American Federation of Teachers president to call for full school reopenings in the fall

The president of the second-largest teachers’ union in the U.S. called for schools to fully reopen for in-person instruction five days a week in the fall during an address on Thursday. 

Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), weighed in on the debate over school reopenings amid the COVID-19 pandemic as supporters of returning to full in-person learning have accused teachers’ unions of being an obstacle to the move for requesting safety precautions. 

The AFT president argued that “prolonged isolation is harmful” for students and that remote school inhibits parents’, in particular mothers,’ ability to work. She outlined proposals to mitigate the risk of COVID-19 transmission in schools, according to a draft of her prepared speech obtained by The Hill.

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“There is no doubt: Schools must be open,” she said.

“Conditions have changed,” she added. “We can and we must reopen schools in the fall for in-person teaching, learning and support. And we must keep them open. Fully and safely five days a week.”

The president of the union with 1.7 million members committed $5 million toward a campaign that will have teachers host open houses and go door to door to discuss the strategy for reopening and alleviate any parent worries about getting back to in-person instruction. 

“The United States will not be fully back until we are fully back in school. And my union is all in,” she said.

Weingarten acknowledged that returning is “not risk-free” but that risk can be diminished through precautions like masking and hand-washing, as well as larger adjustments to reduce class sizes and teach in additional spaces.

The AFT president proposed hiring more teachers to allow for smaller classes and explore teaching in empty storefronts, offices, mobile trailers or tents. 

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She also recommended all schools have a committee for school staff, parents and “where appropriate” students to prepare and respond to any “safety issues.”

Weingarten added that the AFT Executive Council unanimously approved a resolution on Wednesday “on everything I am talking about today.”

The New York Times first reported on Weingarten’s remarks Thursday morning. 

Weingarten’s address comes as about half of schools have returned to full in-person teaching, while the other half remain on either fully remote or hybrid schedules, according to the Return to Learn Tracker.  

In her speech, she defended teachers and unions, who have been accused of delaying reopening by pushing for meticulous safety precautions. Weingarten said teachers have only asked for “a safe workplace during this pandemic and the resources they and their students need to succeed.” 

“They are exhausted,” she said. “They’re working longer hours, troubleshooting IT problems, and trying to connect with students despite the barriers — whether that’s a computer screen or a Plexiglas shield. And if there’s an educator in your life, you know this.”

“Yet critics have scapegoated teachers and vilified their unions because of the school closures during the pandemic, ignoring the extreme disparities among schools and blaming teachers for problems outside their control,” she said. 

Weingarten said with 89 percent of AFT members vaccinated or willing to be, she thinks less teachers will opt for medical accommodations to teach remotely in the fall.

But as several families continue to opt for remote learning, some unions have argued that focus instead should be placed on reforming online teaching. 

Updated at 11:55 a.m.

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Regional emergency declaration issued over pipeline shut down after cyberattack

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration on Sunday issued a regional emergency declaration in 17 states and the District of Columbia in response to the shutdown of one of the largest pipelines in the U.S., which supplies around 45 percent of fuel consumed by the East Coast.

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The regional emergency declaration from the U.S. Department of Transportation lifts restrictions for motor carriers and drivers who are providing assistance to areas that are suffering a shortages of “gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, and other refined petroleum products” in the wake of the Colonial pipeline shutdown.

The regional emergency declaration affects the following territories: Alabama, Arkansas, District of Columbia, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia.

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The declaration grants drivers and carriers relief from “Parts 390 through 399 of Title 49 Code of Federal Regulations except as restricted herein.”

These regulations are reinstated once a driver or commercial motor vehicle is used for interstate commerce that does not provide assistance to help the shortage.

“Upon termination of direct assistance to emergency relief efforts related to the shortages of gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, and other refined petroleum products due to the shutdown, partial shutdown and/or manual operation of the Colonial pipeline system in the Affected States, the motor carrier and driver are subject to the requirements of 49 CFR Parts 390 through 399,” the declaration read.

