Fast
forward to the present, and neither MLB nor the MLBPA want to
retroactively restore these non-vested men into pension coverage;
instead, taxes are taken out of their non-qualified retirement payment,
which cannot be passed on to a surviving spouse or designated
beneficiary.
So
when Spinks dies, the payment he is currently receiving is not passed
to any of his loved ones, including his third wife, Jeanette, or his
daughter, Terri Lynn.
Meanwhile, the maximum IRS pension a vested retiree can receive is $275,000. And the minimum salary for the 26th man riding the pines this year is $760,000.
Though
Spinks may not be looking back at his career with regret, he is focused
on getting the MLBPA to right what he feels is a significant wrong,
namely, short shifting him out of a retirement benefit.
“SOMETHING
needs to be done,” he told me via email recently. “Let’s do something
about it, I’m tired of this bullshit with the players’ association.”
With the average MLB salary last year reported to be $5.1 million, and with MLBPA Executive Director Tony Clark reportedly receiving a yearly salary of $3.41 million,
Spinks contends that the union is forgetting to take care of the men
like him, who helped grow the game by enduring labor stoppages and going
without paychecks all so free agency could occur. After all, he adds,
unions are supposed to help hard working people in this country get a
fair shake in life.
Since
the league doesn’t have to have negotiate about this matter in
collective bargaining, it’s essentially up to the union to go to bat for
these men.
What makes this especially reprehensible is that Clark,
who received the Negro League Museum’s Jackie Robinson Award in 2016,
has never commented about these non-vested retirees, many of whom are
filing for bankruptcy at advanced ages and having banks foreclose on
their homes.
Other
persons of color affected include Pablo Torrealba of the Atlantic
Braves; George Lauzerique of the Milwaukee Brewers, Joe Gilbert of the
Montreal Expos (who wore uniform 42 as a tribute to Robinson) and Aaron Pointer, an NAACP award winner who was the first African-American
linesman in the PAC-10.
From
where I sit, it’s time the union and, in particular, Clark, stop taking
advantage of Spinks and the 507 other men and squash this injustice
once and for all.