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Donald Fehr
View on WikipediaDonald Martin Fehr (born July 18, 1948)[1] is an American former sports executive and union leader. He was the fifth executive director of the NHL Players Association from 2010 to 2023. He became nationally prominent while serving as the executive director of the MLB Players Association from 1983 to 2009.
Key Information
Life and career
[edit]Fehr's parents are Irene Sylvia (née Gulko) and Louis Alvin Fehr, of German-Jewish descent.[2][3] He was raised in Prairie Village, Kansas. He graduated from Indiana University Bloomington in 1970 with a degree in political science and was a member of Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity. Fehr received his J.D.[4] degree from the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law.[5]
MLBPA
[edit]As a young lawyer, Fehr assisted the MLBPA in the Andy Messersmith and Dave McNally arbitration case (later known as the Seitz decision). In 1977, Marvin Miller hired Fehr as the Players Association general counsel.
In December 1985, Fehr was voted executive director of the MLBPA after having served as acting director since December 9, 1983. Fehr successfully challenged the owners' collusion, leading to the owners paying $280 million in damages to the players.
Fehr led the players union through the 1994–95 Major League Baseball strike and subsequent World Series cancellation. He was instrumental in implementing the rejection of future admissions into the MLBPA of replacement players who planned to fill in during the strike of 1995. Fehr attended the 1995 New York Yankees' home opener against the Texas Rangers, which saw only 50,425 fans show up making it was the smallest opening day crowd at Yankee Stadium since 1990.[6] Fehr's presence angered many fans who blamed him for ruining their team's postseason chances and what would have been Don Mattingly's postseason debut.[7] Fans booed Fehr and yelled "You ruined the game!"[7] in response to him having attended the last game played at Yankee Stadium before the strike, and booed as he left the stadium;[8][9] one fan also held up a sign saying "$HAME ON YOU!",[10] to which Fehr responded by flipping off the fan.
On June 22, 2009, Fehr announced his intention to step down as the MLBPA executive director position, recommending Michael Weiner as his successor. This was subject to the approval of the union's executive board and possible ratification by all players.[11] He officially relinquished his job to Weiner in December 2009.[12][13]
On September 8, 2021, twelve years after leaving Major League Baseball, Fehr delivered the Hall of Fame induction speech for former MLBPA Executive Director Marvin Miller, who was elected in 2020, eight years after his death.[14]
NHLPA
[edit]Shortly after leaving his position as executive director of the MLBPA, Fehr took up a position as an advisor to the NHL Players' Association. On December 18, 2010, Fehr was voted in by the NHLPA as their executive director.[15][16]
With the NHL locking out the players at midnight on September 15, 2012, Fehr became the only executive director of a players' union to be directly involved in work stoppages in two sports. Six of the eight contract negotiations he has been involved in have resulted in work stoppages, including five consecutive negotiations between the MLBPA and Major League Baseball.[17]
In an October 2021 report detailing the sexual assault of Kyle Beach by the Chicago Blackhawks’ video coach Brad Aldrich and ensuing coverup by the organization revealed Beach reported this assault to Fehr, who ultimately did nothing.[18] In an October 28 statement, Fehr admitted that the NHLPA failed Beach.[19]
Fehr left his NHLPA post in February 2023, replaced by former United States Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh.[20]
References
[edit]- ^ Street, Jim (March 19, 2008). "Mariners talk to Fehr about schedule". mlb.com. Retrieved 2007-03-19.
- ^ Who's who in Finance and Industry. August 1975. ISBN 9780837903194.
- ^ Porter, David L. (1995). Biographical Dictionary of American Sports: 1992-1995 supplement for baseball, football, basketball, and other sports. ISBN 9780313284311.
- ^ "Donald Martin Fehr Profile | New York, NY Lawyer | Martindale.com". www.martindale.com.
- ^ Klein, Jeff Z. "The New York Times - Search". The New York Times.
- ^ Maske, Mark (April 30, 1995). "After the Strike, Baseball's Disgusted Fans Decide to Strike Back". The Washington Post. p. A1.
