Yuma Sun

Majority of US adults are against college athletes joining unions, according to AP-NORC survey

- BY RALPH D. RUSSO AND LINLEY SANDERS

As Dartmouth men’s basketball players move toward forming the first labor union in college sports, a majority of Americans say they are against college athletes unionizing – though younger respondent­s are more supportive.

A new poll from The Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found that most adults, 55%, believe NCAA athletes should not be permitted to form unions that would allow them as employees to collective­ly bargain with their schools.

But younger Americans, Democrats and Independen­ts are more open to unionizati­on. About 6 in 10 adults under the age of 45 support allowing college athletes to form unions. That drops to 36% among those between the ages of 45-59 and 23% of adults ages 60 and older.

Across party lines, 56% of Democrats and about half of Independen­ts say athletes should be permitted to form unions. Only 23% of Republican­s are supportive.

In a recent interview with Fox News, Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama, a former major college football coach and a harsh critic of unions in general, said athletes unionizing would “absolutely kill college sports.”

“You know, the last time I looked, they’re not employees. These students are student-athletes. And if you want the federal government involved and ruin something, you try to make the student-athletes employees,” said Tuberville, who has sponsored a college sports bill that would block employee status.

NCAA President Charlie Baker and other college sports leaders have been lobbying Congress for several years, asking for a federal law to regulate the way athletes can be compensate­d for use of their names, images and likenesses.

Tuberville and Democrat Joe Manchin of West Virginia have sponsored one of several bills addressing NIL and other college sports reforms that have been put forth in both the House and Senate over the past four years. None have gotten any traction, with lawmakers focused on more pressing matters.

More recently, the emphasis from college sports leaders has shifted to NCAA antitrust protection­s that would prevent athletes from being deemed employees, thanks to looming lawsuits.

Baker and others contend the vast majority of the 1,100 NCAA member schools could not afford to treat their athletes as employees and would sponsor fewer teams if athletes were categorize­d this way.

According to the APNORC poll, 55% of nonwhite adults support college athletes being permitted to form unions. Only 34% of white adults say that unions should be permitted for college athletes.

“This country is not based on unions, but when unions got started, it secured everybody’s position in whatever their profession was, so to speak, especially the blue collars,” said 62-year-old Eric Mcwilliams, a Black man from Pennsylvan­ia who’s been a part of a union and participat­ed in the poll. “These college athletes aren’t making millions of dollars like the pros are. They have nothing really to fall back on. If they get injured, it’s over.”

Last month, a regional director of the National Labor Relations Board ruled Dartmouth’s men’s basketball players qualified for employee status, paving the way for team members to vote if they it wanted to join a union.

On March 5, the players voted 13-2 to join Service Employees Internatio­nal Union Local 560, which already represents some Dartmouth workers. The school has asked for a review – essentiall­y appealing the regional director’s initial ruling – which could result in a lengthy process to determine if Dartmouth will ever be required to negotiate with the players.

Still, it was a significan­t milestone for those who have been advocating for some – if not all – college athletes to be recognized as employees and receive a greater share of the revenue that college football and basketball generate for schools and conference­s that compete at the highest levels.

The media and marketing rights for the NCAA men’s Division I basketball tournament, which begins next week, generated $945 million in revenue for the associatio­n and its member schools last year.

“Now it’s time for the colleges to stop wasting their time and money fighting athletes in court and lobbying Congress to roll back athletes’ rights, and instead start negotiatin­g with athletes on revenue-sharing, health and safety protection­s, and more,” Sen. Chris Murphy (D-conn.) said.

The survey found 53% of U.S. adults say colleges and universiti­es with major athletic programs should provide athletes with a share of any revenue received from broadcast rights. However, less than half support giving athletes additional spending money, a salary or exemptions from certain academic courses that they need to graduate.

“I think that really the credit towards progress has always gone to athletes,” said Ramogi Huma, the executive director of the advocacy group the National College Players Associatio­n, which has pushed for college athletes in revenue-generating programs to be deemed employees. “This is brick by brick by brick.”

Huma helped organize a labor movement among Northweste­rn football players in 2015 that started similarly to the one at Dartmouth, with a regional NLRB director ruling the players could vote to join a union. The initial ruling was eventually dismissed.

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC VIA AP ?? IN THIS MARCH 18, 2015, FILE PHOTO, the NCAA logo is displayed at center court at
The Consol Energy Center in Pittsburgh.
KEITH SRAKOCIC VIA AP IN THIS MARCH 18, 2015, FILE PHOTO, the NCAA logo is displayed at center court at The Consol Energy Center in Pittsburgh.

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