WNBA player complains chartered planes are too small: 'We are grateful, but there's still work to be done'



WNBA player Sophie Cunningham explained in an interview that her team's chartered flights have been too small to fit all the team's bags and personnel.

The Phoenix Mercury guard is the latest player to take issue with not being given what she feels are adequate flying accommodations in wake of superstar player Caitlin Clark stealing the majority of the spotlight.

Cunningham spoke to the media following a recent practice and explained that while she was grateful for a charter flight, other teams have bigger planes so they can fit all their bags.

"We are so grateful to be able to start chartering, but with that, there's a lot of things that need to be adjusted," Cunningham began.

"Our bags and some of our people can't fly with us because our charter is too small. While other teams get big planes. We want to talk about competitive advantage. Well, that's one right there. That our team has to be split up and our bags don't even get to travel with us. So, social media makes everything sound so great."

"Butterflies and rainbows now that we got the charters, but half the teams don't have the proper charter to fly with your whole team. So, we are grateful, but there's still work to be done," the video, posted by Sirius XM host Nick Hamilton, concluded.

'Practicing gratitude & patience as the league introduces charter flights for all teams.'

— (@)

Chicago Sky rookie Angel Reese also took to the internet to display her lack of satisfaction over not having a luxury private jet. Seemingly forgetting that the WNBA is subsidized by the NBA, Reese posted a photo with text that said, "Just praying that this is one of the last commercial flights the Chicago Sky has to fly ..."

Then below, the masked player wrote "practicing gratitude & patience as the league introduces charter flights for all teams."

— (@)

Clark was pictured earlier that day on a luxury private flight as the player appears unable to escape undue criticisms. Much of this has manifested in accusations of racism against the popular player, who clearly has garnered the most attention for the league since it has existed.

Recently, Las Vegas Aces player A'ja Wilson complained that Clark was popular because she is white and that black women are overlooked for endorsement deals.

Soon thereafter, Wilson would sign endorsement deals with Nike and Gatorade.

Just days after that, the entire Las Vegas Aces team was awarded $100,000 each by the city of Las Vegas for no reason other than playing in that city.

— (@)

Meanwhile, Clark has helped raise ticket prices wherever she has played, and her debut regular season game saw the highest viewership for the league in 23 years.

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Many companies dropping vaccine mandate: 'The rationale ... had become weak'



Many global companies have quietly ended the vaccine mandates they once imposed on their employees and future hires.

According to a report from Axios, Goldman Sachs announced late last month that no employee, except those working in New York City, will be subject to a vaccine mandate as a precondition of their continued or future employment. That policy went into effect earlier this week.

And compared to other companies, Goldman Sachs is relatively late to the game. The international sports and footwear giant Adidas, based in Germany, dropped its vaccine mandates for all employees back in early February.

"Though no longer required, we strongly encourage all employees to be vaccinated against COVID-19," an Adidas spokesperson stated in an email at the time. The email also noted that all U.S. employees still had to report their vaccination status to the company.

Adidas followed in the footsteps of Starbucks and Intel, which had both already abandoned their vaccine mandates. Cisco and JPMorgan Chase also changed their vaccine mandate policies this summer.

Business and public health leaders have offered several reasons for the dramatic about-face on vaccine mandates.

Jeff Levin-Scherz, a population health leader at Willis Towers Watson, an investment and risk management company based out of Texas, believes that these companies "decided that the rationale for [mandates] had become weak enough that they don’t want to continue."

Because testing and treatment for the COVID virus has progressed so well, vaccines could no longer reasonably be claimed as the only line of defense against further spread.

Others believe that company leaders desperately want employees to return to in-person work, and they see the mandates as a potential barrier to that goal.

According to Axios, Erin Grau of Charter, a media and services company which claims to give "people the tactical playbook for what work can and should be," said that vaccine mandates are expensive and time-consuming for current employees and potentially off-putting for new hires.

In addition to those companies which have reconsidered their vaccine mandates, there are several companies facing lawsuits because of the mandates. The Indianapolis Business Journal reports that several area businesses — including Eli Lilly and Co., Roche Diagnostics, and Ascension St. Vincent, which are all affiliated with the medical industry — have been sued by former and/or current employees who were either forced to take the vaccine against their religious objections or were fired for refusing it. All three companies continue to impose the vaccine mandate, but have not required a booster.

Even the Biden administration has begun to temper its rhetoric on vaccines. It recently issued companies a list of recommendations for combatting COVID this fall and did not include vaccines among them.

Meanwhile, many other major corporations — including Google, Tyson Foods, United Airlines, and Facebook — have kept their vaccine mandates in place.

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