On The Union Comment Count

Brian

We've reached a crossroads. Northwestern has had just about their entire football program sign on to an attempt to get themselves recognized as a union by the National Labor Relations Board. This is a crossroads for the NCAA for obvious reasons.

It is also one for this here blog because it is explicitly a no-politics zone. Whenever the word "union" comes up your bitter uncle who watches Sean Hannity on a loop waddles in from [email protected] to talk about how unions are the doom of America and gets in an argument with your aunt with a dozen cats who sounds like that one lady on NPR. This argument is why the hopefully-soon-to-be-fired dude in charge of NCAA PR framed his response like so:

This union-backed attempt to turn student-athletes into employees undermines the purpose of college: an education.

The unions! They're destroying education.

I don't care about any of that; I only want to look at an interesting tactic to force schools to bargain with their athletes.

So.

Can this work?

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Former UNC center John Henson

The NCAA says student-athletes are not employees, because student-athletes are student-athletes, who are not employees. This came about in the 1950s when the widow of a player who had died tried to get workmen's comp. The Colorado Supreme Court eventually found that Fort Lewis College was "not in the football business," which was probably accurate in that time and place.

More recently, a paralyzed TCU player had a long-running court battle that ended in 2000 with the NCAA winning on what seems like a hell of a technicality:

The appeals court finally rejected Waldrep’s claim in June of 2000, ruling that he was not an employee because he had not paid taxes on financial aid that he could have kept even if he quit football.

Along with a weaving series of decisions by the NLRB that erratically but generally side with universities when students who happen to also be workers ask for bargaining rights, this is what the NCAA will hang its hat on.

On the other side, a 2006 paper by a couple of Michigan State law professors (one of whom is a Michigan law alum) entitled

THE MYTH OF THE STUDENT-ATHLETE: THE COLLEGE ATHLETE AS EMPLOYEE

The article is a lot more fun than it sounds.

Why, a half century after adopting this term, should the NCAA
unceasingly intone to millions of viewers that these young men and
women are “student-athletes”? The NCAA’s purpose in this message is
to shore up a crumbling façade, a myth in America, that these young
athletes in NCAA-member sports programs are properly characterized
only as “student-athletes.” This characterization—that athletes at
NCAA-member schools are student-athletes—is essential to the NCAA
because it obscures the legal reality that some of these athletes, in fact,
are also employees.

About halfway through the authors start using the term "employee-athletes" in a delightful fashion. And I'm pretty sure that this paper is the underpinning of the case Northwestern will take to the board, because it lays out its argument specifically for D-I football and basketball players. The new College Athletics Players Association is currently restricting itself to the same players:

Huma told Farrey that only NCAA Division I FBS football players and men’s basketball players will be eligible to join CAPA — not because non-revenue sports athletes don’t deserve a voice and workplace protections, but because revenue sports athletes are in the best position to make a legal case that they should be treated as employees.

The upshot of their argument is that the most recent edict set down by the NLRB declares that students working in some capacity for the university are not actually employees as long as their work is primarily educational (ie, research assistants getting credit for their work) and if their relationship with the university is "not an economic one."

Scholarship athletes are being compensated for activities that have nothing to do with their academic goals and if they're at a number of D-I basketball and football schools they are raking in millions of dollars for their university. Therefore, they are employees*. It's hard to envision a court claiming with a straight face that Michigan is "not in the football business" these days. That they are using their football business money in bizarre ways is not the NLRB's problem.

The weakest part of the argument here comes from the fact that employee-athletes are all given the same amount of compensation. The decision this paper is basing their argument off cited the uniformity of compensation of GAs at Brown, and the fact that some Brown students got the same compensation without having to do work-like activities. The paper convincingly argues that this fourth test is nonsensical in multiple ways, but that is still a sticking point upon which the whole enterprise might founder.

I'm no law-talking guy, but I'd say there's a decent chance Northwestern gets certified.

*[As long as you accept the premise that athletes submit to a high level of control of their activities in exchange for compensation, which is entirely obvious and will be fought against tooth and nail by the NCAA.]

Then what?

