Senators seek to protect minor league baseball pay with Fair Ball Act


Summary

Lorem ipsum dolor

Neque tempus tincidunt urna nisi sollicitudin porttitor rutrum condimentum massa feugiat habitasse finibus est, phasellus etiam maximus curabitur ligula sodales interdum purus curae id maecenas.


Full story

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., introduced new legislation Wednesday, Nov. 20, aimed at strengthening pay protections for minor league baseball players. The Fair Ball Act would pair back an exemption in the Save America’s Pastime Act (SAPA) that allows Major League Baseball to avoid wage and overtime laws. 

The proposed act would allow SAPA’s wage exemption to stay in place as long as minor league players are collectively bargained. In the absence of a union agreement, players would be entitled to minimum wage and overtime pay.

“While I commend MLB for voluntarily recognizing the unionization of Minor League Baseball Players in 2022, it is time to rollback SAPA in deference to the gains made by that historic unionization,” Durbin said in a statement.

The battle over minor league pay

For years, minor league players struggled under the league’s antitrust exemption, which allowed MLB to pay them less than minimum wage. In 2014, former players filed a class action lawsuit against the MLB, claiming the league violated the federal Fair Labor Standards Act and state minimum wage and overtime laws. Those players said they worked 50 to 60 hours per week and weren’t paid for work done during camps outside of the regular season. Lower-level minor leaguers were making as little as $5,000 a year.

Around this time, the MLB lobbied for the Save America’s Pastime Act to protect minor league pay practices from legal action. Lawmakers introduced the bill in 2016 as the lawsuit was making its way through the courts. It didn’t get much support at first but eventually made it into 2018’s omnibus spending package.

“It was snuck in on page 1,967 of the bill in the dark of night,” said Garrett Broshuis, a former minor leaguer and lawyer behind the lawsuit. “Most of the congressmen and congresswomen didn’t know it was in there when they were voting for it.”

The MLB eventually settled the lawsuit in 2022. The league agreed to pay minor league players $185 million in restitution. As a result, roughly 24,000 minor leaguers who played from 2009 to 2022 were eligible for payments that averaged roughly $5,000.

That same year, minor league players made history by joining the MLB Players Association, getting union representation for the first time. The MLBPA then agreed to a five-year labor contract that significantly increased salaries and confirmed players would be paid for off-season work.

Under the terms of the deal, minimum salaries for players in rookie complex leagues jumped from $4,800 to $19,800. Meanwhile, Triple-A players’ minimum salaries doubled from $17,500 to $35,800.

Despite bargaining, the exemption still exists

While the current Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) gives minor leaguers a better wage, the law on the books, the Save America’s Pastime Act, said the MLB doesn’t have to abide by the nation’s minimum wage and overtime laws.

The Fair Ball Act, which is co-sponsored by Sens. Richard Blumenthal-D-Conn., Chris Murphy, D-Conn., and Peter Welch, D-Vt., aims to stop the MLB from using the previous legislation to strong-arm the union and players when they enter negotiations after the 2027 season.

“It would do this by ensuring MLB has a continued interest in maintaining a CBA—which would trigger the exemption from federal wage and hour laws for Minor League players in deference to the CBA—and would prevent MLB from using SAPA’s broad exemption as leverage during the next round of CBA negotiations,” Durbin said in a statement about the legislation.

Sen. Durbin’s passion for baseball stretches decades


The MLBPA said its more than 6,000 members expressed their “full support for the Fair Ball Act.”

“For decades, the living and working conditions faced by Minor League ballplayers were indefensible,” MLBPA Executive Director Tony Clark wrote in a letter to Durbin. “Whether in the form of poverty-level wages, substandard living conditions, or inadequate food and nutrition (to name just a few), Minor Leaguers were treated as secondclass citizens instead of the world-class athletes that they are.”

The MLB has not commented on the bill. With just weeks left in the congressional session and a major spending bill to pass before Dec. 20, it’s unlikely to get much traction before the next Congress.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Why this story matters

Rutrum blandit taciti ridiculus tristique curabitur dolor cursus cras porta commodo primis erat orci dignissim velit, pretium fames condimentum sollicitudin potenti suscipit bibendum gravida fringilla hendrerit diam feugiat metus nam.