Carriers or drivers who are subject to an out-of-service are not eligible for the relief granted by the declaration.

The emergency declaration will stay in effect until the emergency is over or until 11:59 p.m. ET, June 8, 2021.

Colonial Pipeline said Friday it was shutting down more than 5,000 miles of pipeline after a ransomware attack on its system. Experts have warned that gas prices may begin to rise if the pipeline is not operational within the next few days. As of Sunday, the pipeline has been out of operation for three days. 

On Sunday it was reported that the investigation into the cyberattack that shut down the pipeline had been linked to a criminal ransomware gang called Dark Horse.

Editors note: An earlier version of this story misstated the type of declaration issued. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration issued a regional emergency declaration. 

Amazon looks to add 75K employees, offers $100 vaccination bonuses for new hires

Amazon announced Thursday that it is looking to hire 75,000 more employees across the U.S. and Canada.

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The e-commerce giant also said it will offer a $100 bonus to new hires who show proof of vaccination against COVID-19.

“We look forward to hiring 75,000 associates across our fulfillment and transportation network,” said Alicia Boler Davis, vice president of global customer fulfillment at Amazon.

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The new positions will have an average starting pay of $17 an hour, the company said in a blog post.

Amazon last month increased pay for a half-million workers, with wages rising between 50 cents and $3 an hour.

Amazon has ramped up hiring during the pandemic to keep up with demand. The company added 500,000 workers in 2020 and now has about 1.3 million employees worldwide.

At the same time, Amazon has also come under criticism from workers who are pushing for improved working conditions, higher wages and better protection from the coronavirus. More than 19,000 Amazon workers had contracted COVID-19 as of October.

The company recently beat back a unionization drive at its Bessemer, Ala., facility, but a challenge to those results is ongoing.

Senate Democrats offer bill to scrap tax break for investment managers

A group of Senate Democrats on Wednesday introduced legislation to end the carried-interest tax break that benefits investment managers after President BidenJoe BidenKinzinger, Gaetz get in back-and-forth on Twitter over Cheney vote Cheney in defiant floor speech: Trump on ‘crusade to undermine our democracy’ US officials testify on domestic terrorism in wake of Capitol attack MORE also called for scrapping the tax preference as part of his human infrastructure plan.

The tax break for carried interest allows investment managers to pay taxes on certain compensation income at capital gains rates, rather than ordinary income rates. The senators’ bill would require carried interest to be taxed at ordinary income rates. The current top ordinary income rate is 37 percent, while the current top capital gains rate is 20 percent.

Democratic Sens. Tammy BaldwinTammy Suzanne BaldwinSenate Democrats push Biden over raising refugee cap House Dems to unveil drug pricing measure ahead of Biden package World passes 3 million coronavirus deaths MORE (Wis.), Sherrod BrownSherrod Campbell BrownWyden: Funding infrastructure with gas tax hike a ‘big mistake’ Sherrod Brown calls Rand Paul ‘kind of a lunatic’ for not wearing mask On The Money: How demand is outstripping supply and hampering recovery | Montana pulls back jobless benefits | Yellen says higher rates may be necessary MORE (Ohio) and Joe ManchinJoe ManchinSenate panel deadlocks in vote on sweeping elections bill Wyden: Funding infrastructure with gas tax hike a ‘big mistake’ Biden to host Sinema for meeting on infrastructure proposal MORE (W.Va.) took the lead on offering the bill, which has more than a dozen Democratic senators sponsoring it. Brown is a prominent progressive while Manchin is a prominent centrist, indicating widespread support in the Democratic caucus for ending the carried-interest preference.

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“Currently, there is a loophole in our tax code that allows investment managers to pay less taxes for wage income than the ordinary West Virginian and American worker. This legislation would close this loophole to ensure wealthy hedge fund managers are paying the fair amount in taxes,” Manchin said in a statement. “I urge my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to support this commonsense legislation that treats all workers fairly.”

