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WHL seeks labor law exemption

Minimum wage for amateur hockey players among issues

The Columbian
Published: February 19, 2015, 12:00am

OLYMPIA — While Washington’s four teams in the Western Hockey League are under investigation for child labor practices, the state Legislature is considering a league request to exempt amateur athletes from state labor laws.

In a hearing before the Washington state Senate’s Commerce and Labor Committee Wednesday, officials from the state’s WHL teams and the league office said the Seattle Thunderbirds, Spokane Chiefs, Tri-City Americans and Everett Silvertips might have to leave or shut down if state law isn’t changed to consider amateur athletes nonemployees.

The state’s Department of Labor & Industries has been investigating all four teams since a complaint was filed in 2013 over working conditions for their players, who range in age from 16 to 20 years old and play a 72-game regular season. If the players are considered employees, they are subject to state laws on minimum wage and working conditions, including child labor laws.

“If the bill is not passed, it could negatively impact our ability to operate and would force us to move or not operate in the state,” Silvertips General Manager Garry Davidson told the Senate committee.

The 22-team league, along with two others, operates at the highest level of Canadian junior hockey and feeds players to National Hockey League teams. Its athletes are paid stipends, live with host families and earn a year of college scholarship for each season they compete in the league. The only U.S. team in the WHL outside of Washington is the Portland Winterhawks. Oregon officials looked into a child labor complaint against that team last year but did not launch a formal investigation, a spokesman for the state’s labor department said.

In Washington, the league and teams face possible civil penalties and other consequences if L&I finds violations. The department consulted with state Attorney General Bob Ferguson’s office in December on the investigation and is currently seeking more information from each team, L&I spokesman Matthew Erlich said.

Several class-action lawsuits are pending in Canada over pay for junior-league hockey players. The lawyer behind them, Theodore Charney of Toronto, said weather prevented him from attending Wednesday’s hearing but sent a six-page letter criticizing the bill for its attempt to deny players coverage under Washington’s minimum-wage and labor conditions laws. Charney said in a telephone interview that no other U.S. state or Canadian province has attempted similar legislation and that he doesn’t consider the hockey players’ position similar to that of college athletes.

“The hockey teams are not universities, they’re for-profit businesses,” Charney said.

The Senate bill passed a committee vote unopposed Wednesday evening. A companion bill comes before the House Committee on Labor for a vote this morning.

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