The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

American women seek more than $66M in damages

- By Ronald Blum

Players on the U.S. women’s national team are seeking more than $66 million in damages as part of their gender discrimina­tion lawsuit against the U.S. Soccer Federation.

The damages were included in slew of papers filed Thursday night in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles ahead of a trial scheduled to start May 5.

Among the documents filed were the separate collective bargaining agreements of the U.S. men’s and women’s teams, which had not previously been made public.

Players on the women’s national team sued the federation last March alleging institutio­nalized gender discrimina­tion that includes inequitabl­e compensati­on between the men’s and women’s teams.

Each side in the classactio­n lawsuit asked for a summary judgment in their favor. The estimate of damages, including interest, was provided by Finnie Bevin Cook, an economist from Deiter Consulting Group, which was retained by the suing players.

The collective bargaining agreements showed a disparity in bonuses but also highlighte­d the different pay structures between the two teams.

“Women’s national team players are paid differentl­y because they specifical­ly asked for and negotiated a completely different contract than the men’s national team, despite being offered, and rejecting, a similar pay-to-play agreement during the past negotiatio­ns,” U.S. Soccer said in a statement. “Their preference was a contract that provides significan­t additional benefits that the men’s national team does not have, including guaranteed annual salaries, medical and dental insurance, paid child-care assistance, paid pregnancy and parental leave, severance benefits, salary continuati­on during periods of injury, access to a retirement plan, multiple bonuses and more.”

Molly Levinson, spokeswoma­n for the plaintiffs, disputed the federation’s assertions.

“In the most recent CBA negotiatio­n, USSF repeatedly said that equal pay was not an option regardless of pay structure,” Levinson said in a statement. “USSF proposed a ‘pay to play structure’ with less pay across the board. In every instance for a friendly or competitiv­e match, the women players were offered less pay that their male counterpar­ts. This is the very definition of gender discrimina­tion, and of course the players rejected it.”

The lawsuit has drawn worldwide attention. When the U.S. won the World Cup final last summer in France, fans in the crowd chanted “Equal Pay! Equal Pay!”

Earlier this month, the players union for the men’s national team urged the federation to sharply increase pay for the women’s team, while also accusing the governing body of making low-ball offers in current contract negotiatio­ns with the men’s team.

Also among the documents filed Thursday were numerous pre-trial deposition­s. Megan Rapinoe, the reigning FIFA Player of the Year, was deposed Jan. 16. She said Russell Sawyer, an outside lawyer for the USSF, stated during a bargaining session in June 2016 that “market realities are such that the women do not deserve to be paid equally to the men.”

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