The introduction of the bill comes after Biden proposed in his American Families Plan to do away with the carried-interest preference. Biden also proposed raising both the top ordinary income tax rate and the top capital gains rate to 39.6 percent for high-income taxpayers. Biden is proposing to use the revenue raised from these tax increases to pay for spending in areas such as child care and education.

Former President TrumpDonald TrumpKinzinger, Gaetz get in back-and-forth on Twitter over Cheney vote READ: Liz Cheney’s speech on the House floor Cheney in defiant floor speech: Trump on ‘crusade to undermine our democracy’ MORE had also called for ending the carried-interest tax break when he ran for president in 2016, but his 2017 tax law did not do away with the preference. The 2017 law did increase the amount of time investments had to be held for to qualify for the tax break, from one year to three years.

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“Trump broke his promise to close this loophole and actually signed a Republican tax bill that kept it in place,” Baldwin said in a statement. “President Biden has called on Congress to close the carried interest tax loophole and this legislation will do it. Now let’s get it done and use this revenue to invest in workers and economic growth.”

Democratic senators have also introduced versions of the carried-interest bill in previous Congresses. A version of the bill was introduced in February in the House by Reps. Bill PascrellWilliam (Bill) James PascrellAmerica’s Jewish communities are under attack — Here are 3 things Congress can do Democrats warn Waters censure move opens floodgates Lawmakers launch bipartisan caucus on SALT deduction MORE (D-N.J.), Andy LevinAndrew (Andy) LevinOvernight Energy: Update on Biden administration conservation goals | GOP sees opportunity to knock Biden amid rising gas prices | Push for nationwide electric vehicle charging stations Ocasio-Cortez, Levin introduce revised bill to provide nationwide electric vehicle charging network OSHA sends draft emergency temporary standard for COVID-19 to OMB review MORE (D-Mich.) and Katie Porter (D-Calif.). A number of liberal groups and labor unions support the measure, including the AFL-CIO, the Patriotic Millionaires and the Working Families Party.

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The American Investment Council (AIC), a group representing the private equity industry, has expressed opposition to the bill, arguing that it would hurt the economy. 

“As workers and local economies continue to struggle during this pandemic, Washington should not punish long term investment that creates jobs, builds businesses in communities, and develops more renewable energy across America,” AIC President and CEO Drew Maloney said in a statement,

Updated at 11:35 a.m.

Carper urges Biden to nominate ambassadors amid influx at border

Sen. Tom CarperThomas (Tom) Richard CarperCarper urges Biden to nominate ambassadors amid influx at border DC statehood bill picks up Senate holdout The Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by Facebook – Cheney poised to be ousted; Biden to host big meeting MORE (D-Del.) dinged the Biden administration Thursday for so far failing to nominate ambassadors to the three Central American nations responsible for the bulk of migration to the southern border as the White House grapples with an influx of migrants.

President BidenJoe BidenFauci says school should be open ‘full blast’ five days a week in the fall Overnight Defense: Military sexual assault reform bill has votes to pass in Senate l First active duty service member arrested over Jan. 6 riot l Israeli troops attack Gaza Strip Immigration experts say GOP senators questioned DHS secretary with misleading chart MORE has yet to nominate ambassadors to El Salvador, Guatemala or Honduras, even as the White House has designated significant personnel to Northern Triangle issues, including Vice President Harris.

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“They’ve had a chance to get their feet wet now. We need him to nominate some career ambassadors, and we need to hold speedy hearings, vet them and vote them up or down,” Carper said at a Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee hearing on the border.

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His comments come as Biden has predicated much of his border strategy on dealing with the “root causes” of migration and pledging to send some $4 billion in aid to the three countries.

The money would be designated across a variety of priorities, from boosting local economies to dealing with cartel violence to pro-democracy measures.

The State Department has appointed Ricardo Zúñiga to serve as a special envoy for the region, in part to carry out the root causes strategy. But the administration has yet to make any ambassador nominations in Latin America, and the U.S. has been without an ambassador in Honduras since the start of the Trump administration. 

