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California Lawmakers Pass Bill Allowing College Athletes To Profit From Endorsements – Deadspin, Deadspin.com

California Lawmakers Pass Bill Allowing College Athletes To Profit From Endorsements – Deadspin, Deadspin.com


Illustration for article titled California Lawmakers Pass Bill Allowing College Athletes To Profit From Endorsements

Photo: Harry How (Getty Images)

The California State Assembly on Monday passed a bill that would allow college athletes to sign endorsement deals. SB 206, the Fair Pay To Play Act, cleared the Assembly by a vote of 72 – 0. A version of the bill passed the Senate by a similarly decisive vote in May.

The bill, if it becomes law, would go into effect January 1, 2023. Though none of the bill’s provisions involve schools paying athletes directly, it would prohibit schools in California from revoking scholarships or scholarship eligibility from athletes who profit off their own name, image and likeness.

The bill’s high-profile backers include LeBron James andmulti-sportAthleteBernie Sanders.

The chambers will next need to reconcile differences in their versions of the bill; a vote to do so could come as early as Tuesday,says SB 206 sponsor Sen. Nancy Skinner. The Assembly’s version included amendments addressing potential conflicts between individual athlete deals and school deals, such as existing apparel contracts.

Then, the legislation will head to the desk of Gov. Gavin Newsom, who will have 30 days to sign it. Whether that will happen remains unclear. The numbers here – 72 – 0 passage in the Assembly and 31 – 5 in the Senate — would seem enough to override any veto, but those are rare in California. Per the state’s tradition of legislative servility to mousy governors, the legislature has not overridden a gubernatorial veto since 1979.

It’s also likely Newsom will be lobbied heavily by the NCAA and the state’s public school systems, large private colleges and athletic conference officials.

“We’re firmly against anything that would lead to a pay-for-play system,” Pac – 12 Commissioner Larry Scotttold theNew York Times.

In a (June letter) , NCAA President Mark Emmert had urged California lawmakers to postpone consideration of the bill while an NCAA working group study of amateurism policies is ongoin g.

In theletter, Emmert suggested that colleges in California could be prohibited from competing for NCAA championships, because the bill might give those schools unfair advantages in recruiting athletes:

We recognize all of the efforts that have been undertaken to develop this bill in the context of complex issues related to the current collegiate model that have been the subject of litigation and much national debate. Nonetheless, when contrasted with current NCAA rules, as drafted the bill threatens to alter materially the principles of intercollegiate athletics and create local differences that would make it impossible to host fair national championships. As a result, it would likely have a negative impact on the exact student-athletes it indents to assist.

Emmertreportedly makesnearly $ 4 million per year.


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