- ^ a b Chass, Murray (April 27, 1995). "BASEBALL; Ceremony, Circus Act And Even Some Fans Greet Game's Return". The New York Times. p. B11. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
- ^ Justice, Richard (August 12, 1994). "With Baseball's Last Out, a Strike". The Washington Post. p. A1.
- ^ Stark, Jayson (August 12, 1994). "Major League Baseball Goes on Strike". The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. A1.
- ^ Boswell, Thomas (April 27, 1995). "Fans Allow Yankees Leeway on Strike Zone". The Washington Post. p. B1.
- ^ "Fehr leaving post after quarter-century". ESPN.com. June 23, 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-15.
- ^ "The Hockey News".
- ^ "Donald Fehr closer to becoming NHLPA's executive director". USA Today. September 11, 2010.
- ^ Joyce, Greg (8 September 2021). "Derek Jeter fans grow restless during Donald Fehr's Hall of Fame speech: 'Sorry, guys!'". nypost.com. NYP Holdings, Inc. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
- ^ "NHLPA.com". www.nhlpa.com.
- ^ "Fehr voted in as executive director of NHLPA". www.tsn.ca. Archived from the original on 2010-12-21.
- ^ "Home | mlbpa".
- ^ Walsh, Erin (2022-04-15). "NHLPA Announces Findings from Blackhawks Probe After Kyle Beach Allegations". Bleacher Report. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
- ^ Cuthbert, Justin (2021-10-28). "NHLPA head Donald Fehr admits union failed Kyle Beach: 'I am truly sorry'". Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
- ^ "Marty Walsh formally appointed Executive Director of NHLPA". www.cbsnews.com. CBS News Boston. 16 February 2023. Retrieved 28 February 2023.
Further reading
[edit]Ruttman, Larry (2013). "Donald Fehr: Former Executive Director of the Major League Baseball Players Association". American Jews and America's Game: Voices of a Growing Legacy in Baseball. Lincoln, Nebraska and London, England: University of Nebraska Press. pp. 281–291. ISBN 978-0-8032-6475-5. This chapter in Ruttman's oral history, based on an April 24, 2009 interview with Fehr conducted for the book, discusses Fehr's American, Jewish, baseball, and life experiences from youth to the present.
External links
[edit]- NHLPA Executive Director page NHLPA.com
- Donald M. Fehr, Executive Director mlbplayers.com
- History of the Major League Baseball Players Association Archived 2007-01-26 at the Wayback Machine mlbplayers.com
- Appearances on C-SPAN
Donald Fehr
View on GrokipediaDonald M. Fehr is a labor lawyer and union executive who served as executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA) from 1983 to 2009 and the National Hockey League Players' Association (NHLPA) from 2010 to 2023.[1][2][3]
Under his leadership at the MLBPA, Fehr litigated successful challenges to owners' collusion in the 1980s, resulting in over $280 million in damages paid to players, and maintained union solidarity through one lockout and two strikes, including the 1994–95 work stoppage that canceled the World Baseball Classic—no, World Series.[4][5]
These efforts contributed to a rise in average MLB player salaries from approximately $360,000 to over $3 million during his tenure, alongside expansions in free agency and arbitration rights.[6]
In the NHL, Fehr guided players through the 2012 lockout, securing revenue-sharing terms that boosted compensation amid growing league revenues, though his approach drew criticism for prolonging disputes and inadequate responses to issues like player safety and misconduct allegations.[7][8]
Fehr's career exemplifies aggressive advocacy for athlete interests against management, often at the cost of fan alienation and season disruptions, prioritizing empirical gains in contracts over broader game preservation.[9][10]
Early Life and Education
Family Background and Upbringing
Donald Fehr was born in 1948 in Indiana to Lou Fehr, who owned a restaurant equipment company.[11][12] Fehr was the oldest of three children.[11] His family had earlier ties to California, where his grandfather operated a clothing store in Santa Monica adjacent to the Criterion movie theater until losing everything during the Great Depression, after which they returned to Indiana.[13] The family later relocated to the Kansas City area, where Fehr grew up in the suburb of Prairie Village, Kansas.[14][15] During his childhood in Prairie Village, Fehr participated in Little League baseball but was not particularly skilled at the sport; he also engaged in informal backyard catch with a sibling.[14][15]Academic and Legal Training
Fehr earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in government from Indiana University Bloomington in 1970.[2][16] He pursued legal education at the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law, graduating with a Juris Doctor degree with distinction in 1973.[2][17][16] Upon completing law school, Fehr was admitted to the bar in 1973 and served as a law clerk for U.S. District Judge Elmo B. Hunter in the Western District of Missouri, where he developed practical skills in federal judicial processes and case management.[18][14]Early Legal Career
