NLRB Claims Lack of Jurisdiction, Dismisses Northwestern Football Players’ Petition to Unionize
NLRB Claims Lack of Jurisdiction, Dismisses Northwestern Football Players’ Petition to Unionize
In essence, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) punted on Monday in Northwestern University football players’ attempt to form a union. Led by former team quarterback Kain Colter and a group of student athletes calling themselves the College Athletes Players Association (CAPA), the players testified that they put in roughly 1,750 hours of football-related activities per year with no pay beyond their scholarships and per-diem stipends. The movement to unionize began in January 2014, with safety concerns being the main priority. In addition to citing the need to be paid for their efforts, Colter demanded that the schools and the NCAA agree to a program that will pay for the treatment of football-related injuries later in life that occurred while playing for the university. Instead of backing or rejecting the argument however; the five-person national NLRB panel dismissed the petition, citing lack of jurisdiction. According to the NLRB, the board only maintains jurisdiction for private sector business, in which only 17 of the 125 division I football programs are, including Northwestern. 108 of the participants are state-run institutions however, including every other team in Northwestern’s Big Ten Conference.In the dismissal, the NLRB wrote, “the Board held that asserting jurisdiction would not promote labor stability due to the nature and structure of NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS)." The NLRB wrote that the dismissal is specific to this particular petition saying, "This decision is narrowly focused to apply only to the players in this case and does not preclude reconsideration of this issue in the future." Last year, the NLRB’s regional director in Chicago ruled that Northwestern football players are employees, with both Northwestern University and the NCAA appealing that decision. Monday’s full-panel ruling, however, stalls the battle for another time. CAPA president and former UCLA linebacker Ramogi Huma believes the NLRB ruling to be a cop-out, saying that "Competitive equity doesn't exist right now, and we have data to support that. To use a hollow argument to deny players equal protection under the law is disappointing." Huma added, "This delays the players having the leverage they need to protect themselves.”
Former Northwestern quarterback Kain Colter said that he and CAPA President Ramogi Huma would continue the fight for NCAA athletes to unionize.
Photo courtesy of Twitter/@KainColter_2