• Loading stock data...
Saturday, September 7, 2024
Last Chance for Tuned In Tickets!

Why a College Athletes’ Rights Group Is Setting Employee Status Aside

  • On Monday, the College Football Players Association endorsed a collective bargaining model in which athletes remain amateurs.
  • It could be a quicker path for athletes to receive more rights, protections, and revenue, the organization says.
Dec 2, 2023; Atlanta, GA, USA; Georgia Bulldogs wide receiver Marcus Rosemy-Jacksaint (1) reacts in the second half against the Alabama Crimson Tide at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports

One college athlete advocacy group is proposing a solution to reforming college sports that doesn’t include employee status.

The College Football Players Association said athletes could gain the rights to collectively bargain without being deemed employees under federal labor laws. The group, which counts current and former players in its membership and leadership roles, announced its position in an email newsletter and press release Monday. 

Executive director Jason Stahl was adamant that the CFBPA is not opposed to players becoming professionals. But the organization thinks it may be a more palatable solution to the debate over athletes receiving more compensation and power in the NCAA structure. The CFBPA suggests that collective bargaining without employee status could be adopted more quickly than an employment model, and that it could provide athletes the same protections and benefits.

“We do think that there has been such a dominance in the conversation around the employee model that it has ground things to a halt in a way that is not productive,” Stahl tells Front Office Sports.

Significantly, it’s possible that this model could help college athletes earn more money than they could as employees, Stahl says. Conversations surrounding revenue-sharing, and specifically settlements in the House v. NCAA case over the definition of name, image, and likeness rights, could set up a system in which players could share a pool of millions of dollars, rather than hourly minimum wage. Stahl also believes that crucial issues like increased medical care, oversight on health and safety, and more power in NCAA governance, can be achieved without employee status.

There’s little precedent for this type of concept, however, outside of a 2012 paper by prominent labor lawyer Michael LeRoy, which Stahl cited in his newsletter as a jumping-off point.

For the past several years, the college sports industry has been embroiled in a debate over whether athletes should become employees. Major insiders, from championship football coaches to the NCAA president, believe that players, especially in high-revenue sports, deserve a bigger cut of revenue—and perhaps even the ability to collectively bargain. But the NCAA has fought hard against an employment model, spending millions of dollars in court and in Congress to protect its model of amateurism.

Stahl says most of the players he speaks with are, in many cases, unwilling to or uninterested in going up against the NCAA to become employees. For one, recent cases against the NCAA, like Dartmouth and USC, are tied up at the National Labor Relations Board and could take years to reach a final decision. Additionally, athletes are also concerned about making “a direct challenge” to their own programs, coaches, and conferences in many cases, Stahl says. “Athletes that we have been talking to do not have the appetite for something like that.” 

The announcement doesn’t mean the players are completely against being professionals, Stahl says. He thinks more research and polling is needed about what players want, and that in many cases, players don’t have an opinion one way or another. (There’s also evidence athletes are uninformed—or even misinformed—about the pros and cons of employment, thanks to the talking points fed to them through the NCAA.) The CFBPA fully supports anyone who does want to pursue employment status, like the players on the Dartmouth men’s basketball team. “We’re trying to only do what college athletes want us to do,” Stahl says.

For the model to become a reality, Congress would likely have to pass some sort of law that gives college athletes a special status under U.S. labor law, given that collective bargaining rights are not currently granted to amateurs. 

The CFBPA has had conversations with lawmakers already, and will continue advocating for the idea on Capitol Hill this week. “I think it is striking the way in which people [in Congress] are like, ‘I want to hear more about this,’” he says, noting that that interest is coming from “both sides of the aisle.” Ahead of the general election in November, the question of whether college athletes should be employees—and be able to unionize—has become extremely partisan, as lawmakers see it as an extension of the ideological differences between Democrats and Republicans on labor rights issues. A compromise seems much more likely.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Notre Dame Paid Northern Illinois $1.4M and Lost

NIU went home with $1.4 million and its biggest win in school history.

Chiefs-Ravens Is Most-Watched NFL Kickoff Game Ever

The game peaked at 33 million viewers in the second quarter.

Federal Appeals Court Sides With Lane Kiffin, Ole Miss in Discrimination Suit

A three-judge panel upheld a February decision to dismiss a player’s lawsuit.
Tennis Channel

Sinclair Fires Tennis Channel CEO Over Work With Dr. Phil

It’s a major executive shake-up in the closing days of the US Open.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

Drew Brees, Dexter Lawrence Talk NFL Changes

0:00

Featured Today

Northwestern’s Tiny Temporary Football Stadium Is Making Big Money

Despite 35,000 fewer fans in seats, Northwestern is bringing in more revenue.
Aug 25, 2024; Denver, Colorado, USA; Detailed view of a Denver Broncos snapping the football in the second half against the Arizona Cardinals at Empower Field at Mile High.
September 3, 2024

How NFL Streaming Will Work With Coverage Across Four Exclusive Platforms

Each week will feature at least one game exclusively on a streaming service.
Aug 25, 2024; Landover, Maryland, USA; A detailed view of New England Patriots footballs on the field before the game against the Washington Commanders at Commanders Field.
opinion
September 1, 2024

The NFL Let the Private Equity ‘Barbarians’ Through the Gate

Fans will barely see any change from the arrival of PE money.
PBR at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York
August 26, 2024

Pro Rodeo Is Pushing to Capitalize on America’s Western Culture Obsession

PBR hopes the cowboy-loving zeitgeist will propel explosive growth.
Sep 2, 2024; Tallahassee, Florida, USA; Florida State Seminoles linebacker Justin Cryer (28) reacts during the fourth quarter against the Boston College Eagles at Doak S. Campbell Stadium.

Federal Judge ‘Concerned’ with House v. NCAA Settlement Proposal

Lawyers now have three weeks to submit an amended settlement proposal.
? speaks during a press conference celebrating the 25 year anniversary of the NCAA moving its national office to Indianapolis on Tuesday, Aug. 13, 2024, at the NCAA Headquarters in Indianapolis.
September 5, 2024

Federal Judge to Hear Arguments Over Athlete Pay Settlement Proposal

During a potentially landmark hearing Thursday, a federal judge will hear arguments.
September 5, 2024

Big 12 Commissioner: Talks to Add UConn to Conference ‘Paused’

The Big 12 schools ultimately convinced Yormark to halt conversations, a source tells FOS.
Sponsored

Untold Team

Behind each major athlete are those who contribute to their success. This is the Untold Team.
Apr 13, 2023; Fort Worth, TX, USA; UCLA Bruins gymnast Selena Harris performs on beam during the NCAA Women's National Gymnastics Tournament Semifinal at Dickies Arena.
September 4, 2024

Gender Equity at Heart of New California NIL Law

Sen. Nancy Skinner hopes more transparency will benefit women’s sports athletes.
Aug 31, 2024; Pullman, Washington, USA; Washington State Cougars cheerleader celebrate after a touchdown against the Portland State Vikings in the first half at Gesa Field at Martin Stadium.
September 3, 2024

Pac-12, Mountain West Won’t Extend Football Partnership to 2025 Season

The Pac-12 was unwilling to agree to the existing fee structure.
August 31, 2024

NCAA Nixes Oklahoma State Helmet QR Codes

“We disagree with the interpretation of the rule” says OSU.
Oregon State prepares for the upcoming football season during a practice on Wednesday, July 31, 2024 in Corvallis, Ore
August 31, 2024

Everything to Know About ‘Pac-2’ Football This Season

How Oregon State and Washington State are charting a new path.