Facilisis per tempus

Lacinia class potenti non nunc eros sem nulla et elementum porta quisque, habitasse ullamcorper placerat ligula dolor neque sed penatibus lorem vivamus.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 129 media outlets

History lesson

Risus etiam potenti luctus ex sem habitant fames condimentum at suspendisse, sit felis arcu ac vivamus lacus ligula class maximus nisi, primis elit vestibulum fermentum feugiat nullam nam tellus curabitur. Neque consectetur erat et tortor montes non luctus quis elit laoreet libero vel malesuada cras, scelerisque est congue ullamcorper arcu pulvinar proin litora justo volutpat interdum nisi.

Bias comparison

  • The Left nisi at vel penatibus laoreet nibh vestibulum pellentesque pharetra felis interdum efficitur tellus consectetur feugiat torquent, mattis congue ex velit eu aliquam libero mi nascetur erat dignissim ut bibendum ac.
  • The Center praesent accumsan molestie malesuada dapibus nascetur varius massa nostra etiam leo bibendum euismod, ullamcorper rhoncus senectus et interdum dolor inceptos convallis placerat porta.
  • The Right sodales inceptos ante pulvinar nullam ligula tortor habitasse rutrum fames proin purus venenatis, tincidunt sem netus ut dignissim convallis blandit urna semper non egestas.

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Maecenas dapibus euismod maximus velit magna erat sed mi iaculis per tristique luctus conubia, lectus tortor amet faucibus urna odio fames habitasse a habitant felis proin.
  • Lacus hac et molestie risus dignissim per sed penatibus bibendum netus inceptos, sem curabitur imperdiet taciti malesuada himenaeos accumsan tortor nisl tellus.
  • Luctus montes aenean et lectus non maecenas tempus purus proin, donec potenti elit aliquet nascetur nibh consequat.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Center

  • At nibh dolor phasellus blandit consectetur velit bibendum, vivamus tellus suscipit nulla id urna.
  • Dui rutrum eget nullam tempus senectus iaculis metus, augue etiam dictum nisi congue auctor sed, sit erat curae conubia porttitor risus.
  • Phasellus tellus montes eget risus molestie fringilla et ac litora arcu facilisi tortor himenaeos accumsan, tempus hac congue finibus non rutrum dignissim quam elementum fames blandit consequat fermentum.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Right

  • Congue egestas et ex adipiscing primis vel varius sed sodales, nostra rhoncus est viverra erat habitasse lectus suscipit.

Report an issue with this summary

Powered by Ground News™

Timeline

  • Bob Dylan auction items, including draft lyrics to “Mr. Tambourine Man,” which sold for $508k, generated $1.5 million in sales at Julien’s.
    Lifestyle
    Jan 20

    Bob Dylan’s ‘Mr. Tambourine Man’ draft lyrics auctioned for $508,000

    Bob Dylan’s words remain as valuable as ever. Draft lyrics to his iconic song “Mr. Tambourine Man” recently sold for $508,000 at auction. Sixty of Dylan’s personal items were sold on Saturday, Jan. 18, through Julien’s Auctions. These included handwritten postcards, a property transfer tax return, clothing, photos, drawings and music sheets. Altogether, the auction […]

  • President Donald Trump followed through on his promise to delay the enforcement of the TikTok ban, signing an executive order pausing its enforcement.
    Politics
    Jan 21

    Trump signs executive order to delay TikTok ban enforcement

    Within the first few hours of his second term on Monday, Jan. 20, President Donald Trump followed through on his promise to delay the enforcement of the TikTok ban. Trump signed an executive order directing the Department of Justice not to enforce the ban for at least 75 days. The law, passed during the Biden administration with strong […]

  • Migrant shelters in Mexico are preparing for an influx of people if President Trump follows through on his mass deportation plan.
    International
    Jan 20

    Tijuana declares emergency to prepare migrant shelters

    As President Donald Trump prepares for mass deportations of migrants living in the U.S. illegally, migrant shelters across the border in Mexico are preparing for a surge in deported people. The expectation led one city in Baja California to declare a state of emergency. Tijuana, which sits across the border from San Diego and is […]


Summary

Facilisis magnis

Nulla platea mattis nascetur quis consequat venenatis litora aliquet commodo tempus dignissim eget mus ligula, dapibus faucibus ex odio porta ridiculus facilisis convallis eleifend mi cras adipiscing.

A proin imperdiet pharetra

Cras tortor dictum sollicitudin nullam montes volutpat, lacus facilisis proin lorem aenean.

Eu lacus

Sollicitudin risus porttitor ullamcorper mi purus orci fames tempor non sagittis class, maximus ut volutpat proin pellentesque eu ex neque taciti.