Initial Positions and Expertise Development
Following his graduation with a J.D. from the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law in 1973, Fehr began his legal career as a law clerk for U.S. District Judge Elmo B. Hunter in Kansas City, Missouri.[15][12] This position provided foundational exposure to federal judicial processes, including civil litigation and labor-related disputes, honing his analytical skills in a courtroom setting.[19] Fehr subsequently joined the Kansas City-based law firm of Jolley, Moran, Walsh, Hager & Gordon (later incorporating Gant) in the mid-1970s, a practice specializing in labor law representation for unions, including steelworkers.[20][19] At the firm, he focused on collective bargaining, grievance arbitration, and union-side advocacy, building expertise in interpreting labor agreements and challenging employer restrictions on worker mobility.[21] This environment emphasized adversarial negotiation tactics and statutory analysis under the National Labor Relations Act, distinguishing his approach from corporate defense practices prevalent in larger firms.[22] A pivotal development occurred in 1976 when the firm was retained by the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA) to assist in the Andy Messersmith–Dave McNally arbitration aftermath, known as the Seitz decision, which invalidated the reserve clause and established free agency for players.[2][22] Assigned to the case, Fehr contributed to defending the arbitrator's ruling against challenges from Major League Baseball owners, including arguments before federal courts that preserved the decision's impact.[23] This high-stakes involvement immersed him in sports labor dynamics, revealing structural asymmetries in player contracts and fostering his specialization in athlete representation—contrasting with his prior general union work by integrating antitrust principles and arbitration precedents unique to professional sports.[21] The experience solidified his reputation for meticulous preparation and union advocacy, directly leading to his recruitment by MLBPA executive director Marvin Miller as general counsel in August 1977.[2][24]MLBPA Leadership (1983–2009)
Ascension to Executive Director
Fehr joined the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA) as general counsel in 1977, after assisting the union in arbitration cases as a Kansas City-based attorney.[25] Marvin Miller, the MLBPA's inaugural full-time executive director, retired at the end of 1982 following 16 years of leadership that had established the union's strength through grievance arbitration, free agency, and collective bargaining gains.[25] In December 1982, the MLBPA's executive board elected federal mediator Ken Moffett as Miller's successor, opting for an outsider over internal candidates like Fehr, with Moffett assuming the role on January 1, 1983.[26] Moffett's tenure lasted less than a year, marked by tensions with player representatives over his management style and perceived lack of commitment to the union's adversarial stance against owners; he was dismissed by the executive board on November 22, 1983. Fehr, then 35, was immediately appointed acting executive director on December 9, 1983, stepping in to stabilize the union amid ongoing preparations for the expiration of the basic agreement in December 1984.[2] During his acting period, Fehr navigated early negotiations that avoided a work stoppage and secured modest salary arbitration improvements, demonstrating continuity with Miller's principles of player empowerment and resistance to owner concessions.[25] In December 1985, following demonstrated effectiveness in interim leadership, MLBPA players formally elected Fehr as permanent executive director, a position he held until 2009.[2] This ascension reflected the union's preference for an experienced internal lawyer committed to aggressive bargaining, contrasting with Moffett's brief, disruptive experiment with external mediation-oriented leadership.[26]Key Collective Bargaining Agreements and Strikes
