Current:Home > InvestCalifornia bill mandating college athletes' welfare withdrawn before vote -ProsperityEdge
California bill mandating college athletes' welfare withdrawn before vote
View
Date:2025-04-16 07:06:29
A bill in the California legislature that would have created wide-ranging changes aimed at mandating and regulating college athletes’ health and welfare was withdrawn by its sponsor Wednesday, the day it was scheduled for a hearing and vote by a state Senate committee.
Because of the legislature’s calendar and legislative deadlines, the action effectively kills the bill for the remainder of a two-year session that finishes at the end of August. In addition, the bill’s sponsor, Assemblyman Chris Holden, D, will reach the state-mandated 12-year limit on lifetime service in the legislature this year.
An even more expansive version of the bill, which included a provision calling for college athletes in the state to receive payments from their schools based on their respective team revenue, schools narrowly passed the Assembly last June. Since then, Holden had dropped a number of elements of that version, including the revenue-sharing component. He announced that adjustment in the wake of the proposed settlement of three college-athlete compensation antitrust suits that would include a $2.8 billion damages pool and give schools the opportunity to pay athletes.
Holden’s chief of staff, Willie Armstrong, did not immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday evening. Ramogi Huma, the executive director of a California-based national college-athlete advocacy group that had been working with Holden on the bill, said in an interview that Holden withdrew the bill after Senate Education Committee chair Josh Newman, D, recommended that the committee reject the measure.
Newman’s communications director, Brian Wheatley, declined to comment on Newman’s position on the bill. He said any recommendation from Newman “is just that.” The committee members are “free to vote how ever they want,” Wheatley said. Wheatley added that “the decision to pull the bill comes from the author’s office.”
“It was surprising that (Newman) recommended a ‘No’ vote,” Huma said. “We were close, but it wasn’t in the cards today. We’ve had bills die in the past. We’ll keep going at it.”
In 2019, California lawmakers and Gov. Gavin Newsom, D, handed athlete advocates one of their most significant legislative victories when they enacted the first law that allowed college athletes to make money from activities connected to their name, image and likeness. This happened at a time when NCAA rules largely prohibited such activity. And it happened under the threat that schools in California would not be allowed to play in NCAA championships and could have trouble scheduling games.
However, instead of isolating California, the law emboldened other states to pass similar laws, in part for competitive reasons.
The NCAA, which had forcefully and publicly opposed Holden’s bill — beginning well before the Assembly floor vote — said it was pleased by Wednesday’s outcome.
“The NCAA and member schools have been working hard to educate lawmakers in California and across the country about the positive changes taking place at the association to address the needs of modern student-athletes,” NCAA senior vice president of external affairs, Tim Buckley, wrote in a text message. “Those changes combined with the landmark settlement proposal is making clear that state by state legislation would be detrimental to college sports, and that many past legislative proposals will create more challenges than they solve.
“Instead the NCAA and member schools are eager to partner with Congress to use the settlement proposal as a roadmap to address specific challenges to ensure college sports will continue to deliver life-changing educational opportunities for millions of young people for generations to come.”
veryGood! (447)
Related
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Big Ten commissioner has nothing but bad options as pressure to punish Michigan mounts
- A Ukrainian missile strike on a shipyard in Crimea damages a Russian ship
- Early returns are in, and NBA's new and colorful in-season tournament is merely meh
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- German airport closed after armed man breaches security with his car
- AP Top 25: USC drops out for first time under Lincoln Riley; Oklahoma State vaults in to No. 15
- Minneapolis police investigating another fire at a mosque
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- How real estate brokerage ruling could impact home buyers and sellers
Ranking
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Jalen Milroe stiff-arms Jayden Daniels' Heisman Trophy bid as No. 8 Alabama rolls past LSU
- Family with Chicago ties flees Gaza, arrives safely in Egypt
- Boy killed in Cincinnati shooting that wounded 5 others, some juveniles, police say
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- 'Wait Wait' for November 4, 2023: With Not My Job guest Dr. Rae Wynn-Grant
- What young athletes can learn from the late Frank Howard – and not Bob Knight
- China Premier Li seeks to bolster his country’s economic outlook at the Shanghai export fair
Recommendation
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Her son ended his life with a gun. Driven to her knees, she found hope.
When Libs of TikTok tweets, threats increasingly follow
Off-duty Los Angeles police officer, passenger killed by suspected drunken driver, authorities say
Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
What’s streaming now: Annette Bening, Jason Aldean, ‘Planet Earth,’ NKOTB and ‘Blue Eye Samurai’
The economy added 150,000 jobs in October as hiring slowed, report shows
Succession star Alan Ruck crashes into Hollywood pizza restaurant