“I think that one of the best things we can do is put in place career ambassadors with Senate confirmation, Senate support as much as anything. We need to make sure that they’re surrounded by terrific staff in the embassies in Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador. They need to be the counterbalance to all the thugs and the crooks and the criminals down there that are using drug money that we provide to continue to screw up those countries,” Carper said.

He then echoed a call also made by Sen. Rob PortmanRobert (Rob) Jones PortmanCarper urges Biden to nominate ambassadors amid influx at border Fudge violated the Hatch Act, watchdog finds House conservatives take aim at Schumer-led bipartisan China bill MORE (R-Ohio) to allow people to apply for asylum prior to arriving in the U.S. — something that has been endorsed by the administration but that would require an act of Congress.  

“If we can, in fact, adjudicate claims in the countries of origin or in truly safe places then we will spare children the perilous journey north,” Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro MayorkasAlejandro MayorkasImmigration experts say GOP senators questioned DHS secretary with misleading chart Carper urges Biden to nominate ambassadors amid influx at border Colonial Pipeline says it has restored full service MORE said at the hearing.

Former Russian mayor who encouraged pro-Navalny protests is jailed

The former mayor of Russia’s fourth-largest city, Yekaterinburg, is in jail after a court on Wednesday found him guilty of using social media to encourage protests in support of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, Reuters reported.

Yevgeny Roizman was charged by Russian authorities for using Twitter to organize an illegal rally for Navalny, a jailed former Russian presidential candidate who is one of the most high-profile critics of Russian President Vladimir PutinVladimir Vladimirovich PutinREAD: Liz Cheney’s speech on the House floor Scarborough, Greenwald trade insults on Twitter over rise of Trump Congress may force Biden to stop Russia’s Nord Stream 2 pipeline MORE

Roizman has been known to be an outspoken critic of the government, using Twitter to denounce Russian authorities. 

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Roizman, who served as mayor of Yekaterinburg for five years, resigned from his position in 2018 after authorities moved to scrap mayoral elections in the city of 1.5 million in the industrial belt of the Ural Mountains. 

Police in the country have stepped up their crackdowns on protesters calling for the release of Navalny, who has been imprisoned since February. Police have detained thousands of pro-Navalny protesters in 2021. 

Roizman also will serve 30 hours of community service, according to Reuters. 

Study: Early unemployment cutoff would cost 16M people $100B

Cutting off federal emergency unemployment benefits ahead of their September expiration date would prevent some $100 billion from flowing to 16 million people, according to a study by the left-leaning Century Foundation.

The study comes as Republicans push to scale back the policy, which they argue is responsible for labor shortages.

The study found that among the 12 states that have already announced an early end to additional benefits, 895,000 workers would lose a collective $4.7 billion.

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“These derelictions of responsibility are an affront to workers in these states,” the study’s author Andrew Stettner wrote. “Workers were right to believe that they would receive these benefits through September 6, but now they’ve been denied this federal aid.”

Unemployed workers are eligible for federal programs giving them an additional $300 in weekly benefits, as well as programs that extend benefits for those who have been collecting benefits for a prolonged period of time and offer benefits to populations that are normally not eligible, such as gig economy workers, freelancers or the self-employed.

While so far the cuts have only been announced by a handful of states led by GOP governors, many of which have unemployment figures below the national average, GOP senators on Thursday called for revoking the additional federal benefits.

“Enhanced unemployment benefits are creating an incentive for not going back to work until they expire,” Sen. Marco RubioMarco Antonio RubioStudy: Early unemployment cutoff would cost 16M people 0B The Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by Facebook – Cheney poised to be ousted; Biden to host big meeting Senate votes to repeal OCC ‘true lender’ rule MORE (R-Fla.) said, citing complaints from small businesses having trouble hiring workers.

“I think it’s important for us to acknowledge that we have a labor crisis, that a government program has exacerbated it,” he added.

