Newyddion
12 Year Strategy for Athletics in the UK released
02/11/2020 00:00, I Mewn Blog /
UK ATHLETICS AND HOME COUNTRIES ANNOUNCE NEW STRATEGY 2020 – 2032
- Strategy unveiled following period of consultation as the first step in a new era of collaboration between UKA and Home Country Athletics Federations.
- All organisations united behind three clear aspirations.
- New Working Groups comprising of UKA and HCAF leads and independent experts to oversee strategic areas.
UK Athletics (UKA) and the four Home Country Athletics Federations (HCAFs); Athletics Northern Ireland, England Athletics, Scottish Athletics and Welsh Athletics have unveiled the new UK-wide strategy for the sport of athletics: Athletics Unified – Powering Potential; Enhancing Experiences, Delivering Success 2020-2032. The strategy, developed between all five organisations, was formulated from existing research and understanding of the sport and has also benefited from an period of consultation during Summer 2020, including an online consultation process and a series of joint engagement webinars held by UK Athletics and HCAF partners.
James Williams, CEO Welsh Athletics
“Our own strategy for the sport in Wales launched last year is closely aligned to these aspirations, and we are committed to working with our partners at UK Athletics and the Home Countries. The way we have shared the challenge of COVID has demonstrated how collectively we can be far stronger than working independently. I look forward to the next period and continuing to develop this fantastic sport of ours, and by putting the athlete at the heart of the decision-making process, I am sure that we can create a stronger sport for all to enjoy.”
At the centre of the new strategy are three key aspirations marking a clear departure from previous strategic focus areas and demonstrating a commitment to supporting the core of the sport by putting the athlete and the athletics family at the heart of everything they do.
The key aspirations are:
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Goal 1: In 2032, GB & NI will have a representative in every discipline at all senior international events. In 2032, 95% of the Paralympic team will reach their final.
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Goal 2: A world-renowned infrastructure of athletics and running clubs, competitions, coaches and officials that retains over 250,000 registered athletes across the UK by 2032.
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Goal 3: Athletics, running and pushing* is the nations’ choice to stay active: 9 million regular participants by 2032.
The three aspirations are strategically linked: To improve performance of athletes (Goal 1) there will need to be a world-class support system of clubs, coaches, officials and competition (Goal 2) and to make sure this system flourishes with a continuous supply of athletes, participation levels need to be sustained (Goal 3). If elite success is achieved, talented athletes are developed and major events are delivered, this will inspire more young people to participate, existing athletes to stay in the sport and attract more commercial income to re-invest back into the sport to further support the strategy and delivery of these aspirations.
To deliver these aspirations all five organisations have signed up to a UK wide framework agreement, to clearly set out how they will work together, following clear roles and responsibilities, in delivering the unified UK wide strategy.
The CEO forum; Joanna Coates (UKA), Kerry Woods (Athletics Northern Ireland), Chris Jones (England Athletics), Mark Munro (Scottish Athletics) and James Williams (Welsh Athletics), will work to clear terms of reference and, accountable to their respective Boards and reporting to UK Sport and the sports councils, will ensure that resources are utilised in the most efficient and effective way to drive success at all levels of the sport.
In addition, a cross-organisational series of working groups will jointly oversee the strategic and priority areas across the sport. These working groups will comprise of a Chair, the subject matter leads from UKA and each HCAF, plus additional volunteer and expert advisors. Areas they will coordinate on will include Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (ED & I), leadership, performance and talent, coaching, officials, competition, clubs, club leaders and facilities, running, young people, commercial, and major events.
UK Athletics CEO Joanna Coates said:
“This is a significant opportunity for the sport and the first time that all five governing bodies have come together as equal partners to build a united strategy for athletics in the UK, one that they will deliver together in collaboration.
“This is a key development as outlined in the Dame Sue Street review of UK Athletics published in May 2020. The co-development of a long-term strategy and framework agreement for athletics across the UK, with an ethical decision-making culture and a new communications strategy will ensure that we address the sport’s long-term issues.
“I’m delighted that we are all united behind these three aspirations and that the new working group format will ensure we are working jointly on these key priority areas.”