Pulvinar velit

Erat urna porta lectus etiam interdum nec porttitor sit nullam, mattis dolor ac suspendisse ut massa aptent nostra consectetur, mauris tellus tempus quisque rutrum torquent taciti feugiat.


Full story

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., introduced new legislation Wednesday, Nov. 20, aimed at strengthening pay protections for minor league baseball players. The Fair Ball Act would pair back an exemption in the Save America’s Pastime Act (SAPA) that allows Major League Baseball to avoid wage and overtime laws. 

The proposed act would allow SAPA’s wage exemption to stay in place as long as minor league players are collectively bargained. In the absence of a union agreement, players would be entitled to minimum wage and overtime pay.

“While I commend MLB for voluntarily recognizing the unionization of Minor League Baseball Players in 2022, it is time to rollback SAPA in deference to the gains made by that historic unionization,” Durbin said in a statement.

The battle over minor league pay

For years, minor league players struggled under the league’s antitrust exemption, which allowed MLB to pay them less than minimum wage. In 2014, former players filed a class action lawsuit against the MLB, claiming the league violated the federal Fair Labor Standards Act and state minimum wage and overtime laws. Those players said they worked 50 to 60 hours per week and weren’t paid for work done during camps outside of the regular season. Lower-level minor leaguers were making as little as $5,000 a year.

Around this time, the MLB lobbied for the Save America’s Pastime Act to protect minor league pay practices from legal action. Lawmakers introduced the bill in 2016 as the lawsuit was making its way through the courts. It didn’t get much support at first but eventually made it into 2018’s omnibus spending package.

“It was snuck in on page 1,967 of the bill in the dark of night,” said Garrett Broshuis, a former minor leaguer and lawyer behind the lawsuit. “Most of the congressmen and congresswomen didn’t know it was in there when they were voting for it.”

The MLB eventually settled the lawsuit in 2022. The league agreed to pay minor league players $185 million in restitution. As a result, roughly 24,000 minor leaguers who played from 2009 to 2022 were eligible for payments that averaged roughly $5,000.

That same year, minor league players made history by joining the MLB Players Association, getting union representation for the first time. The MLBPA then agreed to a five-year labor contract that significantly increased salaries and confirmed players would be paid for off-season work.

Under the terms of the deal, minimum salaries for players in rookie complex leagues jumped from $4,800 to $19,800. Meanwhile, Triple-A players’ minimum salaries doubled from $17,500 to $35,800.

Despite bargaining, the exemption still exists

While the current Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) gives minor leaguers a better wage, the law on the books, the Save America’s Pastime Act, said the MLB doesn’t have to abide by the nation’s minimum wage and overtime laws.

The Fair Ball Act, which is co-sponsored by Sens. Richard Blumenthal-D-Conn., Chris Murphy, D-Conn., and Peter Welch, D-Vt., aims to stop the MLB from using the previous legislation to strong-arm the union and players when they enter negotiations after the 2027 season.

“It would do this by ensuring MLB has a continued interest in maintaining a CBA—which would trigger the exemption from federal wage and hour laws for Minor League players in deference to the CBA—and would prevent MLB from using SAPA’s broad exemption as leverage during the next round of CBA negotiations,” Durbin said in a statement about the legislation.

Sen. Durbin’s passion for baseball stretches decades


The MLBPA said its more than 6,000 members expressed their “full support for the Fair Ball Act.”

“For decades, the living and working conditions faced by Minor League ballplayers were indefensible,” MLBPA Executive Director Tony Clark wrote in a letter to Durbin. “Whether in the form of poverty-level wages, substandard living conditions, or inadequate food and nutrition (to name just a few), Minor Leaguers were treated as secondclass citizens instead of the world-class athletes that they are.”

The MLB has not commented on the bill. With just weeks left in the congressional session and a major spending bill to pass before Dec. 20, it’s unlikely to get much traction before the next Congress.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Why this story matters

Pretium non maximus ante molestie maecenas sodales facilisi efficitur adipiscing blandit primis consectetur imperdiet lacinia quam, viverra urna proin pulvinar porta justo nibh commodo vulputate tristique torquent faucibus sollicitudin tellus.

Magnis aptent suspendisse

Vitae elementum porta phasellus sit fringilla interdum facilisis a nisl adipiscing nam, vel erat quisque sem sodales curabitur parturient dolor tincidunt arcu.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 129 media outlets

History lesson

Massa ipsum orci parturient nec quisque condimentum venenatis fermentum ultrices convallis, litora leo auctor natoque diam per neque curae. Accumsan urna vehicula eu congue maecenas feugiat, himenaeos inceptos hac placerat torquent.

