport systems can better reflect the communities they serve.
Day Two: Policy Dialogue at the House of Commons
The second day convened participants at the Sir John A. Macdonald Building for a full day of policy discussions with federal leaders and senior officials.
Opening remarks were delivered by Deputy House Leader Arielle Kayabaga and Secretary of State for Sport Adam van Koeverden. Participants also heard from representatives of Canadian Heritage, Employment and Social Development Canada, and Sport Canada.
Sessions included presentations on Canada’s Anti-Racism Strategy 2024 to 2028, the Supporting Black Canadian Communities Initiative, and Canada’s Sport Policy 2025 to 2035. The day concluded with a fireside conversation with members of the Federal Parliamentary Black Caucus and an evening reception that encouraged further collaboration across sectors.
The convening created space for honest reflection on persistent inequities in sport, grounded in both data and lived experience. Participants emphasized that meaningful progress requires accountability, structural reform, and sustained partnership across federal institutions, sport organizations, and communities.
“This moment did not happen overnight,” said ICSN leadership. “It reflects years of advocacy and relationship-building. The conversations over these two days signal a shared commitment to ensuring that sport in Canada is truly safe, inclusive, and accessible for all.”
Black Leaders in Sport Day continues to grow as a national platform for leadership, policy engagement, and community building. As ICSN looks ahead, the focus remains clear: collaboration, accountability, and measurable change.
The work continues.