Minor League Baseball players signed a historic collective bargaining agreement with Major League Baseball on Wednesday, a person familiar with the negotiations told The Associated Press.
That person spoke on condition of anonymity as details have not been announced.
As part of the five-year agreement, MLB committed not to reduce the number of minor league affiliates, which currently stand at 120.
The parties reached an agreement two days before the start of the minor league season and hours after a federal judge gave final approval to a $185 million settlement reached with MLB last May following a 2014 lawsuit alleging violations. federal minimum wage laws.
Commissioners recommended passing the deal, and about 5,500 minor leaguers are expected to vote by Thursday. Major baseball teams will also have to decide over the next week.
Minimum wages will increase from $4,800 to $19,800 for the rookie ball level, from $11,000 to $26,200 for the Low-A level, from $11,000 to $27,300 for the High-A level, from $13,800 to $27,300 for Double A and $17,500 to $45,800 for Triple A.
Double A and Triple A players will be guaranteed a single room on the road. Domestic violence and drug policies will be covered by the agreement.
Major league players have been protected by an employment contract since 1968, and the average salary has increased from $17,000 in 1967 to $4.22 million last season. Minor leaguers only earned $10,400 last year.
The Major League Baseball Players Association became representative of some 5,500 minor league contract players last September after a 17-day blitz organizing campaign.
Minor leaguers will receive four weeks of retroactive pay for this year’s spring camps. They will receive $625 a week for spring camps and off-season training camps, and $250 a week for off-season home training sessions.
The number of players an organization must keep under contract beginning in 2024 will be 165 during the season and 175 during the offseason, compared to 190 during the season and 180 during the offseason today.
The syndicate will bear the group license fees for the players.
Negotiations for the players were led by Bruce Meyer, Harry Marino, Ian Penny and Matt Nussbaum. Dan Halem, assistant commissioner of the MLB, led the league’s negotiators.