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Sen. Roger MarshallRoger W. MarshallStudy: Early unemployment cutoff would cost 16M people 0B Republicans introduce bill to counter PRO Act on joint employer standard Tennessee cuts off 0 federal unemployment supplement MORE (R-Kan.) acknowledged the role that lack of child care and mismatched skills can play in keeping people unemployed, but called on his state’s Democratic Governor Laura Kelly to cut the emergency benefits early.

Iowa Sen. Joni ErnstJoni Kay ErnstOvernight Defense: Military sexual assault reform bill has votes to pass in Senate l First active duty service member arrested over Jan. 6 riot l Israeli troops attack Gaza Strip Study: Early unemployment cutoff would cost 16M people 0B Masks shed at White House; McConnell: ‘Free at last’ MORE (R) said that taking away the federal benefit would level the playing field for businesses that operate across state lines, but also said the decision should be left to the states.

“This should be a state issue, but there are many governors that aren’t doing the right thing by those businesses,” she said.

Democrats have blasted the moves to curtail benefits, saying they would pull the rug out from millions of unemployed people struggling through the end of the pandemic.

They argue that federal data does not support the idea of widespread labor shortages, despite plenty of anecdotal evidence. The labor market, they add, is not expected to fully recover until 2022 or even 2023.

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Sen. Bernie SandersBernie SandersStudy: Early unemployment cutoff would cost 16M people 0B Machine Gun Kelly reveals how Bernie Sanders aided him in his relationship with Megan Fox Overnight Health Care: CDC approves Pfizer vaccine for adolescents aged 12-15 | House moderates signal concerns with Pelosi drug pricing bill | Panel blasts COVID-19 response MORE (I-Vt.) on Thursday requested that Labor Secretary Marty WalshMarty WalshStudy: Early unemployment cutoff would cost 16M people 0B On The Money: Biden says workers can’t turn down job and get benefits | Treasury launches state and local aid | Businesses jump into vax push Former AFL-CIO official tapped to lead Labor Department division MORE take action to block GOP governors from pulling back the additional benefits.

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“It is critical that the Department of Labor does everything in its power to ensure that jobless Americans continue to receive this aid as the law intended,” he wrote.

While it remains unclear whether the Labor Department has the authority to push through the benefits, the Labor Department said it was doing its utmost to keep a safety net in place.

“Secretary Walsh and the Biden Administration have been doing all they can to take concrete action to prevent anyone from falling through the cracks as we know unemployment benefits have served as a vital lifeline for workers throughout the pandemic – to help them buy food, pay rent and remain healthy,” Labor Department spokesperson Egan Reich told The Hill.

Judge dismisses Twitter's lawsuit against Texas attorney general

A federal judge in California on Tuesday dismissed a lawsuit brought by Twitter that had sought to block Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s (R) office from allegedly retaliating against the company for its decision to ban former President TrumpDonald TrumpKinzinger, Gaetz get in back-and-forth on Twitter over Cheney vote READ: Liz Cheney’s speech on the House floor Cheney in defiant floor speech: Trump on ‘crusade to undermine our democracy’ MORE from the platform.

In a 7-page ruling, the judge said Twitter’s lawsuit was premature because Paxton has not sought to enforce his January records request related to the company’s content moderation policies.

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“The court finds Twitter’s lawsuit is premature, and, as such, is subject to dismissal,” wrote U.S. District Judge Maxine Chesney, a Clinton appointee.

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Twitter banned Trump’s account days after his supporters mounted a deadly insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, with the company saying that his posts threatened to incite more violence. The Jan. 6 attack had been fueled in part by Trump’s repeated false assertions on social media that the 2020 election had been stolen.

A study by Zignal Labs showed that misinformation related to false election fraud claims fell by 73 percent after Trump and several others were suspended from Twitter and other mainstream social media platforms.

A week after Trump was banned, Paxton issued Twitter a request for information on its “practices regarding what can be posted on its platform,” citing concerns that the social media giant’s policies might run afoul of Texas’ consumer protection laws.

