Current:Home > ContactAs hazing scandal plays out at Northwestern, some lawyers say union for athletes might have helped -Nova Finance Academy
As hazing scandal plays out at Northwestern, some lawyers say union for athletes might have helped
View
Date:2025-04-19 11:07:46
CHICAGO (AP) — As Northwestern became engulfed in a hazing scandal in recent weeks, Michelle Simpson Tuegel thought about the athletes she represented in high-profile lawsuits.
The Dallas-based attorney helped negotiate about $900 million in settlements in cases involving U.S. Olympic and national team gymnasts who were sexually assaulted under the guise of medical exams by sports physician Larry Nassar and by former athletes at Michigan who were victimized by the late Dr. Robert E. Anderson.
Simpson Tuegel said she sees common threads with the situation at Northwestern. And she can’t help but wonder: What if college athletes had a union?
“It’s bigger than one university,” Simpson Tuegel said. “It’s bigger than one survivor who has been abused or even just one team. It is a deeply ingrained cultural issue and the product often of long-term institutional negligence.”
A decade after Northwestern was at the center of an attempt to establish the first college athletes union, the university is facing more than a dozen lawsuits across multiple sports with allegations including sexual abuse by teammates as well as racist comments by coaches and race-based assaults. The cases span from 2004 to 2022, and attorneys representing some of the athletes who have already sued say more are coming. Football coach Pat Fitzgerald was fired after 17 seasons.
If college athletes had a union, Simpson Tuegel could see things playing out differently.
They might have more protection and support to complement school protocols. They might feel more comfortable reporting problems to a union representative not affiliated with the program or college, which might help combat what Simpson Tuegel described as a “culture of silence.” That might lead to issues being addressed sooner rather than later.
Other attorneys who discussed the Northwestern situation weren’t as sure. But they agreed there is strength in numbers, and a union wouldn’t hurt.
“At the end of the day, I don’t put this on the players — or the players not being organized,” said attorney Steve Levin, who is representing some of the athletes suing Northwestern. “This is, in my opinion, an administration problem. Northwestern had a clear-cut policy. That policy wasn’t followed. It should have just been ended, and the players should have never been in a position of having to have a voice to prevent it.”
Fitzgerald, whose attorney says he had no knowledge of hazing in his program, was fired July 10 after initially being suspended two weeks by President Michael Schill following an investigation by a law firm. It found hazing within the program and “significant opportunities” for the coaching staff to know about it
Baseball coach Jim Foster was let go a few days later amid allegations he created a toxic culture. Last week, the school hired former U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch to investigate the athletic department and its anti-hazing procedures.
Levin said what’s happening at Northwestern isn’t the same as a dispute over, say, wages between a union and a company. “In a situation like this, there’s just not two sides to it,” he added.
Could a union have helped?
“I don’t know,” Levin said. “I don’t know if a player in a situation like this would go to a union. But it certainly could not have hurt, let’s just say that. If the players had somebody outside of the Northwestern staff and administrators, that could have provided a vehicle to ending this type of behavior earlier.”
Judie Saunders, an attorney who has worked with Olympic and Division I athletes and specializes in survivors of assault, said she doesn’t see a union helping “in practice” when it comes to player-on-player abuse.
“The student in that situation and the survivors that I’ve dealt with, they are whistleblowers,” she said. “A whistleblower on a college campus is one of the worst atmospheres to be in. And we all know why: It’s a closed community.”
She said she knows of whistleblowers who developed suicidal thoughts for the retribution they experience. Coaches often tacitly encourage other players to carry it out for them.
“If you are a thriving, good athlete, you are going to get on the good side of the bully, whether it’s the coach, whether it’s the assistant,” Saunders said. “And you’re going to do whatever you can to stay on that good side. That includes meting out the retribution for whistleblowers.”
When it comes to coach-on-player abuse, she thinks a union might be more helpful.
In January 2014, Northwestern quarterback Kain Colter announced plans to form the first union for college athletes. He became the face of a cause that struck at heart of college athletics, with conferences and schools insisting such a move would end amateur athletics as we know it and disrupt a system that funnels hundreds of millions of dollars to conferences and schools.
Fitzgerald lobbied hard against it. The National Labor Relations Board ultimately stopped the push when it overturned a ruling by a regional director saying Northwestern athletes should be allowed to form a union. Players had cast secret ballots on whether to unionize; the sealed ballots were later destroyed without being counted.
Attorney Wilma Liebman, who chaired the NLRB from 2009 to 2011, said it might be time for college athletes to revisit the issue. NLRB general counsel Jennifer Abruzzo wrote a memo two years ago stating college athletes are employees under the National Labor Relations Act.
“There’s clearly been an upswing in union organizing, collective action in general,” she said. “It’s definitely a moment when a lot of reporters are looking at labor issues, labor issues are no longer marginalized. There’s a lot of interest, a lot of attention, I think a lot of public support.”
___
AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football
veryGood! (52)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Missouri secretary of state is safe after shooting falsely reported at his home
- Reactions to the death of German soccer great Franz Beckenbauer at the age of 78
- Jim Gaffigan on surviving the holidays reality TV-style
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Alaska Airlines and United cancel hundreds of flights following mid-air door blowout
- Belarus refuses to invite OSCE observers to monitor this year’s parliamentary election
- Inside Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet's PDA-Packed Date Night at the 2024 Golden Globes
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- German soccer legend dies at 78. Franz Beckenbauer won World Cup as player and a coach
Ranking
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Investigators found the 'door plug' that blew off a Boeing 737 Max. Here's what it is
- Trump says he'll attend appeals court arguments over immunity in 2020 election case
- Michigan cosmetology school agrees to $2.8M settlement in an unpaid labor dispute
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- House Republicans release contempt resolution against Hunter Biden
- 3 people mistakenly eat laundry detergent in Taiwan election giveaway gone awry
- California sets a special election for US House seat left vacant by exit of former Speaker McCarthy
Recommendation
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
2 killed, 9 injured in 35-vehicle pileup on Interstate 5 near Bakersfield, California
Scientists find about a quarter million invisible nanoplastic particles in a liter of bottled water
Get $174 Worth of Beauty Products for $25— Peter Thomas Roth, Sunday Riley, Clinique, and More
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
Memphis judge maintains $1 million bond for man charged with firing shots at Jewish school
Grizzlies star Ja Morant will have shoulder surgery, miss remainder of season
Scientists find about a quarter million invisible nanoplastic particles in a liter of bottled water