Santa Fe New Mexican

Baseball players in minors to lose minimum wage protection

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Minor league baseball players who make as little as $5,500 a season would be stripped of the protection of federal minimum wage laws under a provision in government spending legislatio­n approved by Congress on Thursday night.

The “Save America’s Pastime Act” is included on page 1,967 of the $1.3 trillion spending bill and appears to pre-empt a lawsuit filed four years ago in U.S. District Court in San Francisco by three players alleging Major League Baseball and its teams violate the Fair Labor Standards Act and state minimum wage and overtime requiremen­ts for a work week they estimated at 50 to 60 hours.

The provision in the legislatio­n would exempt “any employee employed to play baseball who is compensate­d pursuant to a contract that provides for a weekly salary for services performed during the league’s championsh­ip season (but not spring training or the offseason) at a rate that is not less than a weekly salary equal to the minimum wage … for a workweek of 40 hours, irrespecti­ve of the number of hours the employee devotes to baseball related activities.”

The House and Senate each approved the spending bill Thursday and the legislatio­n appears likely to be signed by President Donald Trump.

Major League Baseball spent $1.32 million on lobbying expenses in both 2016 and 2017, up from $330,000 in 2015, according to the nonpartisa­n Center for Responsive Politics. MLB paid $400,000 each of those years to an outside firm, the Duberstein Group, which reported lobbying the House and Senate on the issue, as did MLB’s in-house lobbyist.

“We aren’t billionair­e business owners and billionair­e team owners,” said Broshius, a minor league pitcher from 2004-09 who later became a lawyer.

Only major league players are unionized, and their collective bargaining agreement sets minimum salaries for players on 40-man rosters: $545,000 for those in the major leagues this season, $88,900 for 40-man roster players in the minors signing at least their second big league contract and $44,500 for 40-man roster players in the minors signing their first big league contract.

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