Hockey mom's post highlights 'broom closet' for girls change room
CBC
The handwritten sign taped to the arena door said "Girls dressing room."
But once the four female players took a look inside, they could only laugh. Only about four-by-eight feet in size, the room had no sink, no plumbing fixtures and not a single hook to hang a coat or towel.
Instead of a bench, there were a few plastic chairs. Where there would usually be a rubber floor to protect players' skates, there was only bare concrete, stained a rust-coloured brown.
"It was essentially a broom closet with four stacking chairs," said Liz Page, president of the Point Edward Minor Hockey Association. "I'm not sure that four hockey bags, four chairs and four girls would have even fit in there."
Page is a mother of one of the four girls on the Point Edward Black Hawks under 15 team, which played at the arena last weekend for a Silverstick qualifying tournament in the municipality of South Huron. There are four girls on the team, boys fill out the rest of the roster.
Page posted the video on Facebook and later gave permission for journalist Tara Jeffrey to share it on her X account, the social media platform better known by its former name Twitter.
Page told CBC News she didn't share the video to shame arena staff at the small community of Stephen Township, located about 40 kilomteres north of London, Ont. She understands they were trying to do their best to accommodate a visiting team with both male and female players.
She posted about it to highlight a problem she said persists in youth hockey: Proper dressing rooms for boys while girls are often asked to make-do with a makeshift space to change into their gear.
"We're pretty proud to have four girls playing and keeping up with the boys," said Page, whose husband coaches the team. "But we do encounter challenges with dressing rooms sometimes for sure."
Page also didn't put up her post to single out any one arena. She acknowledges that many small communities in Canada have older arenas at a time when basic arena upgrades are incredibly expensive. She does, however, want to point out that there remains work to be done before hockey becomes truly inclusive.
"In 2023 when Hockey Canada and OMHA (Ontario Minor Hockey Association) are constantly touting 'We can all play' and "Hockey is for everyone,' I think there should be some follow up around that. We shouldn't be showing up at arenas and be asked to make-do."
In September Hockey Canada updated its dressing room policy, calling for all minor hockey players to have "safe, inclusive, and equitable dressing spaces." The policy mentions dressing rooms with separate stall for players but also dressing "environments" which can be temporarily repurposed spaces.
The policy encourages hockey associations to provide accommodations for players who ask for separate dressing room spaces whether that request is for religious reasons or reasons related to gender identity.
The policy also asks players to arrive at arenas wearing a "base layer" which covers their bodies, so they only have to change into their skates and protective padding once they arrive at the arena.