Well, then Northwestern and Northwestern only would have a player union. They would have the legal right to collectively bargain with Northwestern for impermissible benefits that would give the NCAA cause to annihilate Northwestern.

States across the country with laws on the books that are friendlier to student-employee rights would see local CAPA chapters mushroom. As anyone who's dealt with a GEO strike knows, Michigan is one of these.

At this point, the entire system has to either collapse or be forcibly restructured. What the NCAA looks like in the aftermath is completely unpredictable, at least for schools in major conferences. The one thing that is clear: the firmament will be shaken as employee/student/athletes go from people watching the NCAA to half of the decision-making process.

Go team.

Comments

MosherJordan

January 29th, 2014 at 8:42 PM ^

The NCAA has punitive ability regarding how colleges pay employees. If it were not a union, it could not inflict the "death penalty" on schools like SMU that do pay players. And yes, the idea of having a judge rule it an illegal would also necessitate that the justice department prosecute attempts to simply reform it under a different name.

grumbler

January 29th, 2014 at 9:00 PM ^

First, the NCAA has no punitive powers whatsoever.  Any member can tell the NCAA to fuck off, and just leave.  if they want to stay, they have to accept the NCAA's rulings and sanctions, true, but that is true of any voluntary association.

Second, you will never get a judge to simply declare, arbitrarily, that an organization is illegal.  Actions can be illegal; organizations can't (an exception was made for the Nazi party, SS, and maybe another nazi german organization in 1946, but that is noteworthy simply because it had never happened before or since, and it wasn't made by a judge anyway).

I am not sure how your idea that the government, in the form of the judicial branch, can prohibit voluntary associations advances the concept of capitalism over socialism.  Government interference in private affairs with no compelling public interest sounds very socialist to me.

MosherJordan

January 29th, 2014 at 9:11 PM ^

Any professional organization that engages in price fixing in the US is illegal. That is precisely why colleges fight the "employee" label. If schools are not in the business of sports, the NCAA is not a cartel. Otherwise it is, and it is, in fact illegal in the US.

bigfan2959

January 29th, 2014 at 9:56 PM ^

It's a complete fallacy that these kids are getting compensated to the tune of 800K, and I dispute any facts which would state that that much is spent on any student athlete.  Even the value of the education is overstated.  First off many to most of the football scholarship kids don't even come in with the foundational education to take advantage of the higher educational opportunities at a University. 

Also the true cost of a college education is not what the school charges.  A large lecture class that's not filled, what is the actual cost to a school for an extra student to sit in the class?  Close to zero.  Some new books that the university gets at extremely discounted prices anyway?  A dorm room, what do you think it costs to rent a small room apartment with a roommate?

The value of travel, coaching, training, medical, that's a cost of doing business for the university, not compensation to the student athlete.  Pre-Obama care, would a so called student athlete really need any medical care?  I've been in the health insurance field and I can tell you premiums for person 18 to 21 are relatively quite low compared to the general population because they don't get sick, usually. 

God bless these Northwestern kids and I hope they succeed.  I like college football and I've watched it for years, but I'm not selfish enough to want to see these kids continue to be taken advantage of for my pleasure and the Universities profit.

I'll add one more point.  It's my opinion that at least one reason we don't see playoff in the top division of college football is its helps keep up the facade of amateurism for their cash cow.   

AlwaysBlue

January 29th, 2014 at 11:14 PM ^

is determined by what a person has to pay, not what it costs to produce/provide. It's this kind of ass backward reasoning that leads me to believe they should burn the whole system down. Revealing the myth of the student athlete isn't some enlightened door to the future but rather the end of the road.

matty blue

January 30th, 2014 at 7:03 AM ^

...will look very, very different ten years from now.  the money involved is too great, and the fundamental conflict inherent in their mere presence in a educational institutions, will force the entire structure to collapse under its own weight.  this is just one more shot in a long war.

mgoblue98

February 1st, 2014 at 12:55 AM ^

No on unions.  I dislike the NCAA and their ridiculous number of regulations and rules.  However, unions are nothing more than corrupt PAC's and I don't see how fighting the corrupt bureaucracy that is the NCAA with what will become a corrupt bureacracy will work.