Title 36 › Subtitle Subtitle II— - Patriotic and National Organizations › Part Part B— - Organizations › Chapter CHAPTER 2205— - UNITED STATES OLYMPIC AND PARALYMPIC COMMITTEE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - CORPORATION › § 220509
The corporation must set up fast and fair ways in its rules to handle member disputes about retaliation or about whether an athlete, coach, trainer, manager, administrator, or official can take part in the Olympic Games, Paralympic Games, Pan‑American Games, Parapan American Games, world championships, or other competitions its rules protect. If a lawsuit is filed about an athlete’s chance to compete in the Olympic, Paralympic, Pan‑American, or Parapan American Games, a court cannot stop the corporation from acting within 21 days before those games begin if the corporation gives a sworn written statement from an officer, after talking with the Athletes’ Advisory Council, saying its rules cannot resolve the dispute before the games start. The corporation must hire and pay an Athlete Ombuds and staff. The Office of the Athlete Ombuds gives free, independent help and advice to athletes about the law, the corporation’s and governing bodies’ rules, international bodies, and how to resolve disputes about competition opportunities. It helps solve concerns, explains the Center’s role and whether to get a lawyer, and reports regularly to the Athletes’ Advisory Council. The Athletes’ Advisory Council picks one person for the executive director to send to the executive committee, which then hires or rejects the nominee after fully considering the Council’s advice. The ombuds can only be fired under the corporation’s policies and after recommendation by the executive director or the Athletes’ Advisory Council and review by the executive committee. Communications with the ombuds are confidential, and the ombuds and staff generally cannot be forced to testify or hand over records, with limited exceptions for required federal reporting, witnessed felonies, imminent risk of serious harm, or a congressional subpoena. A confidentiality policy must be published in the Federal Register within 180 days of the 2020 Act and shared with governing body and corporation employees; each national governing body must post it online and tell athletes. No one may retaliate against someone for contacting the ombuds or for reporting abuse. If the corporation finds retaliation by an employee, it must suspend them without pay or fire them immediately. The corporation may award damages, including pain and suffering and attorney fees, to a protected person, and may seek reimbursement from a national governing body that caused the retaliation.
Full Legal Text
Patriotic and National Observances — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
36 U.S.C. § 220509
Title 36 — Patriotic and National Observances
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73