trents wrote:https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/30292901/nfl-owners-approve-playoff-diversity-measures
I wonder how long it will be before every team's staff experiences white out conditions?
RiverDog wrote:I don't agree with it. How do you make a determination as to whether or not a candidate is a minority? My two nephews are bi racial (my brother married an Ethiopian). Are they black or white? If we go by what Native American tribes use in determining race, then all it would take would be 1/16 blood, ie your great-great grandmother or grandfather.
Aseahawkfan wrote:They're (my bi racial nephews) Ethiopian and American.
RiverDog wrote:No, they're American. Period.
RiverDog wrote:No, they're American. Period.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Per our law, they are American. Do you know if having an Ethiopian mother makes them Ethiopian citizens? You wouldn't want to much deny them citizenship in another nation if they have it. I wonder if their mom teaches them much about Ethiopian culture or food. That is one interesting nation. So many different tribes and languages.
NorthHawk wrote:They are trying to break through the glass ceiling. Sometimes it's warranted, and this might be one of those times.
NorthHawk wrote:But they also have to be seen as not being stuck in the current rut where there are few upper management and head coaches that are black.
I'm no lawyer either, but affirmative action has been around for a while in various forms in other areas of society.
RiverDog wrote:No one's answered my question as to how are they going to make a distinction as to whether or not an applicant is a minority. Patrick Mahomes has a black father and a white mother. Would a team that hired him as a HC qualify for the league's incentive? And are we talking about just African Americans or are we talking about all minorities? Would hiring Ron Rivera qualify a team for an incentive? Teddy Bruschi is part Filipino. Would he be considered a minority by the league? Or how about Sam Bradford, who is considered by tribal law to be a Native American, but has just 1/16th blood?
This could get hugely complicated to the point of absurdity.
c_hawkbob wrote:It'll only get absurd if the try to commit it all to a written document that spells out every bloody detail. If they just take it on a case by case basis and make a common sense ruling in good faith on each individual case they'll be fine.
mykc14 wrote:Maybe you are overthinking this a bit? I understand what you are saying but I would imagine they would work those details out the same way they worked out the details to the Rooney Rule.
c_hawkbob wrote:Oh come on, so it has to be written out for one but not the other? Even though both specify minorities in exactly the same context? I'm glad they don't write their rules based on your logic.
RiverDog wrote:
The Rooney Rule required teams to interview minority candidates. There's nothing illegal about requiring a business to consider certain applicants, and I support that initiative. What is possibly illegal (again, I'm not a lawyer) is offering an incentive for teams to engage in a discriminatory act. Big difference.
RiverDog wrote:The Rooney Rule required teams to interview minority candidates. There's nothing illegal about requiring a business to consider certain applicants, and I support that initiative. What is possibly illegal (again, I'm not a lawyer) is offering an incentive for teams to engage in a discriminatory act. Big difference.
mykc14 wrote:My point about the Rooney Rule wasn't to suggest the two rules are similar but instead to point out that however they use the term 'minority' in the Rooney Rule could be the same for this rule.
As to your second point, I don't know there is no incentive for the team that hires the minority as head coach. In other words you're not rewarding the team that hires the head coach you are rewarding the team that put that candidate in a position to become a head coach. It seems like it would be hard to prove that a team is promoting minorities internally simply based on race to get draft picks when there would be years between the internal promotion and that coach possibly being hired to be a Head Coach somewhere else. I would imagine it would take a minimum of 3 years for most OC/DC's to go from a coordinator position to a Head Coach.
c_hawkbob wrote:Oh come on, so it has to be written out for one but not the other? Even though both specify minorities in exactly the same context? I'm glad they don't write their rules based on your logic.
RiverDog wrote:Oh, come on yourself!
Not sure what "one" or the "other" you are referring to. The Rooney Rule?
If someone doesn't get hired for a position they felt they were qualified for and they suspect that the deciding factor was that they did not have the incentive of a draft choice paper clipped to their application, they have the right to sue for damages. A judge is going to want to see...in writing...what the league's policy is regarding the awarding of draft choices related to the hiring of personnel.
c_hawkbob wrote:Yes of course I'm referring to the Rooney Rule. it calls for a qualified minority candidate to be interviewed or there are penalties. This one calls for incentives for teams that hire/promote minority candidates. But you seem to think there needs to be a written delineation for what constitutes a minority for one rule but not the other.
The Rooney Rule is doing just fine without such a defined specification, so will this new rule.
c_hawkbob wrote:One has penalties, the other has incentives. Lawsuits could be brought in either case, I don't get why you see incentives as more important than penalties.
c_hawkbob wrote:I know what you are saying, I just completely disagree with your conclusion.
The aggrieved party in a potential lawsuit vs. the Rooney Rule is a very limited field, one out of 32 teams. There are no labor laws involved. Teams do not have civil rights that could be violated. The chances of a team suing the league (especially now that Al Davis is gone) is extremely remote. Additionally, the Rooney Rule has never been tested in court, so it could be illegal.
c_hawkbob wrote:The exact same as this new incentives rule. There is no difference.
c_hawkbob wrote:Affirmative action hires have been upheld in courts for years. I don't think the courts would look any differently on hires to comply than on incentives given for compliance.
c_hawkbob wrote:Whether a team or an individual were to bring the suit I don't really think does matter.
c_hawkbob wrote:There's a difference between AA as it applies to school admissions and as it applies to labor. And I still disagree with you on how a court would handle a legal challenge, irrespective of your quoted precedent (which is not a direct parallel but I'm done with this line of questioning). I guess we'll just have to see when the first challenge comes.
trents wrote:I agree with River that diversity needs to happen in an organic way rather than through instituting rules and regulations. Discrimination is really a matter of the heart and it takes time to change hearts. Rules and laws that force change often create resentment and pushback. There has been tremendous progress with regard to diversity/discrimination in the land and in the NFL in the past 60 or so years. Not saying that we have arrived but the progress is seldom acknowledged. Look at the large number of non Caucasian QBs there are now in the league. And there are now three or four non Caucasian head coaches. One thing that needs to happen is for wealthy black businessmen to get into the franchise ownership arena. It's happened already in the NBA and now it needs to happen in the NFL. Then they would have more say in picking a head coach of color if that was their desire. And there are non Caucasian businessmen out there with that kind of money.
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