The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

DeWine OKs pay for college athletes

- By Farnoush Amiri and Andrew Welsh-Huggins

COLUMBUS >> Ohio became the 18th state June 28 to allow college athletes to earn money off their name, image and likeness after a GOP attempt to add a transgende­r sports ban to the bill forced the governor to issue an executive order.

Republican Gov. Mike DeWine, surrounded by university presidents and ex-Ohio State University quarterbac­k Cardale Jones, signed an executive order that would bring Ohio up to speed with more than a dozen other states who now prevent universiti­es or college athletic conference­s from punishing athletes if they are compensate­d based on their sports performanc­e.

“For Ohio to be competitiv­e, we need to get this now,” DeWine said. “We need to let everyone know that Ohio is in the game. Ohio is going to stay in the game.”

About half of those states — including Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississipp­i and Texas — will have their laws go into effect July 1. Ohio State University football coach Ryan Day lobbied heavily for the change, saying Ohio schools would be at a recruiting disadvanta­ge without it.

State Sen. Niraj Antani, a suburban Dayton Republican, pushed this legislatio­n through the Senate and onto the House floor June 24, where Republican lawmakers attached an amendment to the bipartisan bill targeting transgende­r female athletes.

The proposal, titled the Save Women’s Sports Act, would require schools and higher education institutio­ns in the state to designate “separate single-sex teams and sports for each sex.”

In a rare Statehouse outburst, Democratic lawmakers pounded their desks and stood up in opposition as the bill’s sponsor, GOP state Rep. Jena Powell, introduced the amendment.

Supporters, like Powell, say the measures are necessary to maintain fairness and protect the integrity in women’s sports in Ohio, though lawmakers have yet to point to a single instance where this has been an issue in the state.

DeWine immediatel­y criticized the ban on transgende­r girls.

His executive order is a way to work around the Legislatur­e to ensure the athletic compensati­on issue takes place without getting tied up in the politics of the transgende­r ban.

Despite that, Antani said he would work to get his version of the bill through by the July 1 deadline

to make sure Ohio is competitiv­e with the other big college sports states that will be competing from the same athletic pool of candidates.

Such compensati­on could involve anything from a book-signing at a bookstore to a deal with a local restaurant. Exceptions include sponsorshi­ps for marijuana, alcohol, tobacco and casinos, which are not permitted under the bill, Antani said.

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 ?? FARNOUSH AMIRI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former Ohio State University quarterbac­k Cardale Jones.
FARNOUSH AMIRI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Ohio State University quarterbac­k Cardale Jones.

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