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Monitor Daily Podcast

October 20, 2021
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Fair pay in pro baseball’s minor leagues is about as rare as a no-hitter. 

On average, these wannabe big leaguers make less per hour than workers at McDonald’s or Walmart. And it’s legal. With passage of the 2018 Save America’s Pastime Act (now under litigation), minimum wage protection was removed. 

You might say, but when they get to the majors, these guys make a bundle for playing a game. True. But only 10% of minor league baseball players make it to “The Show.” And compared with players of other major U.S. sports, those pursuing the pro dream are literally paying for that privilege. A Triple-A baseball player makes less than half the minimum annual salary ($14,700) that an NBA G-League player makes ($35,000), reports Sporting News. A baseball minor leaguer must also cover housing and at least six weeks of unpaid spring training. 

Still, there is modest progress. The Triple-A minimum salary went up by 38% this year (to $14,700). And it was reported Sunday that minor league players next year will get what their hockey and basketball counterparts already receive: a housing stipend. 

The business model for nurturing new baseball talent is getting some overdue attention to fairness. Or as Bill Fletcher Jr. of Advocates for Minor Leaguers told Axios: “People talk about wages, hours, and working conditions, but it is really about dignity. Am I going to be respected as a human being?”


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Today’s stories

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Amir Cohen/Reuters
People attend a rally in support of a so-called government of change, a day after far-right party leader Naftali Bennett threw his crucial support behind a unity government in Israel to unseat Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in Tel Aviv, Israel, May 31, 2021.
Sara Miller Llana/The Christian Science Monitor
Halima Bahman co-founded the Hazara Women's Organization in Canada last year. Since the takeover of Afghanistan by the Taliban, the Canada-based group has quickly pivoted to fundraise for Hazara families in safe houses and help them with translations and documents they may need to resettle in Canada.

Commentary

Courtesy of the Rev. Nicole Duncan-Smith
The Rev. Nicole Duncan-Smith (left) hugs Ms. Harriet Corprew, a leader in the Peridot collective in the St. Paul Community Baptist Church's Jewel Ministry, after her ordination.

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A protester in Dhaka, Bangladesh, holds a placard during an Oct. 19 protest against violence committed on Hindu communities.

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A message of love

Raneen Sawafta/Reuters
Members of the Samaritan community take part in a traditional pilgrimage marking the holiday of Sukkot, or the Feast of Tabernacles, atop Mount Gerizim near Nablus in the occupied West Bank on Oct. 20, 2021.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

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