Medicine Hat News

MLB asked to voluntaril­y accept minor league union

- RONALD BLUM

NEW YORK

The Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n asked management Tuesday to voluntaril­y accept the union as the bargaining agent for minor leaguers.

Bruce Meyer, the union’s deputy executive director, sent a letter to MLB Deputy Commission­er Dan Halem that claimed a majority of minor leaguers had signed authorizat­ion cards.

The MLBPA, which reached its first collective bargaining agreement for major leaguers in 1968, launched the minor league unionizati­on drive on Aug. 28. Players with minor league contracts, who earn as little as $400 weekly during the six-month season, would become their own bargaining unit within the MLBPA.

If MLB does not voluntaril­y accept the union, signed cards from 30% of the 5,000 to 6,5000 minor leaguers in the bargaining unit would allow the union to file a petition to the National Labor Relations Board asking for a union authorizat­ion election. A majority vote in an election would authorize union representa­tion.

“Minor league players have made it unmistakab­ly clear they want the MLBPA to represent them and are ready to begin collective bargaining in order to positively affect the upcoming season,” MLBPA executive director Tony Clark said in a statement.

The union did not say what percentage of minor leaguers had signed authorizat­ion cards.

MLB did not immediatel­y comment on the letter.

Players with major league contracts average more than $4 million and have a $700,000 minimum salary while in the big leagues. Their minimum is $57,200 while on option to the minor leagues, with a first major league contract and $114,100 if a second or later big league contract.

MLB raised weekly minimum salaries for minor leaguers in 2021 to $400 at rookie and short-season levels, $500 at Class A, $600 at Double-A and $700 at Triple-A. For players on option, the minimum is

$57,200 per season for a first big league contract and $114,100 for later big league contracts.

In addition, MLB this year began requiring teams to provide housing for most minor leaguers.

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