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Archive for April 8, 2008

Matt Stover’s e-mail to members of NFLPA

Executive committee and reps,

After the conference call on Wednesday, April 4th, I believe that the

NFLPA is ready to begin a national search process to find a new

Executive Director. As you are completely aware of our election

process, Gene’s contractual situation, and our looming battles against

the owners in the coming years, I feel that the Board must begin to

prepare for a change in leadership immediately. I believe we have the

proper environment with our teammates and leadership within the board

to execute the process of this selection. To be “Open and Transparent”

is critical for the body to back our possible selection, as well as

our outside critics.

I want to make this clear: I have no personal agenda as I would hope

everyone else would as well. I only want what is best for the Union

and our teammates and my intentions are to establish a healthy

leadership for years to come. I believe that whoever the candidate

would end up being has the opportunity to gain valuable insight and

experience to lead future generations of players.

With that being said, I would suggest to the Executive Committee to:

1. Form a sub-committee (3-5 members) to lead the process. The members

should have the time and resources to fully commit to this all-

important process.

2. Use Board Designated Funds to hire an outside consultant, Executive

Head Hunter or Search Firm to aid in the collection of candidates from

both the outside and within the NFL world.

3. Form a list of 8-10 candidates by no later than the start of

training camp.

4. Use any means necessary (personal meetings in home cities or

another city or teleconference) to interview candidates, with

completion by the end of the 2008 football season.

5. Form a final list of 3 candidates by Jan. 1, 2009 that will be

interviewed by the entire Executive Board from Jan. 1-Feb. 15 (6 weeks

to interview 3 candidates again, by any means).

6. The entire Executive Committee select 1 candidate to be recommended

to the Board of Reps. at the 2009 March NFLPA meeting.

As I recommend this process, I fully realize this is just 1 man.

However, I was on that conference call and I am not the only Rep. who

listened and felt that it is time for a change. As I make this

suggestion, I will only hope that every one of us will put any

personal agenda aside and remember who each of us represent. Both the

old and young players in our locker rooms have voted us in because

they trust our judgment. This is about the future of our organization.

Not now … not 1 or 2 years from now, but 5, 10, 15 years from now.

Thanks.

– Matt Stover

Baltimore Ravens NFLPA Player Representative Says Union “Must Begin to Prepare for a Change in Leadership Immediately”

from John Hogan at RetiredFootballPlayers.org

ESPN.com reports Baltimore Ravens union representative, Matt Stover, sent an e-mail to other NFLPA player representatives on Monday which outlined a plan to have a new union Executive Director in place by March of 2009. The following is a copy of the e-mail sent by Stover:

Executive committee and reps,

After the conference call on Wednesday, April 4th, I believe that the NFLPA is ready to begin a national search process to find a new Executive Director. As you are completely aware of our election process, Gene’s contractual situation, and our looming battles against the owners in the coming years, I feel that the Board must begin to prepare for a change in leadership immediately. I believe we have the proper environment with our teammates and leadership within the board to execute the process of this selection. To be “Open and Transparent” is critical for the body to back our possible selection, as well as our outside critics. READ MORE AT RETIREDFOOTBALLPLAYERS.ORG


NFL Disability Plan Draws Congressional Attention

April 8, 2008 John Hannah 1 comment

by Les Carpenter/Washington Post

For a quarter of a century John Hogan has burrowed through the pages of disability plans, looking for traps, digging for loopholes. His practice as a disability and Social Security lawyer in the Atlanta suburb of Sugar Hill, Ga., pits him against faceless bureaucracies of America’s insurance industry almost every day, leaving him to wade through its muck of paperwork and regulations.

Yet asked what organization is the worst at providing disability benefits to its employees, he doesn’t hesitate.

The NFL.

“Not that insurance companies are easy,” he said one recent morning from a downtown Atlanta conference room. “But insurance companies follow [government] timelines. They are supposed to rule 45 days after a claim is made. The NFL plan completely ignores it.” READ MORE