CHL settles lawsuits filed by current and former players over backpay
TORONTO — The Canadian Hockey League has settled three class-action lawsuits filed by current and former junior players seeking backpay for minimum wage.
The CHL — an umbrella organization for the Western Hockey League, Ontario Hockey League and Quebec Major Junior Hockey League — and the plaintiffs announced the settlements that amount to a total of $30 million on Friday.
“This settlement does not mean that we agree with the plaintiffs,” the CHL said in an open letter. “It means that we wanted to end the lawsuits so we could continue to focus on being the best development league in hockey.”
Toronto-based Charney Lawyers, a firm that pursued the case along with Goldblatt Partners and Savonitto & Ass., filed a $180-million lawsuit against the CHL on behalf of all current and many former players in 2014 for outstanding wages, overtime pay, holiday pay and vacation pay.