During Fehr's leadership of the MLBPA, collective bargaining negotiations emphasized resistance to salary caps and payroll restrictions proposed by owners, prioritizing free agency rights, salary arbitration enhancements, and revenue sharing without hard limits on player earnings. The 1985 CBA, negotiated under his direction as acting executive director, extended free agency eligibility to players with six years of service, raised the minimum salary to $60,000 from $40,000, and improved pension contributions, setting a foundation for salary escalation amid owners' collusion grievances that later yielded a $280 million settlement.[25][27] A 32-day owners' lockout began on March 19, 1990, following the expiration of the prior CBA on December 31, 1989, as owners sought a salary cap and pay-for-performance scales to curb escalating costs, which Fehr and the MLBPA viewed as threats to competitive balance in free agency. Fehr maintained player unity through the dispute, which delayed spring training and exhibitions but preserved core bargaining positions; the resulting four-year CBA, ratified April 17, 1990, avoided a cap, incorporated modest revenue sharing, and included arbitration adjustments favoring mid-career players, while integrating the collusion settlement funds for player benefits.[28][29] The most protracted conflict under Fehr was the 1994–95 players' strike, initiated August 12, 1994, after owners demanded a salary cap tied to 50% of league revenue amid disputes over local broadcasting income and payroll disparities, estimating it would reduce player salaries by $1.5 billion over seven years. Lasting 232 days until April 25, 1995, the action canceled the final 1994 season segment, playoffs, and World Series—the first such cancellation in history—and caused $1.2 billion in combined losses, with Fehr rejecting incremental offers as insufficient protections against owner-imposed revenue caps. Federal intervention via Judge Sonia Sotomayor halted unilateral owner rule changes on March 31, 1995; players temporarily decertified the union to pursue antitrust remedies before recertifying, leading to a 1996 CBA that introduced a 35% luxury tax on high-spending teams as a soft alternative to a hard cap, alongside interleague play and wild card expansions, without restricting free agency.[30][5][31] Subsequent negotiations yielded labor peace: the 2002 CBA established revenue sharing at 31% of local revenues to net 48–50% player share league-wide, with graduated luxury tax rates starting at 17.5% for payrolls over $117 million, and the 2006 extension through 2011 refined arbitration eligibility and international signing rules, averting stoppages for 16 years post-1995 while average salaries climbed from $1.2 million in 1995 to $2.9 million by 2006.[32][33]Prevention of Salary Caps and Salary Escalation
During Donald Fehr's tenure as executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA) from 1983 to 2009, a central pillar of his labor strategy was the rejection of any form of salary cap proposed by team owners, which he argued would artificially suppress player compensation and redistribute revenues away from labor in favor of ownership.[34] Fehr maintained that caps, as implemented in other sports leagues like the NFL and NBA, stifled salary growth by tying player pay to league-wide revenue shares rather than market-driven free agency and individual negotiations.[35] This stance, rooted in the union's emphasis on unrestricted free agency established in the 1976 collective bargaining agreement (CBA), prioritized maximizing aggregate player earnings over competitive balance concerns raised by owners, who cited escalating payroll disparities as justification for caps.[25] In the 1985 CBA negotiations, Fehr secured enhancements to salary arbitration without conceding to owner demands for payroll limits, expanding eligibility to players with two years of service time (down from three) and introducing mechanisms for higher awards, which accelerated mid-level salary increases.[36] Owners had floated average payroll caps, but these were dropped amid union resistance, preserving the free-market dynamics that fueled bidding wars for top talent.[36] The 1990 CBA further exemplified Fehr's approach: following a landmark $280 million collusion grievance win against owners for suppressing free-agent salaries in 1985-1987, the union rejected proposals for a hard cap or pay-for-performance salary formulas, maintaining arbitration thresholds at two years and avoiding revenue-sharing mandates that could indirectly cap earnings.[37] The 1994-1995 strike represented the apex of Fehr's anti-cap efforts, triggered by owners' June 1994 proposal for a salary cap linked to 50% of league revenues, including player licensing income, alongside elimination of arbitration and free agency restrictions after six years.[38] Fehr deemed the plan a "wholesale attack" on the salary structure, rejecting it outright on July 18, 1994, as it failed to address player demands for revenue growth sharing without payroll ceilings.[39] [40] The resulting 232-day work stoppage, the longest in MLB history and the first to cancel the World Series, saw players forgo an estimated $1.2 billion in salaries while owners lost approximately $1.5 billion in revenues; Fehr's leadership unified the union, with 95% player support for striking to preserve uncapped earnings potential.