Union: NFL not giving poor teams enough

The NFL Players Association accused the league Tuesday of not
sharing as much supplemental revenue with its lower-income teams as
it is supposed to.
Jeffrey Kessler, the outside counsel for the NFLPA, said that
a filing by the union is a result of the NFLPA concluding that the
league violated the terms of the collective bargaining agreement
and the supplemental revenue sharing plan.
"The NFLPA is filing this new proceeding because it has
discovered that the NFL did not provide its lower-revenue clubs
with all of the supplemental revenue sharing that was promised in
the CBA for the years 2006-08," Kessler said. "Such funds are
important to insure that the lower-revenue teams can field
competitive teams, offer competitive salaries and provide their
fans with hope for success on the field each NFL season."
League spokesman Greg Aiello said the NFL has abided by the
system, which was put into place with the 2006 CBA, and hasn't hurt
any low-revenue teams. Teams have to qualify - in essence, show
they need the money - to receive the supplemental funds.
"Qualifiers have been part of the supplemental revenue
sharing system since its inception," Aiello said. "The union
approved the use of qualifiers in the CBA. The operation of the
qualifiers has been consistent with the resolution adopted when the
extension was approved and has not disadvantaged any low-revenue
club."
The SportsBusiness Journal first reported the story Tuesday.
Despite the league saying it has not violated the CBA or SRS
plan, Kessler said the union insists that there was a shortfall in
the amount of supplemental revenue sharing from 2006-08, possibly
in the tens of millions of dollars.
"What we would like to have happen is find out how much the
program was shorted and then to make sure that that money is
applied in the way it was intended," Kessler said.
The union won a previous decision from Special Master Stephen
Burbank in Philadelphia earlier this month. Burbank ruled that the
league must continue the SRS plan in the 2010 season - even if
uncapped.
"We are surprised that the NFL seems intent on not living up
to its revenue sharing agreement," Kessler said, "and that the
union has now been forced to file a second proceeding to enforce
the supplemental revenue sharing program provided for in the CBA."
Without a deal in the next few weeks to preserve labor peace,
teams will operate next season without a salary cap. And if no deal
can be reached next season, a work stoppage could occur in 2011.
