Current:Home > MarketsBiden Administration appears to lean toward college athletes on range of issues with NCAA -FinanceCore
Biden Administration appears to lean toward college athletes on range of issues with NCAA
View
Date:2025-04-16 01:54:45
President Joe Biden on Wednesday participated for about 40 minutes in a roundtable discussion with former college football players about issues surrounding the treatment and benefits college-sports programs provide to their athletes, one of the meeting participants said.
Former Georgia running back Keith Marshall told USA TODAY Sports that the session, which also included a number of White House staffers, lasted for more than an hour. And while he said he came into the meeting wondering whether it was a "PR play," he came away believing the White House "is clearly very interested in being involved in the conversation" about ongoing college sports issues and "how to create a better environment" for college athletes.
"It was just exciting," added Marshall, who is a co-founder of The Players' Lounge, a web platform that provides content from current and former college athletes and seeks to provide them with additional opportunities to make money from their name, image and likeness (NIL).
Marshall said Biden and his staff "didn't get into any federal legislation ... or that you can expect us to do X or Y or Z" but that Biden wants "100 percent" believes that athletes should be able to receive long-term health care for injuries suffered while playing college sports. Marshall also said the conversation covered safety issues, the question of whether athletes should be able to unionize, matters related to athletes' NIL activities and Title IX.
Prior to the meeting, a White House official said the session was “to discuss why college football players - and all student-athletes - deserve consistent safety standards, to have voice, and to benefit from the revenue they produce.
“The student-athletes who play college football work hard on behalf of their schools, their communities, and their families and President Biden believes all workers should be treated fairly and college athletes should be too,” the official said. “All college athletes deserve consistent safety standards, to have voice, and to benefit from the revenue they produce.”
Amid heavy lobbying from officials representing the NCAA, conferences and schools, there are a variety of bills and discussion drafts of bills that have been circulated on Capitol Hill this year regarding college athletes’ NIL activities, as well as issues about health-care benefits, safety and educational opportunities.
The NCAA is eager for a law that would create federal standards concerning athletes NIL activities that would take the place of the current patchwork of state laws. It also wants any Congressional action to prevent college athletes from becoming employees of their schools, and it wants protection from lawsuits challenging changes to its rules.
Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, has offered a proposal that is relatively narrow in its focus on NIL matters. Cruz is the ranking member of the Senate Commerce Committee, which has primary jurisdiction over this issue. But Sen. Maria Cantwell, who chairs the committee said recently she wants any Congressional legislation related to college sports to cover more than issues related to NIL.
Sens. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.; Jerry Moran, R-Kan.; and Cory Booker, D-N.J., have put forward a much wider-ranging idea that, among other things, would establish a set of rules for athletes’ short- and long-term health care, their safety and their educational choice.
Sens. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., and Joe Manchin, D-W. Va., have introduced a bill that attempts to cover those issues, but also would largely prevent athletes from transferring schools for their first three years of eligibility and would provide the NCAA with a measure of legal protection from suits connected to the changes that would be made under their bill.
Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., and Rep. Lori Trahan, D-Mass., have introduced a measure that includes, among other things, a provision allowing athletes from foreign countries to engage in NIL activities while they are in the United States. U.S. student-visa rules regarding work here by foreign students have made it virtually impossible for the thousands of athletes on NCAA teams to have NIL deals the way American athletes can.
Wednesday’s meeting, according to the White House official, was to include National Economic Council Director Lael Brainard and senior advisor and Director of the Office of Public Engagement Steve Benjamin.
In addition to Marshall, the former athletes invited were Andrew Luck, Desmond Howard, Ryan Clark, Rod Gilmore and Jordan Meachum. Howard, Clark and Gilmore have become commentators for ESPN. Meachum is involved with an athlete advocacy group, the College Football Players Association. ESPN anchor Kevin Negandhi also was invited.
There were no female athletes on the list of invitees, which also did not include a current college athlete.
Marshall said White House staff asked about the day-to-day lives of college athletes, and that the former players talked about "amateurism and the reality that it is a farce ... with the sheer volume of revenue going up every year" and college athletes lacking the kind of lobbying advocacy that professional athletes have through their unions.
The Biden Administration’s position on college athletes stated Wednesday is not surprising, given that one of its appointees, National Labor Relations Board General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo, issued a memorandum in September 2021 saying that she views college athletes as employees of their schools under the National Labor Relations Act.
That opinion is being tested, starting this week, as an administrative law judge began proceedings Tuesday in a National Labor Relations Board complaint against the NCAA, the Pac-12 Conference and the University of Southern California that alleges they have unlawfully misclassified college athletes as "student-athletes" rather than employees.
Those proceedings began just days after a federal judge in California granted class-action status in the damages portion of a lawsuit against the NCAA and major-college athletics conferences that could result in a multi-billion-dollar award to former and current college athletes.
The suit challenges the association’s remaining rules regarding athletes’ ability to make money from their names, images and likenesses and seeks damages based on the share of television-rights money and the social media earnings it claims athletes would have received if the NCAA’s previous limits on NIL compensation had not existed.
veryGood! (82)
Related
- Shilo Sanders' bankruptcy case reaches 'impasse' over NIL information for CU star
- Seattle officer won't face felony charges for fatally hitting Jaahnavi Kandula in 2023
- West Virginia House OKs bill to phase out Social Security tax
- Dashiell Soren's Business Core: Alpha Elite Capital (AEC) Business Management
- USA women's basketball live updates at Olympics: Start time vs Nigeria, how to watch
- Oklahoma man hacked government auction site to buy cars for a buck
- Washington lawmakers advance bill making it a felony to threaten election workers
- U.S. Navy petty officer based in Japan charged with espionage
- Organizers cancel Taylor Swift concerts in Vienna over fears of an attack
- Taylor Swift announces new song 'The Albatross' on 'Tortured Poets' album
Ranking
- FBI: California woman brought sword, whip and other weapons into Capitol during Jan. 6 riot
- What’s next after the Alabama ruling that counts IVF embryos as children?
- Bail is set at $4 million for an Ohio woman charged in her 5-year-old foster son’s suffocation death
- Love Is Blind Season 6 Reunion Date Revealed
- Everything Simone Biles did at the Paris Olympics was amplified. She thrived in the spotlight
- Some people are slicing their shoes apart to walk barefoot in public. What's going on?
- How the death of a nonbinary Oklahoma teenager has renewed scrutiny on anti-trans policies
- Hey, guys, wanna know how to diaper a baby or make a ponytail? Try the School for Men
Recommendation
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Divers retrieve 80-pound brass bell from first U.S. Navy destroyer ever sunk by enemy fire
CBP officers seize 6.5 tons of meth in Texas border town bust, largest ever at a port
Trump moves to dismiss classified documents case, claiming immunity and unlawful appointment of special counsel
Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
Dashiell Soren's Business Core: Alpha Elite Capital (AEC) Business Management
Oklahoma man hacked government auction site to buy cars for a buck
Americans have more credit card debt than savings again in 2024. How much do they owe?