Mr. Kennedy said Canadians won't mind that their donations from his cross-country skate will be spent on programs other than the ranch he had planned.
"It wasn't that people were really giving money to Sheldon Kennedy specifically," he says.
"I'm glad that it covers all the abuse."
Mr. Kennedy, who turns 30 today - he was born in 1969 in Elkhorn, Manitoba - put on in-line skates to skate across Canada last year.
He was trying to raise $15 million to build a ranch for sexually abused children near Radium, British Columbia.
The former NHL player turned the hockey world upside down in January 1997 when he went public about how junior hockey coach Graham James sexually abused him.
Both were with the Swift Current Broncos of the Western Hockey League at the time.
The Sheldon Kennedy Foundation received $2.2 million in donations last year and paid out $1.3 million in expenses.
About $1 million remains, which includes the 640-acre property donated for the Anaphe ranch.
It is estimated to be worth $500,000.
The foundation is closing down because it didn't raise anywhere near the money needed.
It lacked foresight and planning, foundation president Wayne McNeil admitted Monday.
The foundation's credibility was also hurt when Mr. Kennedy crashed and abandoned a borrowed vehicle in Edmonton, Alberta.
He had been drinking.
There were also questions about the fact that he was paid a salary from the fund during his skate.
The Red Cross said they want to work with Kennedy in the future, but didn't say in what capacity.
The Red Cross Abuse Prevention Services reaches out to Western Canadians.
The organization has plans to expand to Eastern Canada. 2. Who said Canadians won't mind that their donations from his cross-country skate will be spent on programs other than the ranch he had planned?
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