Twitter then sued Paxton in early March, asking the court to block his request. The company alleged that the investigation was issued as a retaliatory measure for its suspension of Trump’s account and said it threatened to chill Twitter’s free speech rights.

In dismissing Twitter’s suit, Chesney found that Paxton lacked the authority to impose sanctions on Twitter if it failed to comply with his records request.

Missouri abandons voter-approved Medicaid expansion

Less than a year after Missouri voters approved a constitutional amendment expanding Medicaid coverage, Gov. Mike Parson (R) said Thursday he will drop plans to implement the expansion after legislators refused to provide funding.

Parson sent a letter to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services formally withdrawing plans to expand MO HealthNet, the state’s Medicaid program. He said the legislature’s refusal to fund the expansion threatened the entire program’s fiscal solvency.

“Although I was never in support of MO HealthNet expansion, I always said that I would uphold the ballot amendment if it passed. The majority of Missouri voters supported it, and we included funds for the expansion in our budget proposal,” Parson said in a statement. “However, without a revenue source or funding authority from the General Assembly, we are unable to proceed with the expansion at this time.”

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Voters approved the amendment to the state constitution, which would have expanded Medicaid eligibility to those whose income was under 138 percent of the federal poverty level under the Affordable Care Act, by a 53 percent to 47 percent margin in August.

But a Missouri court ruled in June that because the measure did not have a funding mechanism, it would be up to the General Assembly to dedicate a funding stream. Parson included a $1.9 billion funding request in his budget proposal earlier this year.

The legislature voted against allocating that funding last month after a pitched battle among state Senate Republicans, who were divided over the expansion.

Supporters of the expansion say the state has no choice but to broaden access and that they intend to take the matter to court.

“Missouri’s constitution is crystal clear: Medicaid expansion must begin on July 1,” said Jonathan Schleifer, executive director of The Fairness Project, a group that backed the amendment. “Gov. Parson’s announcement today that he intends to ignore the will of Missouri’s voters and violate the state constitution makes this a matter for Missouri’s courts to resolve. We have every confidence that litigation will result in Medicaid expansion beginning on time for the 275,000 Missourians who will be eligible for healthcare.”

Thirty-eight states and the District of Columbia have expanded Medicare under the Affordable Care Act, a decade after its passage. Oklahoma voters passed a ballot measure to expand Medicare in 2020, and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services approved their proposal in December.

Supporters of Medicaid expansion are also seeking to put the question on the ballot in Florida, one of the 12 states that has not adopted the broader eligibility standards. Those backers are trying to qualify for the ballot in 2022.

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NFL accused of 'systemic racism' in handling Black ex-players' brain injuries

The NFL is coming under growing pressure from critics who say its landmark concussion settlement treats ex-players differently based on race, making it more difficult for Black retirees to get payouts.

Critics argue the settlement amounts to a form of systemic racism because it uses race-based criteria for neuropsychologists to assess whether Black and white former players have valid dementia-related claims stemming from their professional football careers.

The concept of using different statistical curves based on race, known as “race-norming,” is inherently controversial. It is also the subject of a lawsuit by two ex-players, Kevin Henry, a lineman for eight seasons in the NFL, and Najeh Davenport, a running back for seven seasons, who sued the league last year for race discrimination.

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Attorney Christopher Seeger, who negotiated the settlement on behalf of roughly 20,000 ex-players in the class-action suit, now also faces mounting criticism. 

A petition signed online by more than 50,000 people will be presented on Friday to U.S. District Judge Anita Brody, who presided over the settlement. It asks that Brody, who chose Seeger as lead counsel for the class of NFL retirees, select a new attorney to represent the former players, about 70 percent of whom are Black.

“This is classic systemic racism,” said former NFL player Ken Jenkins, who will deliver the petition with his wife, Amy Lewis. Both are advocates for Black NFL retirees, though Jenkins is not a party to any individual lawsuits and is not suffering from head injuries due to his playing career.

