US women take a stand over pay equity, sending ripples through soccer’s world – Los Angeles Times

After practicing law for more than three decades, Rich Nichols has developed a feel for which cases are going to fly and which are going to die. So he admits he had some trepidation about a plan for members of the women’s national team to file a pay-equity complaint against U.S. Soccer this spring.

“To file a wage-discrimination case against your current employer — you kidding me?” said Nichols, executive director and general counsel for the Women’s National Team Players Assn.

The players had no such doubts.

“There was no hesitation at all. None,” Nichols said. “Like, ‘Where do we sign?’ They are an incredible, strong, selfless group of women. End of story.”

Well, not quite, because the final chapter is still being crafted. But just the fact that the U.S. team is telling its story is already sending ripples through global soccer, where women have long been ignored, marginalized and discriminated against.

The union and U.S. Soccer continue to battle on two fronts: in a federal court in Chicago, where a dispute over an expired collective bargaining agreement is being fought, and with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which is investigating the wage-disparity issue.