(Ottawa, Ontario – April 1, 2010) — The newest member of the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport’s (CCES) board of directors brings with him a career-long dedication to law and community. Ken Bagshaw, currently the chief legal officer with the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC), will join the CCES board in June to help foster ethical sport for all Canadians.
“I am excited to witness the energy that will be injected in to the CCES board when
Mr. Bagshaw, fresh from his work with Vancouver 2010, joins us,” says Dr. Louise Walker, chair of the CCES board of directors. “Mr. Bagshaw’s experience on the senior team running a successful major games will benefit the work of the CCES as we attempt to leverage our own experience in this field.”
Mr. Bagshaw leads the VANOC legal team, managing all legal services including contracts, IP and trademark issues, and liaising with international sport and government officials. Prior to that, he capped forty years with the Vancouver law firm Ladner Downs by negotiating the merger that brought five firms together into Borden Ladner Gervais LLP. He then served as regional managing partner for the merged entity, the largest and one of the most prestigious law firms in Canada.
A British Columbia native, Mr. Bagshaw has deep roots in his community. He has played leadership roles in organizations as diverse as the Vancouver Art Gallery, the Vancouver Police Board, and the UBC Board of Governors.
The CCES is an independent, national, non-profit organization. Our mission, to foster ethical sport for all Canadians, is carried out through research, promotion, education, detection and deterrence, as well as through programs and partnerships with other organizations.
A brief biography of Mr. Bagshaw is attached.
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For further information, please contact
Rosemary Pitfield, Director of Communications
(613) 355-0889
(613) 521-3340 x3236
rpitfield@cces.ca
(Aussi disponible en français)
Ken Bagshaw, Q.C.
VANOC Chief Legal Officer
Ken Bagshaw is one of the few non-athlete competitors who can claim he has won a gold medal. Its impact, however, was no less than it would be for top athletes: awarded to Bagshaw for graduating first in his law class, the medal was a cherished beginning to a distinguished career in the law.
As VANOC’s Chief Legal Officer, Bagshaw has lead the team that provided or managed all legal services for Vancouver 2010. Working closely with senior executives in all of the organization’s divisions, Bagshaw oversaw VANOC’s legal relationships, negotiated major revenue contracts and coordinated the strategy for protection of intellectual property and trademark issues associated with the Games. Ongoing liaison with International Olympic Committee counsel, senior government officials and VANOC’s Board of Directors was also an integral part of his team’s portfolio.
Bagshaw built his extensive legal career as a member of Vancouver’s venerable law firm Ladner Downs and its successor, Borden Ladner Gervais LLP. In a practice that spanned four decades, Bagshaw provided counsel to a host of private companies, public corporations and public sector boards on a wide range of legal issues, particularly in the areas of general corporate and commercial law; corporate mergers and acquisitions; and government relations.
He counts among the highlights of his career his longstanding counsel role with a number of provincial Crown Corporations; his work with Northwest Arena Corporation (now Canucks Sports and Entertainment); and his role as principal outside legal advisor to the EXPO 86 Corporation.
In 2000, Bagshaw was one of the principal negotiators for Ladner Downs in the creation of Borden Ladner Gervais LLP, the largest, single multi-law firm merger undertaken in Canada. The merger brought together under one umbrella five law firms from across the country, forming one of the country’s largest and most prestigious national firms.
Prior to joining VANOC, Bagshaw was the regional managing partner of that firm’s Vancouver’s office as well as a member of its national executive committee and board of directors. He also lead the firm’s groundbreaking Professional Excellence Program, viewed as Canada’s most comprehensive professional development and mentoring regime.
Throughout his career, the breadth of Bagshaw’s community involvement has rivaled his professional pursuits. He has held leadership roles with several of BC’s most prestigious non-profit institutions, including the Vancouver Art Gallery and Vancouver Police Board. He also served as chair of the University of British Columbia’s Board of Governors.
Born in Vancouver and raised in West Vancouver, Bagshaw received his LL.B from the University of British Columbia. He was called to the British Columbia bar in 1965, and in 1986 was appointed Queen’s Counsel in recognition of his contribution to the profession and his service to government.
He continues to call West Vancouver home, where he resides with his wife and two terriers. A dabbler in many sports and an accomplished photographer, he relishes long walks during which he can focus his lens on the natural world.
For further information, please contact:
Justin MacNeill
Communications Coordinator
613-521-3340 x3314
jmacneill@cces.ca
(Aussi disponible en français)