“Just because I’m Black, I wasn’t born with fewer brain cells,” Jenkins said.

Neither Henry nor Davenport, who are both Black, have had their brain injury claims accepted by the NFL. Each suffered multiple concussions across their careers and say they still feel the repercussions, with symptoms ranging from memory loss and depression to overall cognitive impairment affecting their daily lives. 

Their lawsuit claims that in Henry’s case, an NFL-approved clinician initially found that he qualified for mild to moderate dementia, but his claim was nonetheless denied. A second clinician, after adjusting his raw scores using a “full demographic model … which includes age, education, race/ethnicity and gender,” found he did not qualify as impaired under the settlement. 

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For his part, Henry, 52, said he feels like a different person now as a result of the multiple concussions he sustained over his career with the Pittsburgh Steelers.

“I had more friends. I was more social. I could carry on a conversation without repeating where I was in the conversation. I could find my way around the city better. I could drive without having accidents. Those kinds of things have all changed,” he told The Hill. “I’m more of a reclusive person now.”

Henry said it’s painful to watch the NFL portray itself as a social justice ally while denying him compensation for what he and his wife, Pamela, say is clear impairment. 

“They come out with all these slogans like ‘We care’ and ‘Black Lives Matter,’” Henry said. “And I’m sitting there, like, you’re lying. You’re lying out of your teeth. It’s so painful to sit there and watch, knowing that you know something totally different.”

Brody, who was appointed to the federal bench by former President George H.W. Bush, dismissed the Henry and Davenport suit in March, though they have since appealed. She said the players’ lawsuit was an improper attack on the court-approved settlement deal reached by the NFL and Seeger.

But in her ruling Brody also said she “remains concerned about the race-norming issue” and ordered the NFL and Seeger to address the matter.

The issue is also getting some attention in Washington. Sen. Ron WydenRonald (Ron) Lee WydenGOP governors move to cut unemployment benefits as debate rages over effects Senate Finance Committee to consider clean energy legislation this month Hillicon Valley: Global cybersecurity leaders say they feel unprepared for attack | Senate Commerce Committee advances Biden’s FTC nominee Lina Khan | Senate panel approves bill that would invest billions in tech MORE (D-Ore.), the chairman of the powerful Senate Finance Committee, wants to see the NFL eliminate the use of racial criteria for assessing brain injury claims.

“He is committed not only to ensuring the NFL stops using the race-based formula going forward,” Wyden aide Keith Chu told The Hill, “but also to ensuring any player previously denied benefits, or who chose not to apply because of the formula, is notified and given the opportunity to retest in order to get the benefits they deserve.”

The estimated $1 billion 2015 court-approved settlement has paid around $800 million in claims so far. Amounts range from around $27,000 up to $5.3 million, depending on a retiree’s age and degree of impairment. 

In a statement to The Hill this week, Seeger defended race-norming, saying it had been used for decades. But he added that he is continuing to investigate whether former players have “been disadvantaged in any way by the application of race norms.”

“Moving forward, we are focused on eliminating the use of demographic norms that adjust for race, and putting into place purely race-neutral demographic norms,” he said.

The NFL said there is “no merit” to charges of racial discrimination in the payouts and downplayed the role that race-norming has had in assessing ex-players’ impairment levels.  

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Brian McCarthy, a spokesman for the NFL, said “the number of players potentially affected by the use of race-based normative adjustments is a fraction of what has been alleged.” But he did not respond when asked to substantiate that claim with data showing a breakdown of settlement awards by race. 

Like Seeger, McCarthy also defended the current form of testing, while expressing an openness to finding race-neutral alternatives.

“The NFL nevertheless is committed to helping find alternative testing techniques that will lead to diagnostic accuracy without employing race-based norms,” he said. “As requested by the Court, the NFL is working with Class Counsel, and the parties’ respective medical experts, under the guidance of the federal magistrate judge, to that end. We understand that the Court intends to solicit the views of interested parties as part of the process.”    

