| activities |
added |
-
- date
- 2006-06-15
- body
- EP
- type
- Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
- committees
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- True
- committee
- CULT
- date
- 2006-02-13
- committee_full
- Culture and Education
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PPE-DE
- name
- BELET Ivo
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- ECON
- date
- 2006-04-03
- committee_full
- Economic and Monetary Affairs
- rapporteur
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- EMPL
- date
- 2006-02-01
- committee_full
- Employment and Social Affairs
- rapporteur
-
- group
- Verts/ALE
- name
- BENNAHMIAS Jean-Luc
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- IMCO
- date
- 2006-09-04
- committee_full
- Internal Market and Consumer Protection
- rapporteur
-
- group
- ALDE
- name
- MANDERS Toine
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- JURI
- date
- 2006-05-30
- committee_full
- Legal Affairs
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PSE
- name
- BERGER Maria
-
- date
- 2006-09-20
- docs
-
- url
- http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE378.708
- type
- Committee draft report
- title
- PE378.708
- body
- EP
- type
- Committee draft report
-
- date
- 2007-01-29
- text
The committee adopted the own-initiative
report drawn up by Ivo BELET (EPP-ED, BE) on the future of
professional football in Europe. The report looked at a number of
areas such as governance in the football sector, the social,
cultural and educational role of football, employment and social
issues, the fight against racism and competition law.
The committee stressed "its attachment to the
European Football Model, with its symbiotic relationship between
amateur and professional football". The Commission was urged to
establish an action plan for European sport in general and football
in particular. The committee noted that, although the EU has no
specific legislative powers in this area, the EC Treaty contains a
wide array of instruments which could be employed under the action
plan.
MEPs wanted to see improved governance in the
football sector, and called on all football governing bodies
to "better define and coordinate their competences,
responsibilities, functions and decision-making procedures in order
to increase their democracy, transparency and legitimacy, for the
benefit of the entire football sector". The committee also backed
the UEFA club licensing system aimed at ensuring a level
playing-field between clubs and contributing to their financial
stability, and urged UEFA to further develop this system in
order to guarantee financial transparency and proper
management.
Among its other recommendations, the report
called for the creation of an independent supervisory body to
monitor the financial and commercial activities of European clubs
and to enforce their compliance with the criteria on financial
transparency and proper management. It also called on the Council
to develop measures for the fight against "the criminal
activities that haunt professional football", including money
laundering, illegal betting, doping, match fixing and enforced
prostitution on the sidelines of major football events. The Member
States were urged to promote cooperation between clubs, the police
and supporters' organisations with a view to combating violence and
hooliganism. And the Commission, the Member States and all those
involved in professional football were asked "to accept..... their
responsibility for continuing and intensifying the fight against
racism and xenophobia by condemning all forms of racism inside and
outside the stadium".
MEPs also backed the UEFA "home-grown players"
initiative aimed at promoting young local talent, while
nevertheless stressing that additional arrangements are necessary
to ensure that this initiative does not lead to child trafficking,
with some clubs giving contracts to very young children (below 16
years of age). They also insisted that immigration law must always
be respected when recruiting young foreign talent and that young
players must be given the opportunity for a general education and
vocational training in parallel with their club and training
activity, so that they do not entirely depend on the clubs. The
Commission was also asked to support the fight against child labour
in football-related industries.
The committee wanted the Commission to draw up
clear guidelines on State aid rules, indicating what kind of public
support is acceptable and legitimate in order to fulfil the social,
cultural and educational role played by football, and to reflect on
the consequences of a possible liberalisation of the betting market
and on mechanisms to secure the financing of football. Lastly, it
called for a policy aimed at at preventing and combating doping,
including a pledge by professional clubs to monitor compliance
through internal checks, and urged the Commission to set up an
independent doping control body.
