Albuquerque Journal

Players offer proposal to extend CBA

Union says it is hoping to prevent a labor lockout

- BY ANNE M. PETERSON

The Major League Soccer Players Associatio­n has proposed extending the current collective bargaining agreement with the league through the 2026 season.

The proposal came Thursday as the league and the union faced a midnight deadline after MLS invoked a force majeure clause to reopen negotiatio­ns over the CBA, citing ongoing uncertaint­y surroundin­g the pandemic.

With its proposal, the union said it hoped to avoid a lockout. The MLS regular season is set to open April 3 with preseason training camps allowed to start on Feb. 22.

“It is our sincere hope that it can be avoided,” the MLSPA said in a statement. “Players are ready to play.”

The league and the players’ union had two difficult negotiatio­ns last year — one in February before the start of the season, and a second in June when players took a pay cut in order to resume the 2020 season.

MLS has said it incurred an estimated $1 billion in losses last year, due in part to lost revenue as a result of the virus.

Earlier this month, MLS proposed paying the players their full salaries this season in exchange for a two-year extension of the current CBA.

The MLSPA proposal would extend it to 2026. The union said the June negotiatio­ns already extended the CBA a year to 2025 and that players have already made concession­s totaling more than $150 million. By extending the CBA another year, those concession­s would reach $200 million, it said.

“Amid a cloud of uncertaint­y over the 2021 season, players have once again been forced back to the negotiatin­g table. Today, after discussion and approval by the MLSPA Bargaining Committee, a proposal has been presented to MLS that includes a second extension to the current CBA term to include the 2026 season. Coupled with our agreement last June, this proposal will result in over $200 million in economic concession­s and the addition of two years to the CBA — one year for each of the years substantia­lly impacted by the pandemic. It will also reduce the impact of revenue sharing that was such a hard-fought gain in the original CBA,” the union said in a statement Thursday.

The proposal would make other changes, including a reduction in the age for free agency eligibilit­y and some restrictio­ns on free agent earnings.

Major League Soccer did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States