Commentary

Minor-league pay tied to spending bill

PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. -- Thursday afternoon, as the Mercedes and Range Rovers of the Mets players were carefully being loaded onto two car haulers in the parking lot at First Data Field, three big wardrobe boxes appeared inside the clubhouse. As the players cleaned out their lockers and prepared to break camp, they were encouraged to throw in used cleats, clothing or equipment to be donated to the minor-league players.

It is a nice gesture, but a better one would be for teams to actually pay minor leaguers a living wage.

Instead, MLB has spent $2.6 million over the past two years lobbying Congress, and it looks like very soon they will get their payoff: an exemption to the federal minimum and overtime wage laws.

After failing to even get a vote on it two years ago, Congress has slid the provision into the $1.3 trillion omnibus spending bill that must be signed today to keep the government open. Buried in the 2,232-page bill is the "Save America's Pastime Act," which would basically take away minimum wage rights for minor-league baseball players, making them "apprentices."

That would also likely squash the lawsuits by players against Major League Baseball seeking a living wage. MLB declined comment Thursday.

And burying it into the spending bill means at this late point that to keep the government going, we have to take away the living-wage rights of non-40-man roster players. For the Mets, that would be P.J. Conlon, Matt den Dekker, Ty Kelly and spring training hero Phil Evans.

The idea was initially introduced to Congress by Representatives Brett Guthrie of Kentucky and Cheri Bustos of Illinois. They pitched the bill as protecting minor league baseball by shielding the teams from devastating cost increases, but major league teams are responsible for the salaries of their minor leaguers.

"We're just talking about basic minimum wage laws here -- the same laws that McDonald's has to comply with, the same laws that Walmart has to comply with," said Garrett Broshuis, a former player and now a St. Louis attorney representing several players in a lawsuit seeking coverage under the laws. "And so surely if Walmart or McDonald's can find a way to comply with those laws, then Major League Baseball can find a way to comply with them, too."

Bustos took her name off the bill and H.R. 5580 never even got a vote.

So now, Congress is sneaking it through with the spending bill, which President Trump must sign by today or risk a shutdown.

The provision, which the Washington Post reported first and said is backed by Majority leader Mitch McConnell (a Nationals fan), has been pushed by MLB. According to Opensecrets.org, MLB has spent $1.3 million lobbying Congress over the last two years. The provision is said to have support on both sides of the aisle. Minority leader Chuck Schumer, whose office did not return a message Thursday about this provision, received $10,000 in donations from political action committees or people associated with MLB, according to OpenSecrets.org.

MLB is a $10 billion industry, according to Forbes. Minor-league baseball is a prime example where trickle-down economics just doesn't work.

A first-year player in Class-A ball makes $1,100 a month and does not start collecting paychecks until the regular season starts. That means a minor leaguer who is cut in spring training accrued both the cost of spring training and no pay.

Paying their minor leaguers a living wage would cost major-league teams an estimated $7.5 million more a year, but even some in player development view it as money that would be well spent.

On Thursday, several minor-league players declined to comment, fearing backlash from the Mets or MLB. Mets GM Sandy Alderson also declined comment.

But off the record, you hear stories of the sacrifices players make to chase their dreams. Thursday, I heard stories about how one minor-league player, who was making an impression on the organization, was asked to work out at the Mets' endorsed Barwis program over the winter, but even subsidized by the team he couldn't manage it financially. I heard about several players who play without contact lenses because they can not afford them.

Nelson Figueroa, a former player who spent many years working his way up, remembers trying to get by on $20 per day per diems.

"They take $13 a day from you for clubhouse dues, so you get one meal there and then you are trying to get two on $7," the current SNY analyst said. "It's a $10 billion industry. It doesn't have to be this way."

Sports on 03/23/2018

Upcoming Events