Proposal to pay baseball players less than minimum wage narrowly advances in Florida Senate

Share
baseball via WMNF iStock subscription

Listen:

 

Usually when people think of professional athletes, they imagine multi-million dollar paychecks.

However, Republican Representative Jonathan Martin of Fort Myers proposed in Senate Bill 892 that Minor League Baseball players in Florida shouldn’t be required to get paid minimum wage.

“There’s a lot of costs that the individual players are not required to make, that are being paid for them by the ball club and other forms of compensation besides minimum wage.”

Martin argued that the minor leagues should be seen as a “training camp” and players can find other ways to make money if needed.

Several members of the public opposed the bill during the meeting, including Rich Templin, a lobbyist for a group of labor unions. He argues that the MLB has been contacting legislators to gain support of the bill.

“This legislation is 100% the product of Major League Baseball because in these ongoing negotiations, they want to have this carve-out from Florida’s constitutionally protected minimum wage to make negotiations easier on them.”

Republican Senator Ed Hooper supports the bill. He’s from Clearwater, home of a Spring Training site that also hosts a minor league team.

“The facilities that in Clearwater that the Philadelphia Phillies offer for housing, for food, for transportation, for workout facilities, for healthcare opportunities would be unimaginable in the country that 99% of these players come from.”

The bill narrowly advanced on a 4-3 vote along party lines.

You may also like

Susan Glickman talks clean energy, Alan Cohn waxes on Tampa Bay’s TV news ecosystem

Susan Glickman has been involved in environmental policy-making for decades....

Former Clearwater City Councilwoman Kathleen Beckman talks elections, Phillies Ballpark Village, and more

Kathleen Beckman had not run for office before moving to...

Florida okays money for a Hardee County project

$6 million from Florida’s Job Growth Grant Fund will help...

SCOTUS protest
Florida issues abortion rules after six-week ban becomes law

Florida healthcare regulators released emergency rules related to treating medical...

Ways to listen

WMNF is listener-supported. That means we don't advertise like a commercial station, and we're not part of a university.

Ways to support

WMNF volunteers have fun providing a variety of needed services to keep your community radio station alive and kickin'.

Follow us on Instagram

Words & Music
Player position: