You know that’s just basically a title, right?Its a take. He's Vice Chairman of the Arizona Commerce Authority. Seems odd he would hold such a position if he was widely not respected.
You know that’s just basically a title, right?Its a take. He's Vice Chairman of the Arizona Commerce Authority. Seems odd he would hold such a position if he was widely not respected.
No. But it doesn’t mean they earned anything.So...just because a person inherited means they are undeserving?
Curious.
Did you not read the article, because it sounds like you didn't read the article.None of the information in this article is new, why is it recirculating now?
We all know Michael is an a-hole. What is the Athletic's angle here?
Wow. Y'all are just overflowing with unsweetened haterade.I would love to hear you explain how inherited wealth is deserved.
He has proven he isn't great at putting a winning team on the field. However, being incompetent does not make him undeserving of taking over the family business.No. But it doesn’t mean they earned anything.
They have to prove it and so far Michael has not
alot of owners ( especially the family owned ones ) tend to put the team operations in the hands of "yes men" instead of the best men.He has proven he isn't great at putting a winning team on the field. However, being incompetent does not make him undeserving of taking over the family business.
From the article, "The team eventually closed off the weight room to all non-football staff and offered employees discounted memberships to a local gym." A good reporter would've checked whether this is standard practice among all NFL teams. Seems as though allowing female employees, or any non-football staff, in the players' weight room is begging for a sexual harrassment / hostile work environment lawsuit, given the certainty of "locker room talk" taking place there among the players.I'd never heard that the team gym was closed to female employees.
Kalyn Kahler isn't some aggregator. She's a real reporter who talked to 100 current and former employees. This isn't made up stuff.
In some cases the article did note that the problems occurred pre-COVID, and that they have been addressed one way or another since. E.g. "Employee wellness initiatives announced in February of 2020". The new "Chief People Officer", Shaun Mayo, was hired in July 2021. "In 2022, the team renovated an unused office into a space for nursing mothers." There is now an HR director and "fully-staffed HR department".Fair points. Maybe I judged the article too harshly but it sure felt to me like there was a lack of specifics. And no timeline, nothing to indicate whether these are historical issues or whether they are still continuing right now.
Agree.From the article, "The team eventually closed off the weight room to all non-football staff and offered employees discounted memberships to a local gym." A good reporter would've checked whether this is standard practice among all NFL teams. Seems as though allowing female employees, or any non-football staff, in the players' weight room is begging for a sexual harrassment / hostile work environment lawsuit, given the certainty of "locker room talk" taking place there among the players.
In some cases the article did note that the problems occurred pre-COVID, and that they have been addressed one way or another since. E.g. "Employee wellness initiatives announced in February of 2020". The new "Chief People Officer", Shaun Mayo, was hired in July 2021. "In 2022, the team renovated an unused office into a space for nursing mothers." There is now an HR director and "fully-staffed HR department".
It should've never come to this or taken this long to create a modern billion dollar corporate environment, but the article would've been more informative if the reporter had written about how employees feel about the changes and the current situation, rather than just talking about how much things sucked prior.
Wow. Y'all are just overflowing with unsweetened haterade.
First, his family earned it. They invested in the team and built the business.
Mike? Mike could have chilled on his laurels and simply enjoyed life as a trust fund baby. Many do.
But Mike, Mike went to work. He went to law school...he then passed the BAR... Mike didn't sit around and let hi.self be kept.
Law school and the BAR...that's hard work. I have never done it but I know several who have. If you know anybody you should ask them.
Being a prosecutor didn't really prepare Mike to run an NFL team... but in a business that has dozens of active contracts not inclusive of players specifically knowing what all the heretofore and wheretofors mean when they are joined with a few words in latin...well that has to have value.
Then you throw in all the work on nfl commitees...
Mike is a dufus. I'll grant you that without argument.
But when it's abundantly clear he has worked his ass off for years...to say he is undeserving is just hatespeach and should be disregarded as such.
From the article, "The team eventually closed off the weight room to all non-football staff and offered employees discounted memberships to a local gym." A good reporter would've checked whether this is standard practice among all NFL teams. Seems as though allowing female employees, or any non-football staff, in the players' weight room is begging for a sexual harrassment / hostile work environment lawsuit, given the certainty of "locker room talk" taking place there among the players.
In some cases the article did note that the problems occurred pre-COVID, and that they have been addressed one way or another since. E.g. "Employee wellness initiatives announced in February of 2020". The new "Chief People Officer", Shaun Mayo, was hired in July 2021. "In 2022, the team renovated an unused office into a space for nursing mothers." There is now an HR director and "fully-staffed HR department".
It should've never come to this or taken this long to create a modern billion dollar corporate environment, but the article would've been more informative if the reporter had written about how employees feel about the changes and the current situation, rather than just talking about how much things sucked prior.
Such is life that some people get things that are "undeserved". The people that built that wealth do deserve to pass it down to future generations of their own family though. That includes passing down control of a major sports team.LOL. None of that means that Michael earned the leadership of a multi-billion-dollar company. He didn't earn any of that.
I'm the son of two attorneys. I've known a bunch of attorneys. There are lots and lots and lots of dumb attorneys.
He doesn't deserve any of this. No inherited wealth is deserved and pretty much all of it is immoral.
1) I agree that either all non-football staff should have access to the weight room or none of them should. Doesn't change the fact that closing it to non-female employees is deeply toxic behavior.
2) Finish reading the article and you'd find (and it's been quoted on this tread multiple times) that the Chief People Officer just held a new series of listening sessions and the employees didn't have time to share their concerns and complaints before the 60-minute meeting time ended. And the note that it was clear who was walking into that meeting, which is an invitation for retaliation.
Such is life that some people get things that are "undeserved". The people that built that wealth do deserve to pass it down to future generations of their own family though. That includes passing down control of a major sports team.
I get what you are sayingNo inherited wealth is deserved and pretty much all of it is immoral.
Damn k9... I know you like red, cardinals fan after all. But reel in the communism...wow...I encourage you to justify this statement.
I don’t think you understand how these specific boards work. Not like it’s a BoD for a Fortune 500 company or a unicorn startup.I'm fairly sure that nowhere in the world are people that are disliked or not respected in their area installed in the top 3 positions of their industry associations.
I think there's enough to dislike Bidwill for without making things up.
And the board likes having a Pro Sports owner on the board because he gives them tickets to games, access to events, etc.I don’t think you understand how these specific boards work. Not like it’s a BoD for a Fortune 500 company or a unicorn startup.
Michael just attends a meeting or two a year, shows up at some events, and votes how the executive director tells him to.
Yup!LOL. None of that means that Michael earned the leadership of a multi-billion-dollar company. He didn't earn any of that.
I'm the son of two attorneys. I've known a bunch of attorneys. There are lots and lots and lots of dumb attorneys.
He doesn't deserve any of this. No inherited wealth is deserved and pretty much all of it is immoral.
1) I agree that either all non-football staff should have access to the weight room or none of them should. Doesn't change the fact that closing it to non-female employees is deeply toxic behavior.
2) Finish reading the article and you'd find (and it's been quoted on this tread multiple times) that the Chief People Officer just held a new series of listening sessions and the employees didn't have time to share their concerns and complaints before the 60-minute meeting time ended. And the note that it was clear who was walking into that meeting, which is an invitation for retaliation.
Meh. All old news. Nothing in here that's post covid. Most of it 4 years old.
And they kinda lost me when they thought not having a dedicated room for nursing mothers was a big deal. Who has that?
Yeah it's pretty common but I don't know how big of a deal this is as the article isn't very clear. I know it can't be in a bathroom but "an area near the showers" tells us very little. Did the organization actually designate an area or are women just finding space where they can? Does it allow for privacy? Does it have a table, chair and sufficient space? And, if it's not in step, is it still going on or has it been resolved as legislation continues to address this for workplaces?
The US is weird man. I've never heard of this anywhere in the UK or Europe.
I just looked it up and the US Gov website says,
"No employer is required by law to provide a permanent lactation room, although many do. If you don't have space for a permanent room, consider using an existing office, closet, or storage area on an as-needed basis, screening off an area in a larger space, or providing a car windshield cover or a single-person pop-up tent."
So I have no idea why the article is complaining that women only had a disused office.
I wasn't minimizing the importance of the mother's room itself, I was questioning how out of line they were based on the article. To me, it wasn't clear. From everything we've heard about Bidwill and management, I suspect the worst but it wasn't clear to me if they'd allocated acceptable space near the showers or whether they were forced to find their own way and the area near the showers and the conference rooms were their best options.The purpose of the law is equal opportunity employment. If companies don't have a mothers room it can make it more likely they're going to discriminate in hiring women. I know it's the NFL but women still work for NFL teams.
1. I don’t expect much of an inheritance. My folks are busy traveling to Europe for three months at a time. Whatever I get will likely go to a down payment on a home I can’t afford to buy myself or paying college tuition for my kids so they’re not also crippled in debt when they graduate.I get what you are saying
But 2 questions for you
What are you going to with your inheritance?
Will you leave your money to your kids?
I wasn't minimizing the importance of the mother's room itself, I was questioning how out of line they were based on the article. To me, it wasn't clear. From everything we've heard about Bidwill and management, I suspect the worst but it wasn't clear to me if they'd allocated acceptable space near the showers or whether they were forced to find their own way and the area near the showers and the conference rooms were their best options.