The norms are essentially estimates of how an average person with a healthy brain would score on various thinking and memory tests, and the estimated score is lower for Black people than whites. 

Without pre-NFL test scores for retirees, race norms are used as a kind of gap-filler. The approach assumes that if Black and white players had taken the exact same cognitive test before the start of their NFL careers, Black players would have scored significantly lower. And this lower baseline, in turn, makes it harder for Black ex-players than whites to demonstrate that playing football caused a significant reduction in brain functioning. 

The race-specific norms used by the NFL, known as the “Heaton norms,” after its lead researcher, come from a 2004 study that found that a sample of African Americans performed significantly worse on a battery of cognitive tests than their white counterparts.

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The league argues that race-norming helps to avoid false dementia diagnoses in healthy ex-players.

“Race-based, demographic adjustments were specifically designed by neuropsychologists to correct for the fact that certain racial groups — even when matched on other demographic factors — were consistently obtaining disproportionately low scores on cognitive testing and were being incorrectly classified as cognitively impaired at unacceptable rates,” the NFL told Wyden and other lawmakers last year in response to a letter.  

But Philip Gasquoine, a neuropsychology professor at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, said he believes the method amounts to systemic racism. Although the practice is used in the field of neuropsychology, he argued, it should be scrapped.

“There’s a lot more interest in the term ‘systemic racism’ now than it was 20 years ago,” Gasquoine told The Hill. “That’s hard to define, but I think race norms probably does fall within that definition.”

He said there’s no question that the system makes it harder for Black players to qualify for settlement money, since if a Black former player gets “exactly the same score on the test as the white player, because it was estimated that the pre-existing score was lower, they’ve got less chance of being diagnosed with dementia, and so they don’t get the compensation.”

Robert Heaton, a professor at the University of California, San Diego’s School of Medicine, in an interview with The Hill defended the evaluation method he devised.

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“The science supports it, as a general practice,” he said. “If the naysayers think NFL players are different, cognitively, than people in the general population, they should show the data that supports that belief.”

Yet critics note that the benchmarks used by the NFL for Black and white players are based on the overall U.S. population, not the universe of ex-NFL players, almost all of whom attended college.

Katherine Possin, a professor at the University of California, San Francisco, in a JAMA article described the use of race-norming as “reminiscent of a damaging, century-long history of assuming that differences on intelligence tests are primarily inherited, and then using this false assumption to legitimize unequal distribution of resources by social class.”

Federal law bans the use of race norms in certain situations, like calculating test scores for would-be employees, but it continues to be used in neuropsychology despite controversy.

The NFL and Seeger, the lawyer for the class of retired players, have said race-norming is not mandatory under the settlement. They claim that whether or not to use the racial criteria is left to the discretion of clinicians.

But that assertion is at odds with other accounts. 

Daniel Kantor, the president emeritus of the Florida Society of Neurology, in an interview with The Hill said the use of the norms “was not discretionary” when he conducted brain injury assessments from 2017 through 2019 as part of the NFL’s concussion settlement. 

“If I got a report from a neuropsychologist that did not use the ‘Heaton factors,’ it would be questioned then invalidated, based on not using them. This was not voluntary,” he said.

Private emails between neuropsychologists involved in the NFL’s cognitive assessment program that were revealed in an ABC News investigation also showed that some clinicians believed they were required to use the race-norming. 

That investigation also provided some hints as to the impact of race-norming. An analysis by one neuropsychologist, acting at the request of a lawyer involved in a lawsuit against the NFL, found that around three times more Black former players would have qualified for compensation if race norms were removed.

As talks go on, former players and their families continue to struggle, says Jenkins, the former player-turned-advocate, and wife Amy Lewis. Jenkins, who retired from the NFL in 1986 after a four-year career, is not seeking compensation from the league, though many of their friends’ attempts have been unsuccessful, the couple said.

“I know three women whose husbands have died in the interim, and they got nothing,” Lewis said. “There are so many of our friends who are deeply suffering.”

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