Stern accuses players of bad-faith bargaining
NEW YORK – The NBA labor talks took on a poisonous tone Monday, with  each side lobbing rhetoric about the other not being willing to  negotiate. The coup de grace came shortly before 6 p.m., from  commissioner David Stern. 
Standing in a midtown hotel lobby  after a nearly three-hour farce of a bargaining session – the first  between the two sides since owners imposed a lockout on July 1 – Stern  fielded one last question in a terse and decidedly glum media session.  After saying, “I don’t feel optimistic about the players’ willingness to  engage in a serious way,” Stern was asked if he believes the players  are bargaining in good faith, or not. 
The grim-faced commissioner thought about it for several seconds and said, “I would say not. Thank you.” 
And  with those comments, Stern’s most direct public assault on the players  during the more than two years of bargaining, the NBA lockout took its  next step toward all-out legal warfare. 
The National Basketball  Players Association already has filed a charge with the National Labor  Relations Board alleging, among other things, that the owners have  failed to bargain in good faith. The players’ hope is that this charge  will result in a formal complaint from the NLRB, and then, an injunction  from a federal judge reinstating the terms of the previous collective  bargaining agreement. Short of decertification by the union, this would  be the quickest path for the players to legally pressure the owners to  back down from their demands of massive salary cuts as a cure for $300  million annual losses by the league. 
With Stern firing back  Monday that it’s the players who are not bargaining in good faith, he  set the stage for a possible counter-charge by the league with the NLRB  on the subject of good-faith bargaining. Such a legal strategy, which  league officials would not confirm Monday as being on the table, could  blunt the impact of the players’ charge and – more importantly – drag  the lockout precariously into territory where it would be impossible to  save all of the 2011-12 season. 
As a point of reference, the NFL  owners filed a similar charge with the NLRB in February, and that  sport’s lockout ended before the board even finished investigating it.  NBPA attorney Larry Katz has said he is hopeful that the NLRB will rule  on the union’s complaint in the next 30-60 days. Training camps are  supposed to open in about 60 days. 
“I think it’s fair to say  that we’re in the same place as we were 30 days ago,” Stern said. “And  we agreed we’d be in touch to schedule some additional meetings.” 
Asked  why that would be necessary, given the lack of progress, Stern said,  “There’s always a reason for more meetings because that’s the only way  you’ll ultimately get to a deal, at the negotiating table. You never  know, but right now we haven’t seen any movement.” 
Earlier, NBPA president 
Derek Fisher  accused Stern, deputy commissioner Adam Silver and the owners present  Monday – San Antonio’s Peter Holt and Minnesota’s Glen Taylor – of  saying one thing in the negotiating sessions and publicly and delivering  quite another message by refusing to alter their proposal. 
“I  think Peter and Glen Taylor, Mr. Stern, Adam Silver are articulating  certain things in the room, expressing their desire to get a deal done,”  Fisher said. “But where their proposal lies makes it hard to believe  that.” 
Informed of Fisher’s comments, which echo the NLRB charge  about failing to bargain in good faith, stern said, “He’s entitled to  draw his own conclusion. We have absolutely the opposite take on it.” 
While  Fisher expressed optimism about “restarting this process,” Stern was  asked what may have occurred Monday that gave him encouragement. 
“Nothing,” he said. 
The  two sides agree on one thing, if nothing else: They’ll attempt to  schedule at least one bargaining session in the next couple of weeks,  with the ultimate goal of engaging in talks for consecutive days before  Sept. 1. At that point, the league will be entering what essentially is a  two-week window when it must begin contemplating the postponement of  training camps and the cancelation of preseason games. 
http://ken-berger.blogs.cbssports.com/mcc/blogs/entry/11838893/31036764