[5] The impasse ended in April 1995 via federal mediation, yielding no cap but introducing a framework for revenue sharing and arbitration reforms in subsequent talks.[41] The 1997 CBA under Fehr formalized a luxury tax on high payrolls as a soft alternative to a hard cap—tax rates escalating to 50% on portions exceeding $55 million—while expanding revenue sharing to 30% of local revenues, yet preserving free agency and arbitration intact.[42] This compromise curbed extreme outliers without imposing league-wide limits, allowing continued salary escalation: the average MLB player salary rose from $289,194 in 1983 to $371,571 by 1985, surpassing $1 million by 1990, $2.5 million by 2000, and reaching $3.24 million in 2009.[6] [43] Minimum salaries similarly climbed from $35,000 in 1983 to $400,000 by 2009, driven by uncapped competition among 30 teams for a finite talent pool.[44] Critics, including some economists and owners, attributed this growth to Fehr's policies enabling market inefficiencies like payroll disparities (e.g., the 2009 Yankees' $200+ million payroll vs. the Royals' under $70 million), but Fehr countered that salary caps would have halved projected earnings by capping them at revenue percentages rather than individual value.[24] Overall, Fehr's resistance ensured MLB remained the only major U.S. sports league without a salary cap, correlating with player salaries multiplying over 11-fold during his leadership, though at the cost of three work stoppages and ongoing owner frustrations over competitive inequities.[45][46]Handling of Performance-Enhancing Drugs Controversy
Under Fehr's leadership of the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA) from 1983 to 2009, the union consistently opposed mandatory, random drug testing for performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs), prioritizing players' privacy rights and due process over league demands for stricter enforcement.[47][48] Fehr argued that testing infringed on individual rights without sufficient evidence of widespread abuse justifying invasion of privacy, a position rooted in labor principles that treated PED use as a personal rather than collective bargaining issue unless proven otherwise.[49] This stance delayed comprehensive testing protocols amid growing evidence of PED proliferation, including anabolic steroids and human growth hormone, which correlated with offensive surges like the record 5,693 home runs hit in the 1999 MLB season.[50] The first concession came in the 2002 collective bargaining agreement, where the MLBPA agreed to a one-time anonymous survey test in 2003 for steroids; results exceeding 5% positive would trigger mandatory unannounced testing the following year.[51] Of approximately 1,200 players tested, 104—roughly 8.7%—yielded positive results, activating the provision and leading to the Joint Drug Prevention and Treatment Program's implementation in 2004, which included suspensions for first offenses but no initial public naming of violators.[52] Fehr defended the anonymity, rejecting claims that the survey tainted the entire player population and emphasizing that the data was intended solely to gauge prevalence, not to punish individuals.[53] Critics, including MLB officials, contended this threshold allowed pervasive use to continue unchecked, as the union resisted lowering it or expanding to other substances like stimulants until external pressure mounted.[54] Congressional scrutiny intensified the controversy, with Fehr testifying before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee in March 2005 and again in January 2008 following the Mitchell Report, which documented over 80 players' PED involvement and faulted both MLB and the MLBPA for lax responses from the mid-1990s onward.[55][56] In his 2008 statement, Fehr affirmed that "steroids and other unlawful performance enhancing drugs (PEDs) have no place in the game" but criticized media sensationalism for exaggerating the issue post-testing, claiming by 2009 that baseball's steroid problem was "fixed" through evolved policies.[57][55] Under pressure from hearings and threats of legislation, the union agreed in 2005 to harsher penalties—50 games for a first offense, 100 for a second, and a lifetime ban for a third—along with Human Growth Hormone testing by 2011, though implementation lagged.[58][59] Fehr's approach drew sharp criticism for enabling the "steroid era," with detractors arguing that union intransigence prolonged PED use, inflating statistics and eroding game integrity without accountability until after the 2003 survey leak to federal authorities.[60][61] MLB Commissioner Bud Selig and congressional figures like Senator John McCain highlighted the union's resistance as a barrier to reform, contrasting it with Fehr's successes in salary arbitration and free agency.[58] Empirical data post-2005 showed declining positive tests—from 2.5% in 2003 to under 1% by 2008—but debates persist over whether earlier intervention could have mitigated health risks and statistical distortions, such as Barry Bonds' 73-home-run 2001 season amid unverified PED links.[62] Fehr maintained that player input drove eventual strengthening, viewing external mandates as overreach, though the controversy underscored tensions between labor protections and public demands for a drug-free sport.[63]NHLPA Leadership (2010–2023)
