National Basketball Referees Association
National Basketball Referees Association | |
Founded | 1977 |
---|---|
Website | www.nbra.net |
The National Basketball Referees Association (NBRA) is the labor union that represents National Basketball Association (NBA), G League, and Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) referees. It was founded in 1977.
History
The National Basketball Officials Association was formed in 1973 to improve the labor environment for NBA referees. The association became a
1977 Strike
Led by
The NBA responded by hiring replacement referees from the Eastern Basketball League and elsewhere.[3] Costing only $300 per game, plus a $40 per diem, the NBA made do with scabs until their inferior officiating caused complaints from players and fans. The NBA agreed to recognize the NBRA as a negotiating partner and the two eventually agreed to a contract.[1][4]
1983 Strike
When their first CBA expired in 1983, the NBRA asked for a 48% wage increase.[5] Referees' starting salary was $24,000, and they averaged $40,000, while NBA players averaged $248,000. As before, the NBA replaced them, and the results were so poor that Dick Young wrote, "The fill-in officials are brutal. I thought I was watching...a steel cage match. Palming? I don't believe these substitute refs know what palming is. And traveling? Forget it. There is no such violation...Next thing you know, the NBA players will be putting the ball under their arm like a running back."[6]
The strike lasted from the beginning of the season until December 16.[7]
1995 Lockout
The NBA locked out the referees because the NBRA rejected the league's request for a no-strike clause in their contract. The NBA was offering a 30% wage increase over 5 years from the 1995–96 season, while the union was asking for a 70% increase in the first year of a new contract.[8] The NBA again used replacement referees and reduced the size of game crews from 3 officials to 2.[9]
Under Fred Slaughter, the NBRA held out until early December. In a 27–26 vote (with 2 members not voting), the union agreed to a new 5-year contract that would see starting salaries increase to $90,000 and top salaries to $328,000.[10]
WNBA
In 2017, the NBRA negotiated the WNBA's first collective bargaining agreement with its referees. The contract resulted in a 66% wage increase and a 401(k).[11]
References
- ^ a b "History". National Basketball Referees Association. Retrieved 2024-03-10.
- ^ Associated Press. "NBA referees seeking sympathy", Staten Island Advance. April 11, 1977. 18.
- ^ a b Associated Press. "Referee strike won't hold back NBA playoffs", Staten Island Advance. April 11, 1977. 18.
- New York TimesApril 11, 1977.
- ^ "Referees & NBA Put Talks on Hold", New York Post. October 25, 1983. 56.
- ^ Young, Dick. "Young Ideas: Gossage's Griping Shouldn't Sink Billy", New York Post. October 25, 1983. 56.
- ^ Barenfeld, Steve. "NBA Refs go Back to Work", New York Post. December 17, 1983. 34.
- ^ "NBA NOTES - Referees Locked Out -- Union Rejected Deal", San Francisco Chronicle. September 30, 1995. B3.
- Tampa Tribune. December 6, 1995. 1.
- ^ Brown, Clifton. "N.B.A. Referees Accept Contract", New York Times. December 5, 1995. B13.
- ^ Berkman, Seth. "Missed Calls Prompt W.N.B.A. to Bolster Referees’ Training", New York Times. May 20, 2017.