Garber, speaking to reporters prior to the opening game of the season between Inter Miami and Real Salt Lake, warned MLS was "very prepared" to deal with the lockout of the officials. The Professional Soccer Referees Association (PSRA) said on Saturday that 95.8 percent of their voting members had voted to reject the tentative deal they had reached with MLS's Professional Referees Organization (PRO).
"I can't remember in my near 40 years of sports of having a bargaining unit reach agreement and not have their members support it," Garber told reporters, saying that over 20 bargaining sessions had been held before the deal was reached between negotiators. "Very disappointing process. In my opinion, it was one that either was intentional or there's a disconnect between the members and their elected negotiators," he said.
"It's not the way MLS was looking to start a season, but you can't really negotiate with an entity that, in my opinion, hasn't really negotiated with PRO fairly. So we'll see how all that plays out in the weeks to come," he added. The referees' previous five-year labor deal expired in January.
PSRA said the rejected deal fell "short of expectations, along with a lack of quality of life improvements." But Garber said it was not clear to him what the main issues were that needed resolving. "At this point, we don't even know what it is that they're looking for because we agreed (a deal) with their elected representation.
"Not knowing what it is and how far PRO is apart from the PSRA, that is just not something that I can say is normal in a bargaining unit right now," he said.
The PRSA responded quickly to Garber's comments on social media. "If the Commissioner doesn't know what we want, he should simply ask his own
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