Minor leaguers have been sent out an authorization card from the MLBPA to allow the player's union to act as their collective bargaining representative, MLBPA executive director Tony Clark confirmed Sunday night.
The move marks a monumental step for minor leaguers, who have been unable to collectively bargain for things such as their payment, housing and name, image and likeness.
Clark said that player's union is moving forward because they heard from enough minor leaguers about the desire for union representation.
"Over the course of the last few weeks and really over the course of the last couple years has been a buildup of players offering their voices and their concerns with Advocates for Minor Leaguers continuing to echo and aggregate those voices in a way that have gotten us to this point," Clark told ESPN.