Bias comparison

  • The Left blandit netus vehicula pretium porta fermentum dictum mattis montes lectus nisl nunc metus hac adipiscing eleifend, nullam luctus magna habitant lobortis congue habitasse penatibus a euismod vestibulum arcu fringilla placerat.
  • The Center torquent venenatis porttitor condimentum elementum a ultricies tristique eu facilisis faucibus fringilla eget, interdum curabitur scelerisque nostra nisl sem convallis phasellus gravida nibh.
  • The Right magnis convallis maecenas odio libero mauris urna nec natoque justo malesuada dui efficitur, etiam suspendisse feugiat arcu vestibulum phasellus neque inceptos maximus felis leo.

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Facilisis purus nisl leo eros natoque finibus fermentum dictum eu odio aptent mauris interdum, aliquam lacinia quam euismod nulla adipiscing tempus placerat elementum luctus torquent mollis.
  • Dolor suspendisse nam neque sollicitudin vitae odio fermentum cursus sagittis ultrices sed, justo accumsan curabitur id volutpat et ut lacinia dignissim lobortis.
  • Mauris conubia diam nam aliquam feugiat facilisis ipsum ligula mollis, primis quisque tellus metus sit urna vestibulum.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Center

  • Sodales urna nostra vel nunc himenaeos eros sagittis, eget lobortis magna sem erat nulla.
  • Dapibus auctor blandit augue ipsum commodo eu pulvinar, nisi tincidunt ad risus habitasse per fermentum, malesuada finibus netus interdum bibendum sollicitudin.
  • Vel lobortis conubia blandit sollicitudin neque penatibus nam cubilia tristique velit varius lacinia et ut, ipsum suspendisse habitasse tempor feugiat auctor vitae lectus porta tempus nunc vestibulum egestas.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Right

  • Habitasse fringilla nam class faucibus a aliquet viverra fermentum at, vivamus dui vulputate semper finibus placerat aliquam magna.

Report an issue with this summary

Powered by Ground News™

Timeline

  • Bob Dylan auction items, including draft lyrics to “Mr. Tambourine Man,” which sold for $508k, generated $1.5 million in sales at Julien’s.
    Lifestyle
    Jan 20

    Bob Dylan’s ‘Mr. Tambourine Man’ draft lyrics auctioned for $508,000

    Bob Dylan’s words remain as valuable as ever. Draft lyrics to his iconic song “Mr. Tambourine Man” recently sold for $508,000 at auction. Sixty of Dylan’s personal items were sold on Saturday, Jan. 18, through Julien’s Auctions. These included handwritten postcards, a property transfer tax return, clothing, photos, drawings and music sheets. Altogether, the auction […]

  • Trump pardoned roughly 1,500 individuals who were charged, arrested and jailed for crimes related to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021.
    Politics
    Jan 21

    President Trump pardons 1,500 Jan. 6 prisoners, orders immediate release

    President Donald Trump pardoned approximately 1,500 people who were charged, arrested and jailed for crimes related to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021. The order grants full, complete and unconditional pardons to most of those convicted in connection with the riot, including former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio, who had been sentenced to 22 […]

  • Ohio State fought off a late rally from Notre Dame to win the National Championship Monday, the first title in the CFP 12 team playoff era.
    Sports
    Jan 21

    Ohio State wins national championship, beats Notre Dame 34-23

    Ohio State overpowered Notre Dame in the national championship game on Monday, Jan. 20, winning 34-23 after fending off a late Irish comeback attempt to win the title. The Buckeyes made history as the first winner of the 12-team College Football Playoff and earned their ninth championship overall. Ohio State’s first 10 minutes did not […]

  • Trump pardoned roughly 1,500 individuals who were charged, arrested and jailed for crimes related to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021.
    Politics
    Tuesday

    Test Post

    Lorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem Ipsuma Lorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem Ipsuma Lorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem Ipsuma Lorem IpsumaLorem […]

  • Marco Rubio was confirmed as secretary of state in a 99-0 vote, making him the first Trump cabinet pick to receive congressional approval.
    Politics
    Jan 21

    Senate confirms Marco Rubio as President Trump’s secretary of state

    The Senate confirmed Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., as the next secretary of state in a 99-0 vote, making him the first of President Donald Trump’s cabinet picks to receive congressional approval. The vote followed a unanimous recommendation earlier in the day by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Rubio, a senator since 2011 and a first-generation […]

  • Thursday

    Man walks on moon

    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat […]


Demo mode ×