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Updated: 58 min ago

Looming hockey players' strike could freeze Maine Mariners' post-holiday season

Fish-eye lens views of hockey game at Cross Insurance Arena Photo / Jim Neuger The Maine Mariners, garbed in retro Portland Pirates uniforms at Cross Insurance Arena on Dec. 13, lost 4-2 to the Worcester (Mass.) Railers.

A looming hockey players’ strike threatens to disrupt the post-holiday season for the Maine Mariners and rival teams in the ECHL minor league. 

The Mariners, currently on holiday break along with other teams, are scheduled to host the Worcester (Mass.) Railers on Friday and Trois-Rivières Lions of Canada's Quebec province at Portland’s Cross Insurance Arena on Saturday.

However, those games and others could be canceled if a strike threat by the Professional Hockey Players' Association goes ahead. The Niagara Falls, Canada-based organization, which represents around 1,800 athletes across two leagues, has threatened a work stoppage starting Friday in the absence of a collective bargaining agreement with the ECHL under negotiation since January. 

The previous accord expired in June.

Salary levels, player safety and travel requirements are among the issues under negotiation, Eric Casey reported for the Worcester Business Journal, a sister publication of Mainebiz.

Michael Keeley, a spokesman for the Maine Mariners, declined to comment.

Latest offer

The ECHL, headquartered in Shrewsbury, N.J., is two rungs below the top-tier National Hockey League and plays a 72-game season. Once known as the East Coast Hockey League, the organization switched to the four-letter abbreviation when teams from other parts of the country joined.

Its latest offer to players includes an immediate 16.4% increase to the salary cap for this season, which would be paid retroactively from the start of the season, along with additional salary cap increases in future years, according to the league’s website.

It has also offered to continue paying 100% of fully furnished housing for players as well as utility and internet costs and medical and dental benefits. 

Health and safety proposals on the table include requirements for mandatory days off; addressing travel between back-to-back games and modifying holiday and mid-season breaks.

Unresolved tensions 

Tensions remained unresolved late Tuesday, with players association Executive Director Brian Ramsey criticizing the ECHL’s lack of response to an offer to settle the dispute through mediation or arbitration to avoid missed games.

“The ECHL responded within minutes, rejecting any interest in this solution and demanding ‘significant movement’ and concessions from the players,” Ramsey said in a statement issued Tuesday afternoon. 

In its latest online update, the ECHL said it wants to avoid a work stoppage that would result in some games being postponed and “and have a significant impact on the players who would stop getting paid and lose housing and medical benefits.”
 

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