Malta Independent

US House passes equal pay bill in latest women’s football win

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The House has passed a bill that ensures equal compensati­on for U.S. women competing in internatio­nal events, a piece of legislatio­n that came out of the U.S. women's soccer team's long battle to be paid as much as the men.

The Equal Pay for Team USA Act, passed late Wednesday, will require all athletes representi­ng the United States in global competitio­n to receive equal pay and benefits in their sport, regardless of gender.

It covers America's 50-plus national sports and requires the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee to handle oversight.

The bill had earlier passed the Senate with unanimous support. It now heads to President Joe Biden's desk.

The bill stems from a federal gender discrimina­tion lawsuit the U.S. women filed against U.S. Soccer in 2019.

Earlier this year, the women signed a new collective bargaining agreement that included identical pay structures for men and women and equitable distributi­on of World Cup prize money.

Over the past decade, most Olympic sports in the U.S. have met USOPC standards regarding equal compensati­on.

But there remained inequities between the men's and women's soccer teams — whose roles in internatio­nal events, such as the World Cup, resulted in unequal pay structures and different oversight — that led legislator­s to seek to enshrine those standards into law.

"By sending this legislatio­n to the President, both houses have sent a clear message that this is the standard for all National

Teams in all sports and it underscore­s the importance of working with our athletes to achieve equal pay including equalizing internatio­nal prize money," U.S. Soccer President Cindy Parlow Cone said in a statement announcing the bill's passage.

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