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Major League baseball players settle contract dispute
By Shannon Jones
3 September 2002
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Major League Baseball players and team owners reached tentative
agreement on a new four-year contract August 31, averting a strike.
It was the first contract settlement without a walkout by players
in 30 years.
The previous agreement expired in November 2001. The players
union had set a late August strike deadline, before the end of
the baseball season, which concludes in October with the World
Series. The agreement covers players on 28 teams in the United
States and two in Canada. Players and team owners still must ratify
it.
Under the tentative agreement teams with higher payrolls will
be subject to a luxury tax. This has been a long sought
goal of owners. The aim of this provision is to make it more costly
for wealthier teams like the New York Yankees to bid up player
salaries.
Owners also obtained agreement by the players union on
a revenue sharing plan. Under the agreement, teams with lower
attendance and revenues will receive a portion of the receipts
of more prosperous clubs. The owners say this provision will increase
competitive balance in the league, leading to increased ticket
sales and television revenue.
In exchange for these concessions, the owners agreed not reduce
the number of teams during the course of the current agreement.
Management had threatened to shut down clubs in Minneapolis and
Montreal in the run-up to the negotiations. A lawsuit temporarily
thwarted their plans.
Major League Baseball is a big business that generates $3.6
billion in revenue per year. Since the players began collective
bargaining in the late 1960s, salaries have risen enormously,
but there is a wide disparity between the relative handful of
stars and the vast majority of second- and third-tier players.
Top players now earn as much as $25 million per year and average
pay is $2.3 million. However, large numbers of players earn at
or near the minimum salary, which was raised from $200,000 to
$300,000 in the new tentative agreement.
Typically, players last only a few years in the majors and
increasingly they face the prospect of career-ending injuries.
Since 1992 there has been a reported 32 percent rise in the number
of players on the disabled list. Much of this increase is being
attributed to the use of steroids. Given the competitive and individualistic
nature of baseball under the profit system, players are under
enormous pressure to use steroids in order to gain an extra edge.
Owners also stand to profit through increased game attendance
and higher television revenues.
The controversy has attracted a considerable amount of publicity
since the 1998 season, when St. Louis Cardinal player Mark McGwire
admitted to using over-the-counter muscle enhancers (which were
not banned by the Major Leagues at the time). That season he set
a new home run record.
Medical studies show that steroids can have side effects including
kidney failure, heart disease, brain tumors, impotency and behavioral
changes, including schizophrenia.
In the tentative agreement the players union agreed for the
first time to steroid testing. There are no details on the plan
for implementation. Players have expressed concern that testing
administered by the owners might violate players right to
privacy and owners might attempt to manipulate players careers
through the discriminatory use of test results.
The talks were accompanied by a drumbeat of hype in the big
business media. Enormous pressure was put on the players to reach
a settlement. There were dire predictions of the demise of baseball
as a major sport if a strike or lockout took place. Management
attempted to place additional pressure on the players with claims
that a number of teams were on the verge of bankruptcy.
Attendance at Major League baseball games has been declining
for a period of time, dropping five percent during the current
season. However, it is absurd to place primary blame on the players
for this situation.
Management has demonstrated again and again that its overriding
interest is the bottom line, not the integrity of
the game. The owners alienated many fans by attempting to eliminate
two teams, a transparent attempt to increase its bargaining power
at the expense of players and the thousands of people whose jobs
are dependent on professional sports.
Team owners in a whole number of cities have raided the public
treasury by insisting that expensive new ballparks be constructed
with the aid of public subsidies. The new stadiums invariably
cater to wealthier baseball patrons, with lavish luxury suites
and higher ticket prices.
See Also:
The NFL meat grinder:
US pro football player dies in training camp
[1 August 2001]
Professional
sports, drugs and profit
[27 August 1998]
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