How Female Athletes Can Help Advance the Fight for Fair Pay
Time|April 3,2017

THE WOMEN ON THE U.S. NATIONAL hockey team can recall even the smaller slights as vividly as a high stick to the face.

Sean Gregory
How Female Athletes Can Help Advance the Fight for Fair Pay

There was the time the players weren’t invited to the public unveiling of the Team USA jerseys for the 2014 Winter Olympics; the inside collar of those jerseys commemorated men’s Olympic champions but not the 1998 gold-medal-winning women’s team. But it’s a much deeper disrespect—how much the women make for doing the same job as their male counterparts—that has turned the hockey rink into the latest battleground in the nation’s ongoing fight over equality in the workplace.

In March, the team announced plans to boycott the world championship—which the U.S. is hosting in Plymouth, Mich., beginning on March 31—unless the players get fairer compensation and increased support. In the past they’ve received $1,000 per month from USA Hockey—and only in the six months before the Olympics. Many players hold second and even third jobs to make ends meet—a situation that has some of the world’s most talented players questioning their careers.

This story is from the April 3,2017 edition of Time.

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This story is from the April 3,2017 edition of Time.

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