CBA, WNBA and Players Association
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If a new CBA were signed today, we’d have just over two months to get all of this done. Yet, with the way it’s looking, it may be six weeks or even less. It’s a lot to think about, and potentially less time than ever to do it.
WNBA and WNBPA weigh a Free Agency moratorium as the CBA deadline hits, with labor tensions rising across the league.
On Friday night, 30 minutes before the deadline for a new collective bargaining agreement between the WNBA and its players union was set to pass, the WNBA Players Association released a statement blasting the league for its negotiating tactics and accusing it of trying to run out the clock.
The WNBA has yet to respond to a collective bargaining agreement proposal made by the players nearly two weeks ago as the Jan. 9 deadline for a new agreement approaches, according to a report by Front Office Sports.
This article was originally published on www.si.com/wnba/wings as The clock is ticking for Dallas Wings, WNBA to reach new CBA agreement. The Dallas Wings, in the rest of the league, are getting closer to the Jan. 9 deadline for collective bargaining agreement negotiations.
Brittney Griner, Aari McDonald and Kahleah Copper are all sidelined as Unrivaled gears up for its second day of action.
WNBPA president Nneka Ogwumike and VP Napheesa Collier applaud player solidarity but bemoan a lack of progress in CBA negotiations.
There has never been a strike in the league's 30-year history, but it appears possible as Friday's deadline approaches.