Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Emmert urges schools to act on NIL

President is seeking permission for athletes to earn, collect money

- By Ralph D. Russo

NCAA President Mark Emmert told the organizati­on’s more than 1,100 member schools Friday that he will seek temporary rules as early as July to ensure all athletes can be compensate­d for their celebrity with a host of state laws looming and congressio­nal efforts seemingly stalled.

In a memo obtained by the Associated Press, Emmert urged members to pass legislatio­n that would make it permissibl­e for the first time for college athletes to earn money off their names, images and likenesses.

All three divisions of NCAA athletics have been working toward reforming NIL rules and lifting restrictio­ns on athletes since 2019.

“Since that time, many states have enacted NIL legislatio­n and 10 state laws can take effect this July. It is therefore essential we now enact rules before the end of the month,” Emmert wrote in an email sent to presidents and chancellor­s, athletic directors, senior compliance administra­tors, conference commission­ers and others.

The NCAA Division I Council meets Tuesday and Wednesday and could act on an NIL proposal that was expected to be voted on back in January.

Instead, Emmert encouraged membership at that time to put the vote on hold after an the Justice Department notified the NCAA that it’s proposed rule changes could violate antitrust law.

Since spring, Emmert has encouraged membership to move forward on NIL reform and has said he was confident new rules would be in place before the start of next football season.

Six states have NIL laws set to go into effect July 1 that will permit college athletes to be paid for endorsemen­ts, personal appearance­s

and social media posts, setting up the possibilit­y of patchwork rules from coast to coast for thousands of athletes.

“By July, all our athletes should be provided NIL opportunit­ies regardless of the state they happen to live in,” Emmert wrote in the memo.

The NCAA has asked Congress for help in the form of a federal NIL law that would set uniform standards and preempt state laws. But it appears nothing will get done in Washington before the August recess.

Emmert wrote that if NCAA rules changes are not in place by July, he will take action.

“I have directed my staff to create proposals to this end. We will provide more details next week as this approach is reviewed by the NCAA Board of Governors and the divisional governance bodies,” he wrote.

The NCAA’s plan is to allow athletes to be paid by third parties. The schools would not be involved in the transactio­ns.

The NCAA does want to place some limitation­s around NIL rights and to be able to monitor athletes’ deals to prevent payments from being used as recruiting inducement­s.

Athlete advocates want unfettered access to the free market, though even state laws soon to be in effect in Alabama, Florida, Mississipp­i, Georgia, New Mexico and Texas place some limitation­s on how athletes can earn money off their fame.

In Washington, there is consensus among lawmakers there should be a federal law guaranteei­ng college athletes the ability to make money from NIL. But leading Democrats would like to extend their reach into other areas of college sports such as regulating long-term health care and education opportunit­ies for athletes. Republican­s want to focus on a more narrow NIL bill.

Both parties have questioned whether the NCAA and Emmert have the ability to successful­ly lead and govern college sports.

“This is an important moment for college sports and particular­ly for our athletes,” Emmert said. “We must act to ensure that fair opportunit­ies, consistent with our values, are provided to all studentath­letes.”

Also hanging over the NCAA is a pending Supreme Court ruling on a case involving restrictio­ns on athlete compensati­on. The so-called Alston case is not about NIL payments, but some college sports leaders are concerned that the high court’s decision could have a wide-ranging impact on the NCAA’s model of amateurism.

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 ?? MATT YORK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? NCAA President Mark Emmert told the organizati­on’s more than 1,200member schools Friday that he will seek temporary rules to ensure all athletes can be compensate­d for their celebrity with a host of state laws looming and congressio­nal efforts seemingly stalled.
MATT YORK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE NCAA President Mark Emmert told the organizati­on’s more than 1,200member schools Friday that he will seek temporary rules to ensure all athletes can be compensate­d for their celebrity with a host of state laws looming and congressio­nal efforts seemingly stalled.

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