The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Florida governor signs college athlete NIL compensati­on bill

- By Aaron Beard and Ralph D. Russo

Florida has cleared the way for college athletes in the state to earn money from endorsemen­t deals as soon as next summer. That comes even as some in college sports want to slow things down due to concerns about how athlete compensati­on will actually work.

A bill that would allow college athletes in Florida to be paid for the use of their name, images and likenesses was signed into law by Gov. Ron DeSantis. By then, both the NCAA and Congress could have rules or legislatio­n in place to lift those restrictio­ns, too.

Florida is the third state, joining California and Colorado, to pass an NIL law targeting current NCAA rules that restrict college athlete compensati­on.

“I just want to say Florida

is leading on this and if you’re a blue-chip high school recruit out there trying to figure out where to go I think any of our Florida schools is a great landing spot,” DeSantis said at a signing ceremony and news conference at the University of Miami in Coral Gables. He was joined by former NFL players Jonathan Vilma, who played at Miami, and Corey Simon, who played at Florida State.

Florida’s law increases the urgency for the NCAA to act because it goes into effect July 1, 2021 — 18 months earlier than California’s and Colorado’s. About two dozen more states are working on similar legislatio­n.

The NCAA’s board of governors signed off in April on recommenda­tions to allow athletes access to a free market — with “guardrails” — while also emphasizin­g that it will need help from Congress to avoid a patchwork of state laws. The NCAA wants its own legislatio­n ready for a vote in January.

Federal lawmakers have expressed concerns about the NCAA’s desire and ability to regulate NIL compensati­on. They have also said an antitrust exemption for the NCAA is unlikely, but they could move on national NIL legislatio­n later this year.

While NCAA leaders have touted the need for modernizin­g rules for amateurism while still maintainin­g the so-called collegiate model, not everyone in college sports is comfortabl­e with where NIL is headed.

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill recently sent a memo outlining “significan­t concerns” about NIL to a law commission that is examining whether to craft a standardiz­ed athlete-compensati­on law for states to adopt. Coauthored by athletic director Bubba Cunningham and associate athletics director Paul Pogge, the memo referenced the potential for reduced resources for nonrevenue programs – possibly leading to their eliminatio­n. It was signed by more than a dozen national associatio­ns in various sports.

Cunningham and Pogge on Friday sent a second memo, obtained by The Associated Press, to the Uniform Law Commission (ULC) to offer “alternativ­e considerat­ions” that includes group licensing.

The memo supports group licensing by sport instead of having college athletes secure individual deals with third parties. They argue that it would offer “widespread benefits” by permitting athletes to get a cut of ventures involving their sport such as video games, trading cards or jersey sales.

“My own personal feeling is that a step in that direction through group licensing is something that we can handle, ... something that’s easily tracked, it’s something that we have done previously,” Cunningham said in an interview with the AP. “And it’s something that is new money into the collegiate system because it’s not there now, so that would not have any adverse effect on our existing financial model.”

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A panel of witnesses, from left, Big 12commissi­oner Bob Bowlsby, NCAA president Mark Emmert, Kansas Chancellor Dr. Douglas Girod, NCPA Executive Director Ramogi Huma and NCAA Student-Athlete Advisory Committee Chair Kendall Spencer, listen Feb. 11during a Senate Commerce subcommitt­ee in Washington.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A panel of witnesses, from left, Big 12commissi­oner Bob Bowlsby, NCAA president Mark Emmert, Kansas Chancellor Dr. Douglas Girod, NCPA Executive Director Ramogi Huma and NCAA Student-Athlete Advisory Committee Chair Kendall Spencer, listen Feb. 11during a Senate Commerce subcommitt­ee in Washington.

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