Booster collectives will be able to continue paying college athletes, but with restrictions, after an agreement between the plaintiff’s attorneys in the House vs. NCAA settlement and the new Collegiate Sports Commission.
New guidance from the CSC went out to schools Thursday, July 31, replacing a July 10 memo that raised alarms with House attorneys Jeffrey Kessler and Steve Berman and would have essentially put collectives out of business. Dozens of collectives had been lining up to file a class-action suit against the CSC and the power conferences had the original guidance gone into effect.
The CSC was created to enforce terms of the settlement and the $20.5 million revenue-sharing cap and has been given the authority to nix deals that don’t fall within certain parameters.
At issue in this case was whether the NIL deals being offered by collectives met the CSC’s threshold of a valid business purpose. The CSC’s original guidance focused on whether the deal came from an entity whose business purpose was “providing goods or services to the general public for provide.” The vast majority of collectives, whose primary function before the House settlement was simply to raise money to pay college athletes, did not meet that standard.
The new guidance will not focus on the entity offering the deal, but whether the deal itself meets the standard of delivering the public a good or service for profit. In other words, a paid autograph signing organized by the collective would theoretically be approved as long as it falls within the standard compensation range for such events as determined by Deloitte, the firm hired by CSC to run its online NIL clearinghouse.
As outlined in the House settlement, athletes whose deals get turned down can either rework the deal or appeal and enter an arbitration process.
“The College Sports Commission will enforce the settlement as written,” CEO Bryan Seeley said in a statement. “Pay-for-play will not be permitted, and every NIL deal done with a student-athlete must be a legitimate NIL deal, not pay-for-play in disguise.”
The net effect is that collectives will still have a role in paying college athletes beyond the revenue sharing cap, a reality the power conferences hoped to eliminate with the settlement, but will not be able to spend unaccountably as they did before. And, for now at least, the CSC will avoid a significant legal challenge although others are expected in the future around issues like Title IX and the allowable range of compensation for certain activities.
A joint statement Thursday from the House plaintiffs and the power conferences confirmed that “in evaluating such payments, the settlement’s requirements focus on substance, not labels. Nothing in the Settlement prohibits an Associated Entity or Individual, including collectives, from making NIL payments to student-athletes, as long as such NIL payments have a valid business purpose related to offering goods or services to the general public for profit and fall within the range of fair market value compensation, as defined by the settlement.”
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: College Sports Commission to allow NIL college payments with scrutiny