Current:Home > NewsCollege athletes will need school approval for NIL deals under bill passed by Utah Legislature -CapitalCourse
College athletes will need school approval for NIL deals under bill passed by Utah Legislature
View
Date:2025-04-15 15:49:34
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — College athletes in Utah who are looking to profit off their name, image and likeness will have to seek written approval from their schools for any business deal exceeding $600 under a bill that received final legislative approval on Friday.
The policy giving Utah universities more control over student-athletes’ marketing partnerships, known as NIL deals, passed by a 21-7 vote in the state Senate on the final day of the 2024 legislative session after the House approved it last month with little opposition. It now heads to the desk of Republican Gov. Spencer Cox, who said on Friday that he supports the bill.
Under the measure, universities will be required to provide written acknowledgment on whether an NIL deal conflicts with the school’s policies or the standards outlined in the bill.
Starting May 1, student-athletes will be prohibited from promoting alcohol, marijuana, controlled substances or tobacco products such as e-cigarettes and vapes. Gambling and sports-betting are off-limits too, as are “sexually oriented” businesses that pay employees for full or partial nudity. Athletes cannot promote any firearm that they cannot legally possess.
Before this year, Utah stayed on the sidelines while more 30 states passed legislation regulating NIL deals in light of a 2021 decision by the National Collegiate Athletics Association to lift its ban on student-athletes cashing in on their celebrity. Several of those states have since clashed in court with the NCAA over who has the authority to regulate those deals.
Rep. Jordan Teuscher, a South Jordan Republican and the bill’s primary sponsor, said it’s time for Utah lawmakers to jump into legislating what he called “the wild, wild West” of student-athlete endorsements.
While the policy brings Utah in line with an NCAA requirement that athletes inform their schools of large NIL deals, it goes a step beyond by requiring schools to sign off on those agreements. Opponents have argued that because NIL deals are between the student and a third party, neither the university nor the state should have a say in them.
The high value of some local NIL deals came into view in December 2023 when University of Utah basketball players and gymnasts began pulling up to class in flashy new Jeeps and RAM trucks that sell for over $40,000. The students had been offered leased vehicles through an NIL deal with a company called the Crimson Collective.
Henrie Walton, an administrator at Utah Tech University who addressed the Legislature on behalf of the state’s universities, said the institutions are “comfortable” with the bill.
Teuscher’s Senate co-sponsor, Republican Sen. Chris Wilson of Logan, said Friday before the vote that a provision making NIL deals no longer a matter of public record would protect Utah schools’ ability to compete in recruiting. As a business owner who has negotiated many NIL contracts, Wilson said entities may be less inclined to enter into such contracts if they are public.
The governor agreed, telling reporters Friday night that he hates what NIL deals have done to college sports but sees a need to help Utah schools stay competitive in that changing landscape.
“Since NIL is kind of the law of college sports now, we have to be able to participate in that,” Cox said. “Our colleges and universities ... have to be able to play in that same sandbox, and we’re at a big competitive disadvantage if other states aren’t required to release the terms of those contracts.”
But critics of the bill say the public records exemption would undercut transparency and regulatory efforts. The legislation would undo a ruling by the State Records Committee that said NIL contracts become public records once they’re shared with a university.
“If government is going to get in the business of regulating these private agreements, the public has an interest in making sure that they’re performing that regulatory function,” said Jeff Hunt of the Utah Media Coalition, a consortium of news outlets.
Another opponent, Sen. Kathleen Riebe, a Cottonwood Heights Democrat who voted against the measure on Friday, has expressed reluctance to restrict student-athletes’ ability to benefit from their achievements after state universities have profited off them for years.
Earlier Friday, NCAA President Charlie Baker said the organization’s board told its enforcement staff to halt all investigations into booster-backed collectives or other third parties making NIL deals with Division I athletes. The move comes a week after the NCAA lost another legal battle in which a federal judge in Tennessee temporarily barred it from enforcing a rule prohibiting third parties from paying recruits to attend a particular school.
New NCAA policies approved in January encourage athletes to report all NIL deals so the organization can build its own database, which it says will improve transparency while helping students make informed decisions.
The NCAA, which represents some 1,100 schools and more than 500,000 athletes, also wants to compile a registry of agents and companies that work with student-athletes to better protect them from predatory business practices.
veryGood! (13145)
Related
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- Chrishell Stause and Marie-Lou Nurk's Feud Continues in Selling Sunset Season 7 Reunion Trailer
- Shania Twain Speaks Out After Very Scary Tour Bus Crash
- Moody’s lowers US credit outlook, though keeps triple-A rating
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Is it OK to say 'Happy Veterans Day'? Veterans share best way to honor them
- Hershey unveils Reese’s Caramel Big Cup, combines classic peanut butter cup with caramel
- Polish nationalists hold Independence Day march in Warsaw after voters reject their worldview
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Sam Bankman-Fried is guilty, and the industry he helped build wants to move on
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Medical debt can damage your credit score. Here's what to know.
- Industrial robot crushes worker to death as he checks whether it was working properly
- Is C.J. Stroud's early NFL success a surprise? Not if you know anything about his past.
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Classes on celebrities like Taylor Swift and Rick Ross are engaging a new generation of law students
- Lyrics can be used as evidence during rapper Young Thug's trial on gang and racketeering charges, judge rules
- Suspected Islamic extremists holding about 30 ethnic Dogon men hostage after bus raid, leader says
Recommendation
Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
Ranking all 32 NFL teams from most to least entertaining: Who's fun at midseason?
Myanmar military court sentences general ousted from ruling council to 5 years for corruption
Remains of infant found at Massachusetts recycling center for second time this year
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
Trump joins media outlets in pushing for his federal election interference case to be televised
U.S. arm of China mega-lender ICBC hit by ransomware attack
Ranking all 32 NFL teams from most to least entertaining: Who's fun at midseason?