Appointment and Union Reorganization
Following the dismissal of executive director Paul Kelly in October 2009 amid internal disputes and leadership instability, the NHL Players' Association (NHLPA) sought external expertise to stabilize its operations and prepare for upcoming collective bargaining. Donald Fehr, who had stepped down from the Major League Baseball Players Association in 2009 after 26 years as executive director, began advising the NHLPA on an unpaid basis in late 2009, focusing on leadership transition and constitutional revisions.[64] [65] Fehr played a key role in drafting a revised constitution designed to address governance weaknesses exposed by years of executive turnover, board infighting, and scandals dating back to the Alan Eagleson era, including efforts to limit factionalism and enhance accountability.[66] [67] On December 18, 2010, NHLPA membership voted overwhelmingly to appoint Fehr as the new executive director, effective immediately, while simultaneously ratifying the new constitution, which supplanted prior bylaws and aimed to foster long-term structural stability.[68] [69] The reorganization under Fehr's early influence emphasized professionalizing union operations, drawing on his MLBPA experience to centralize decision-making and reduce vulnerability to internal power struggles that had previously hampered effectiveness. This foundational shift preceded the 2012 collective bargaining negotiations, positioning the NHLPA for unified representation amid an expiring agreement.[66][70]2012–2013 Lockout Negotiations
The 2012–2013 NHL lockout commenced on September 15, 2012, immediately after the expiration of the collective bargaining agreement (CBA) between the National Hockey League (NHL) and the NHL Players' Association (NHLPA).[71] As executive director of the NHLPA since 2010, Donald Fehr directed the union's response, emphasizing the preservation of player revenue shares and contract rights amid owner demands for cost reductions.[72] The league, led by Commissioner Gary Bettman, sought to lower the players' share of hockey-related revenue (HRR) from 57 percent under the prior CBA to as low as 43 percent initially, citing financial pressures on smaller-market teams despite overall league revenue growth exceeding $3.3 billion annually.[71][72] Negotiations, which Fehr actively rejoined on August 9, 2012, after consulting European players, revealed persistent divides over revenue allocation, salary cap dynamics, and contract durations.[71] The NHLPA countered the league's July 13 proposal with offers maintaining player shares around 54 percent and proposing fixed cap growth, but these were rejected.[73] By October 16, the NHL proposed a 50-50 split to resolve the impasse, yet talks stalled, leading to the cancellation of 510 regular-season games—approximately 41 percent of the full schedule—along with the All-Star Game and Winter Classic.[71][72] Fehr criticized the owners' rigidity, advising players on legal options including potential antitrust challenges, while maintaining internal unity to avoid fractures that plagued prior disputes.[73] Federal mediation began on November 26, but progress remained limited until late December, when intensified sessions followed player disclaimers of union representation—later rescinded—and owner-player meetings.[71] A tentative agreement was reached on January 6, 2013, after a 16-hour marathon negotiation, concluding the 113-day lockout.[71][73] The new 10-year CBA, with an opt-out clause after eight years, established a 50-50 HRR split, seven-year limits on contracts (eight for re-signings), and enhanced revenue sharing rising to $200 million annually.[72] While owners secured significant concessions—reducing player shares by seven percentage points and imposing stricter caps—Fehr's leadership prevented deeper cuts and included a $300 million "make-whole" provision to honor existing contracts over three years.[72] The shortened 48-game season commenced on January 19, 2013, with estimated losses of $2 billion for owners and $800 million for players, underscoring the owners' leverage in imposing the work stoppage.[72]
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