- body
- EP
- committees
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- True
- committee
- CULT
- date
- 2006-02-13
- committee_full
- Culture and Education
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PPE-DE
- name
- BELET Ivo
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- ECON
- date
- 2006-04-03
- committee_full
- Economic and Monetary Affairs
- rapporteur
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- EMPL
- date
- 2006-02-01
- committee_full
- Employment and Social Affairs
- rapporteur
-
- group
- Verts/ALE
- name
- BENNAHMIAS Jean-Luc
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- IMCO
- date
- 2006-09-04
- committee_full
- Internal Market and Consumer Protection
- rapporteur
-
- group
- ALDE
- name
- MANDERS Toine
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- JURI
- date
- 2006-05-30
- committee_full
- Legal Affairs
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PSE
- name
- BERGER Maria
- type
- Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
-
- date
- 2007-02-13
- docs
-
- url
- http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A6-2007-0036&language=EN
- type
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
- title
- A6-0036/2007
- body
- type
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
-
- date
- 2007-02-13
- docs
-
- url
- http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A6-2007-0036&language=EN
- type
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
- title
- A6-0036/2007
- body
- EP
- type
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
-
- date
- 2007-03-28
- body
- EP
- type
- Debate in Parliament
-
- date
- 2007-03-29
- docs
-
- url
- http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P6-TA-2007-0100
- text
The European Parliament adopted a resolution based on
the own-initiative report drafted by Ivo BELET (EPP-ED, BE)
on the future of professional football in Europe, and stressed its
attachment to the European Football Model, with its symbiotic
relationship between amateur and professional football. The the
European Football Model was characterised by open sports
competitions within a pyramid structure in which several hundred
thousand amateur clubs and millions of volunteers and players form
the base for the top professional clubs. Parliament felt that it
was the result of longstanding democratic tradition and grass-roots
support in the community. The greater professionalisation and
commercialisation of sport in general and football in particular
has made EC law much more relevant in this area, a fact reflected
in the growing number of cases pending before the Court of Justice
and the Commission. This has increased legal uncertainty, which was
not only problematic in economic terms, but also in terms of the
social, cultural and educational functions of football. Parliament
also felt that professional football was threatened by the growing
concentration of economic wealth and sports power. Despite the fact
that the Bosman ruling in 1995 had a positive effect on
players' contracts and players' mobility, there were several
negative consequences for the sport. These included an increased
ability on the part of the richest clubs to sign up the best
players, a stronger link between financial power and sporting
success, an inflationary spiral in players' salaries, reduced
opportunities for locally-trained players to express their talent
at the highest level and reduced solidarity between professional
and amateur sport.
- General context: Parliament considered that the economic aspects of
professional sport fell within the scope of the EC Treaty. It asked
the Commission to start a consultation process with the aim of
setting up a formal framework agreement between the EU and the
European and national football governing bodies. The Commission
should establish an action plan for European sport in general and
football in particular which sets out the issues for the Commission
to deal with and the instruments to be used in order to enhance
legal certainty and a level playing-field.
- Governance: Parliament
called on all football governing bodies better to define and
coordinate their competences, responsibilities, functions and
decision-making procedures. The Commission should provide
guidance on which legitimate self-regulation is supported.
Parliament took the view that applying to the civil courts, even
when not justified in sports terms, cannot be penalised by
disciplinary regulations, and it condemned the arbitrary decisions
by the Federation of International Football Association (FIFA) in
this respect. It went on to state that clubs should release their
players for national team duty without entitlement to compensation,
and encouraged UEFA and FIFA, together with the European
clubs and leagues, to reach an agreement on the conditions
applicable to players who are injured while representing their
countries and on a system of collective insurance being put into
place. Parliament supported the UEFA club licensing system, which
aims at ensuring a level playing-field between clubs and
contributing to their financial stability. The social and
democratic role of football is important, and Parliament called on
Member States and football governing bodies to promote the role of
fans through the creation of Supporters Trusts, which could be
involved in the ownership and management of the clubs, and through
the appointment of a football ombudsman.
- Fight against criminal activities: Parliament supported the efforts of governing bodies
to introduce greater transparency in the ownership structures of
clubs and asked the Council to adopt measures for the fight against
the criminal activities that haunt professional football. These
include money laundering, illegal betting, doping and match fixing,
and enforced prostitution on the sidelines of major football
events. Furthermore, the Council must implement its Decision
2002/348/JHA concerning security in connection with football
matches with an international dimension and if necessary,
approve additional measures following recent violent incidents
in and outside football stadiums. (Please see
CNS/2006/0806.)
- Social, cultural and educational role of
football: Parliament felt that
additional arrangements were necessary to ensure that the
home-grown players initiative, which it supported, did not lead to
child trafficking, with some clubs giving contracts to very young
children (below 16 years of age). Immigration law must always be
respected in relation to the recruitment of young foreign talent.
Parliament asked the Commission to tackle the problem of child
trafficking, and pointed out that young players must be given the
opportunity for a general education and vocational training in
parallel with their club and training activity, so that they do not
depend entirely on the clubs. There must be action to prevent the
social exclusion of young people who are ultimately not selected.
