NLRB Opens Door for NCAA Student-Athletes to Unionize
BRETT WILKINS for Common Dreams
Union! Union! Union!
"It's time for worker power in the NCAA."
That was the message from
labor advocate More Perfect Union Monday after the U.S.
National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ruled that the
student-athletes of Dartmouth College's men's basketball team are employees of
the school with collective bargaining rights.
Refuting the New Hampshire school's claim that the players are not employees and that asserting jurisdiction over them would "create instability in labor relations," Laura Sacks, the NLRB's regional director in Boston, said in her ruling:
"I find that because
Dartmouth has the right to control the work performed by the men's varsity
basketball team, and because the players perform that work in exchange for
compensation, the petitioned-for basketball players are employees. Additionally,
I find that asserting jurisdiction would not create instability in labor
relations."
"Accordingly," she added, "I shall direct an election in the petitioned-for unit."
Last year, Dartmouth players petitioned the
NLRB to organize with a local branch of the Service Employees International
Union. Colleges and universities have been pushing Congress to enact
legislation barring student-athletes from being classified as employees,
arguing that being forced to provide pay and benefits and allowing them to form
or join unions threatens their multibillion-dollar monopoly.
If the Dartmouth players choose to unionize, they'll be
the first NCAA student-athletes to do so.
"The NCAA brings in $1 billion each
year," More Pefect Unionrecently noted.
"Its coaches are multimillionaires. Schools and TV networks are making
fortunes. But most college athletes make zero, for the sole reason that the
NCAA chooses to exploit them. It's time for this to change."
Dartmouth College said Monday that it would repeal the
NLRB ruling.