Equine Hippique Canada
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Equine Hippique Canada (EC) is a sanctioning organization for equestrian sport in Canada. Formerly known as the Canadian Horse Show Association, the French word "hippique" (meaning "equine") was inserted into its name to create the appearance of bilingualism, although the vast majority of its activities are still conducted in English only. It is recognized by the International Federation for Equestrian Sports (FEI) as Canada's representative equestrian federation.
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[edit] Equestrian sport in Canada
EC regulates eight of the ten FEI disciplines: dressage, driving, endurance, eventing, reining, show jumping, paraequestrianism, and vaulting.[1] Two of the FEI disciplines have remained independent of EC: horseball[2] and tent pegging[3].
EC also regulates the following non-FEI disciplines: hunt seat, pony club sports, saddle seat, and some breed-specific sports. It does not regulate the non-FEI disciplines of classical dressage, horse racing, or polo.
[edit] National challenges
EC has faced many of the challenges typical of a national organization in a federated country, such as tensions between the central committee and the ten provincial entities. In addition, it candidly admits that it suffers from "dissatisfaction of all four divisions", "sub-standard infrastructure", "inadequate management structure", and persistent "debates on old arguments".[4]
More seriously for a bilingual and multicultural country, EC is often perceived as a captive of white, anglophone, social climbing classes[5], for which money is more important that talent or good sportsmanship. The fact that horseball (a primarily francophone sport in Canada) and tent pegging (the most racially-mixed equestrian sport in Canada) have both remained outside of EC has tended to reinforce this view.
Perhaps as a result of these issues, EC concedes that it has become a "little known and hardly recognized"[6] entity in Canada.
[edit] Financial challenges
The organization has been riven with internal conflict as a result of a permanent funding crisis since its inception. According to its own governance self-assessment, "Competition for scarce resources leads to internal conflict. This results in continuing disagreement amongst the various parts of the organization as everyone seeks to survive."[7]
[edit] Olympics
EC has confirmed that Canadian athletes have qualified for all three equestrian disciplines (dressage, eventing, and show jumping) at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.
[edit] References
- ^ Equine Canada Sports, retrieved 7 February 2008
- ^ Horse-Ball Canada, retrieved 7 February 2008
- ^ UNICEF Team Canada Tent Pegging, retrieved 7 February 2008
- ^ Organizational Review, retrieved 7 February 2008
- ^ "Stop subsidizing the horsey set", National Post, 18 August 2004
- ^ Organizational Review, retrieved 7 February 2008
- ^ Equine Canada 20/20 White Paper 18 September 2007


