So, you're not at all convinced that the content of the Eighth Circuit's brief yesterday is a portend of things to come?
I think both sides are guilty of hardlining things. The players never wanted to move away from the 2006 extension, and the owners wanted nothing to do with it anymore. So, both sides were entrenched. Both sides of nearly every big negotiation are going to low ball the other. My frustration is that they ultimately have to negotiate this thing out, and the players gave up on this process. I think I swing the other way here...the Eighth Circuit will eventually decide in favor of the owners. Hopefully, this stimulates productive negotiations.
I'm a bit confused by it and, yes, less convinced than I was before but still can't see how a lockout of non-unionized employees can be upheld. The decision yesterday could be interpreted as a protection, if you will, that the owners could, not will, win and the 'unscrambling of the eggs' would be undoable so easier to keep the lockout in effect. The status quo until the hearing is heard makes sense.
Some interesting excerpts from the Eighth Circuit's brief that answers your question (as was mine) about lockouts of non-unionized employees...The plain language of the Act states that a case involves or grows out of a labor dispute when it is “between one or more employers or associations of employers and one or more employees or associations of employees.” 29 U.S.C. § 113(a)(1) (emphasis added).
The Act does not specify that the employees must be members of a union for the case to involve or grow out of a labor dispute.
Given the close temporal and substantive relationship linking this case with the labor dispute between League and the Players’ union,
we struggle at this juncture to see why
this case is not at least one “growing out of a labor dispute” – even under the district court’s view that union involvement is required for a labor dispute.
In sum, we have serious doubts that the district court had jurisdiction to enjoin the League’s lockout, and
accordingly conclude that the League has made a strong showing that it is likely to succeed on the merits.
[...this] is a case in which one party or the other likely will suffer some degree of irreparable harm no matter how this court resolves the motion for a stay pending appeal.
We do not agree, however, with the district court’s apparent view that the balance of the equities tilts heavily in favor of the Players. The district court gave little or no weight to the harm caused to the League by an injunction issued in the midst of an ongoing dispute over terms and conditions of employment. The court found irreparable harm to the Players because the lockout prevents free agents from negotiating contracts with any team, but gave no weight to harm that would be caused to the League by player transactions that would occur only with an injunction against the lockout. The court gave full weight to affidavit evidence submitted by the Players, although that proof was untested by cross- examination at a hearing. Cf. 29 U.S.C. § 107. The district court’s analysis was conducted without the benefit of knowledge that this appeal will be submitted for decision on a highly expedited schedule – a circumstance that should minimize harm to the Players during the off-season and allow the case to be resolved well before the scheduled beginning of the 2011 season.