Believing
they have reached an impasse after four months of negotiations with the
Canadian Football League, the CFL Players’ Association is recommending its
membership proceed with a strike vote, Sportsnet has learned.
The
collective bargaining agreement between the league and players expires May 30,
on the eve of training camp. And while both sides are scheduled to meet
this Thursday and Friday in Toronto, documents obtained by Sportsnet indicate
the union is readying itself for a potential labour stoppage.
“It
is the position of your Negotiating Committee that the position of the CFL in
relation to almost all matters and their refusal to have the cap in some way
connected to revenue are unreasonable,” reads an internal memo written by
CFLPA President Scott Flory and distributed to all CFL players
last Friday. “As a result, we are recommending that the Players
proceed with a strike vote.”
Flory,
who did not immediately respond to Sportsnet's request for
comment, has previously stated that the union will not play the 2014
season under terms of the expiring CBA, while both sides negotiate.
Sources
told Sportsnet that when the two sides broke on May 2, the league, which also
declined comment for this story, said it would return this week with
further input from governors/owners on making progress toward a new economic
model.
Since
talks began in February, the CFLPA has been steadfast in its pursuit of revenue
sharing, something that wasn’t included in the 2010 deal but has existed
between the league and the CFLPA in the past. The league’s negotiation
committee has not budged from its stance of having a fixed cap.
At
the centre of the debate is a new television deal, worth $40 million this
coming season. The current TV conract is worth $15.3 million.
Last
season’s salary cap was $4.4 million and proposals obtained by Sportsnet show
the CFL has offered the following when it comes to player compensation:
2014
- $4,500,000.00
2015
- $4,600,000.00
2016
- $4,650,000.00
2017
- $4,700,000.00
2018
- $4,750,000.00
2019
- $4,800,000.00
2020
- $4,900,000.00
2021
- $5,000,000.00
There
are several other points of contention. The CFLPA has proposed a minimum annual
player salary of $55,000—with a 10 percent increase annually. The league
countered with a $46,000 minimum, which caps at $49,000 in 2021.
The
union has proposed practice roster players make no less than $1,000 a week (or
$18,000 per season). The league has countered with $750/week, but to increase
the practice roster size to 12, from seven, and implement “two-way” contracts,
making it easier for teams to release players.
The
union is also pushing for an increase to post-season playoff share, and a hike
to the Grey Cup bonus cheque, which the league has refused.
One
area the two sides have come to terms on is the increase in roster size–from 42
to 44 on game day. The extra two spots would be occupied by a non-import and
one designated import. The reserve list would drop from four per game to two.
The
CFL has proposed an eight-year collective bargaining agreement, double the
length of the current deal. The union wants the duration to be “subject to
negotiation.”
A
source tied to the league, speaking on the condition of
anonymity, believes the tactic of the league and its governors/owners is
patience — the thinking being that the union will eventually give in
once the risk of losing pay is a legitimate possibility.
4 comments:
would be the biggest mistake in the history of the league.
I really don't like the sounds of this. As a fan, this scares me!
Terry C
Players aren't stupid. League has to cough up a lot more money.
Braley hosted the Grey Cup in 11 and 12 and will again this year
so he should be fine financially. Young gets it next so he shouldn't be a problem. Several teams are community owned and the Stamps are owned by the Flames so where is the greed coming from? The TV contract went up 25M so give the players a raise and lets play football.
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