Parliament made some recommendations on the fight against human
trafficking, including the notion that clubs should subscribe and
the creation of a Solidarity Fund that would finance prevention
programmes in countries most affected by human
trafficking.
- Employment and social issues: the current economic reality surrounding players'
agents required that football governing bodies at all levels, in
consultation with the Commission, must improve the rules governing
players' agents. The Commission should consider a proposal for a
directive concerning players' agents which would include: strict
standards and examination criteria before anyone could operate as a
football players' agent; transparency in agents' transactions;
minimum harmonised standards for agents' contracts; an efficient
monitoring and disciplinary system by the European governing
bodies; the introduction of an "agents' licensing system" and
agents' register; and ending "dual representation" and payment of
agents by the player.
- Fight against racism: all those involved in professional football must
accept their responsibility for intensifying the fight against
racism and xenophobia by condemning all forms of discrimination
inside and outside the stadium. Parliament asked for stricter
sanctions against any kind of discriminatory acts in football. UEFA
and the national associations and leagues must apply disciplinary
rules, without neglecting the financial situation of
clubs.
- Competition law and the internal market:
Parliament asked the Commission to draw up clear
guidelines on the application of the State aid rules, indicating
what kind of public support is acceptable and legitimate in order
to fulfil the social, cultural and educational role played by
football, such as financial or other support granted by public
authorities for the provision or updating of football stadiums or
facilities. Parliament also asked the Commission to reflect on the
consequences of a possible liberalisation of the betting market and
on mechanisms to secure the financing of sport in general and
football in particular.
- Selling of television rights and competition
law: collective selling in all
competitions was fundamental to protecting the financial solidarity
model of European football. Parliament welcomed further
investigation by the Commission into whether this model should be
adopted across Europe for both pan-European and domestic
competitions, as suggested by the Independent Sport Review 2006.
The Commission was asked to provide an evaluation of the economic
and sports impact of its relevant media rights decisions and the
extent to which they have or have not worked. Football broadcasts
should be accessible to the widest possible range of people
including through free-to-air channels. It was vital for
professional football that the revenues from television rights be
distributed in a fair way that ensured solidarity between the
professional and amateur games, and between competing clubs in all
competitions. The current distribution of television revenues in
the UEFA Champions League to a significant degree reflects the size
of the clubs' national television markets. Parliament noted that
this favours big countries, thereby diminishing the power of clubs
from smaller countries. It invited UEFA together with the
Commission to create a more competitive balance in this field by
increased redistribution.
- Doping: the fight
against doping should constitute an important concern. Parliament
stressed the need to fight irregularities through checks, research,
testing, monitoring by independent doctors and through education.
Professional clubs were asked to adopt a pledge to combat doping
and to monitor compliance through internal checks.
- type
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
- title
- T6-0100/2007
-
- url
- http://www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=13277&l=en
- type
- Results of vote in Parliament
- title
- Results of vote in Parliament
- body
- EP
- type
- Text adopted by Parliament, single reading
-
- date
- 2007-03-29
- docs
-
- type
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary
- title
- SP(2007)1901/2
-
- url
- http://www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/spdoc.do?i=13277&j=1&l=en
- type
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary
- title
- SP(2007)2329
- body
- EC
- commission
-
- DG
- Education and Culture
- Commissioner
- FIGEĽ Ján
- type
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary
|
| committees |
added |
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- True
- committee
- CULT
- date
- 2006-02-13
- committee_full
- Culture and Education
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PPE-DE
- name
- BELET Ivo
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- ECON
- date
- 2006-04-03
- committee_full
- Economic and Monetary Affairs
- rapporteur
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- EMPL
- date
- 2006-02-01
- committee_full
- Employment and Social Affairs
- rapporteur
-
- group
- Verts/ALE
- name
- BENNAHMIAS Jean-Luc
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- IMCO
- date
- 2006-09-04
- committee_full
- Internal Market and Consumer Protection
- rapporteur
-
- group
- ALDE
- name
- MANDERS Toine
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- JURI
- date
- 2006-05-30
- committee_full
- Legal Affairs
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PSE
- name
- BERGER Maria
|
| other |
added |
-
- body
- EC
- dg
- Education and Culture
- commissioner
- FIGEĽ Ján
|
| procedure |
added |
- dossier_of_the_committee
- CULT/6/37565
- reference
- 2006/2130(INI)
- title
- The future of professional football in Europe
- legal_basis
- Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 048
- stage_reached
- Procedure completed
- subtype
- Initiative
- type
- INI - Own-initiative procedure
- subject
|