Christine Brennan:

That's a great question.

I mean, there is a new leader of the U.S. Olympic Committee, as the CEO, the first female full-time CEO of the U.S. Olympic Committee. And that's Sarah Hirshland. She's been on the job since August, and has done some major things, including wanting to decertify USA Gymnastics, which is the nuclear option under the Amateur Sports Act.

But that's something that the U.S. Olympic Committee can do. And, of course, she is also the one who fired Alan Ashley, when she was made aware of his in action for those 13-and-a-half months.

I think that we will probably see Congress getting even more involved. There have already been five congressional hearings over the last — this year, in the calendar year. I think they probably will do more.

One of the things I think that should be done, SafeSport, the Center for SafeSport, a lot of people have heard about that, right? And you kind of picture this big thing and it's working fine, and it's been around forever.

A year-and-a-half, they have had 1,600 — over 1600 cases, people coming to them with complaints. And up until the end of October, they had four employees, four employees. That's a $6.4 million budget. So Congress needs fund that immediately.

And I think you also need to have a database. Right now, there's no cohesive database, believe it or not. So, if you're a parent, and you say you want your child to start getting involved with gymnastics or volleyball, or whatever it is, a database, so that you can go and see who's been banned, because some of these coaches even move from one sport to the other.

There's no cohesive database. You and I can get on a plane by having our eyes scanned and walk into buildings with our fingerprints, and yet our Olympic movement in the United States can't somehow get on the same page, so that parents and young athletes can know who is a sexual predator.

And I think that's something that needs to be dealt with immediately.