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Friday,
November 9, 2001
MLB
players file grievance against league to prevent contraction
Associated
Press
NEW YORK
Baseball players began their fight to stop owners from
eliminating two major league teams, filing a grievance claiming
their labor contract was violated.
Management
and the union met for about two hours Thursday, their first
session since owners voted earlier in the week to get rid
of two teams next year with Montreal and Minnesota
the front-runners to disappear.
New York
Mets pitcher Al Leiter and Texas pitcher Rick Helling were
at the meeting, along with Detroit Tigers infielders Tony
Clark and Damion Easley.
The session
took place on the day after the expiration of the sports
collective bargaining agreement.
In Washington,
Sens. Paul Wellstone and Mark Dayton, both Democrats from
Minnesota, asked President Bush to support legislation that
would rescind baseballs antitrust exemption.
Wellstone
and Rep. John Conyers, the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary
Committee, said they will introduce legislation next week
to revoke the exemption.
Without
your support, we believe it will be extremely difficult to
move this legislation forward, Wellstone and Dayton
wrote to Bush, the former controlling owner of the Texas Rangers.
White House officials did not return calls seeking comment.
Players
and owners declined comment on the talks, but details were
confirmed by officials on both sides who spoke on the condition
they not be identified.
In the
grievance, filed Wednesday just hours before the labor contract
ran out, the union claimed owners violated the agreement Tuesday
by unilaterally deciding to cut from 30 to 28 teams next season.
If the sides dont settle, the grievance would be decided
by Shyam Das, baseballs permanent arbitrator.
Management
lawyers maintained owners had the right to eliminate teams
but conceded that particulars, such as how to disperse players
on the folded franchises, must be bargained over.
Management
lawyers didnt make any proposals to the union during
the discussion, which dealt in generalities and not specifics,
and both sides agreed it would be impossible to complete negotiations
until the teams to be eliminated are identified.
In addition
to the Expos and Twins, Florida, Oakland and Tampa Bay also
are possibilities. Montreal has the lowest attendance in the
major leagues. Minnesota owner Carl Pohlad, a close friend
of baseball commissioner Bud Selig, wants to be bought out
and would get a much higher price in a contraction payment
from the remaining 28 teams than he would from a sale.
Lawyers
for owners and players said they will get back in touch with
each other next week.
In Minneapolis,
a hearing scheduled Thursday on a suit by the Minnesota Sports
Facilities Commission, was postponed until Tuesday. Hennepin
County District Court Judge Diana Eagon has issued a temporary
restraining order against the Twins and major league baseball.
The commission
sued earlier this week to compel the Twins to honor their
lease to play in the Metrodome, which runs through next season.
Conyers,
a Michigan Democrat, would be in line to become chairman of
the Judiciary Committee if Democrats regain control of the
House next year.
This
is like a game of musical chairs two teams will be
left standing and their fans will be left out in the cold,
he said. This unprecedented decision is bad for the
fans, bad for the players on the field and the workers and
businesses at and around the stadium, bad for the minor league
teams that will also be cut loose, and bad for the cities
that will be forced into new and more costly bidding wars
to avoid being dumped by baseball.
Congress
traditionally has been reluctant to tamper with baseballs
antitrust exemption, created by a 1922 U.S. Supreme Court
decision.
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