Joe Mahoney/Associated Press - San Francisco 49ers head coach Jim Harbaugh, right,
argues with an official during the second quarter of an NFL preseason football
game against the Denver Broncos in Denver, Sunday, Aug. 26, 2012.
Replacements will be on the field beginning Wednesday
night when the Dallas Cowboys visit the New York Giants in the season opener,
league executive Ray Anderson told the 32 teams in a memo. Negotiations are at
a standstill between the NFL and the officials’ union.
The NFL Referees Association was locked out in early
June and talks on a new collective bargaining agreement have gone nowhere.
Replacements have been used throughout the preseason, with mixed results.
In 2001, the NFL used replacements for the first week
of the regular season before a contract was finalized. The speed of the game
and the amount of time starters are on the field increase exponentially for
real games, making the replacements’ task more challenging.
Anderson, the NFL’s executive vice president of
football operations, told the clubs in a memo Wednesday that the replacements
will work “as much of the regular season as necessary,” adding that training
with each crew will continue.
The NFL noted it has expanded the use of instant
replay as an officiating tool this year to include all scoring plays and
turnovers. Officiating supervisors will be on hand to assist the crews on game
administration issues.
“We are not surprised, based on Ray Anderson’s
statements ... that the NFL was not going to reach out to us,” NFLRA spokesman
Michael Arnold said. “However, this is consistent with the NFL’s negotiating
strategy which has been ‘take it or leave it and lock them out.’ It now appears
the NFL is willing to forego any attempt to reach a deal in the last seven days
before opening night.”
The NFL Players Association, which went through a 4 ½-
month lockout last year before settling on a new contract, expressed
disappointment about the decision to use replacements.
Colts safety Antoine Bethea said there is a feeling of
solidarity with the officials.
“They’ve got to do what they’ve got to do, and we were
in a similar situation a little while ago,” Bethea said. “So you can’t fault
those guys for doing what they have to do.”
Anderson said the sides remain considerably apart on
economic issues, including salary and retirement benefits. He also told the
teams there is a substantial difference on operational issues.
“One of our key goals in this negotiation is to
enhance our ability to recruit, train, and replace officials who are not
performing adequately,” Anderson said. “We believe that officials should be
evaluated and performance issues addressed in the same way as players, coaches,
club management and league staff. We have proposed several steps to accomplish
this, including having a number of full-time officials and expanding the
overall number of officials.”
The NFL is offering to add three full officiating
crews, increasing the total number of officials to 140. The NFLRA insists the
compensation being offered with such an increase would reduce the officials’
pay.
The league is proposing having seven officials — one
per position of referee, umpire, line judge, side judge, back judge, field
judge, head linesman — who would train, scout, handle communications, safety
issues and rules interpretations year-round. Now, all NFL game officials are
part-time employees, with outside jobs ranging from lawyers to teachers to
business owners.
In response, the NFLRA has said it is not opposed to
full-time officials “if they are fairly compensated.”
The union also disputes the value of the league’s
current salary offer, which it says would not be the 5 percent to 11 percent
increase the NFL claims.
And the union questions the league’s adherence to
player safety initiatives by using replacement officials, none of whom has
recently worked Division I college games. Many of the officials who were
replacements in 2001 came from the Division I level.
“The league has placed a lot of emphasis on player
health and safety in the last few years and we do feel we are an integral part
of that,” Arnold said. “We think it is unfortunate and we really don’t
understand why the league is willing to risk playing safety and the integrity
of the game by utilizing amateur officials.”
Anderson told the teams that the replacements have
“undergone extensive training and evaluation, and have shown steady improvement
during the preseason.”
Arnold disagreed.
“The referees want to get back on the field,” Arnold
said. “Our members have been engaged in extensive preparations and are ready to
go.”
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