Porterville Recorder

State bill calls for revenue sharing in college sports

- By BETH HARRIS and RALPH D. RUSSO

PASADENA, Calif. — A California lawmaker introduced a bill Thursday that would require schools that play major college sports to pay some athletes as much as $25,000 annually, along with covering the cost of six-year guaranteed athletic scholarshi­ps and post-college medical expenses.

The College Athlete Protection Act is sponsored by Assemblyme­mber Chris Holden, who is a former San Diego State basketball player, and is the type of statelevel legislatio­n that the NCAA is looking to federal lawmakers to preempt.

“I know how close you can come to an injury taking away not only the game you love to play but also your opportunit­y to finish college,” Holden said at a news conference outside the historic Rose Bowl stadium.

California was the first state to pass a law that gave college athletes the right to be compensate­d for name, image and likeness back in 2019. That triggered similar action by state legislatur­es around the country.

Holden is eager for the state to be at the forefront again.

“I’m not prepared to wait for Congress to address this pressing issue,” he said, standing in front of a bronze statue of Jackie Robinson, who was a multi-sport star at UCLA. “This is an extremely competitiv­e and comprehens­ive bill that I believe will provide the income and health services that our college athletes deserve.”

The NCAA lifted its ban on athletes cashing in on their fame with sponsorshi­p and endorsemen­t deals, but more than two dozen state-level NIL laws have made it impossible for the associatio­n to create detailed and uniform rules of its own.

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