A new bill moving through the Wisconsin state legislature has set off a fierce debate about transparency and the future of college sports in the state.
Assembly Bill 1034 and its companion, Senate Bill 1075, would let the University of Wisconsin System pay college athletes for their Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL), bringing state law in line with the House v. NCAA settlement.
The University of Wisconsin (UW) is pushing hard for the legislation, saying it’s necessary to keep its athletic programs competitive.
But transparency advocates aren’t convinced, warning that it could create a broad exemption for financial records tied to university athletics and raise some pretty serious accountability concerns.
Background and Purpose of the Bill
Assembly Bill 1034 passed the lower chamber by a 95-1 vote, and the Senate version, SB 1075, is moving along too.
Here’s what they’re trying to do:
- Alignment with House v. NCAA Settlement: The bills would give the University of Wisconsin System the right to pay college athletes for their NIL.
- Increased State Funding: The legislation would bump up state funding to cover debt service for maintaining certain athletic facilities at UW, UW-Milwaukee, and UW-Green Bay.
- Revenue-Sharing Agreements: It would clarify that athletes signing revenue-sharing deals with private schools like Marquette aren’t considered employees of those schools.
While the bill’s goal is to help Wisconsin’s athletic programs stay competitive, it also tries to carve out an exemption in the state’s open records law for documents about NIL or revenue-sharing agreements involving athletes and universities.
Transparency Concerns
Critics say the bill’s language is just too broad and could hide a lot of what goes on financially in university athletics.
The Wisconsin Newspaper Association warns the provision could create a sweeping exemption for any financial record connected to a public university’s athletic program.
If lawmakers really want to protect sensitive NIL agreements, critics argue, they should write the bill more narrowly.
Public Records Exemption
As it stands, the bill would exempt all university records related to the generation, deployment, or allocation of revenue from an athletic program if there are reasonable efforts to keep them secret for competitive reasons.
This broad language has transparency advocates worried it could be used to hide a ton of financial records from public view.
Support from the University of Wisconsin
The University of Wisconsin is all-in on the bill, saying it’s crucial for keeping its athletic programs in the game during a time of chaos in college sports.
Nancy Lynch, UW’s vice chancellor for legal affairs, testified that the broad exemption is needed to protect NIL-related documents going forward.
She said the legislation is just codifying what’s already happening: denying access to student-athlete NIL agreements and certain records about NIL strategy, revenue, and spending.
University’s Stance on Disclosure Practices
A university spokesperson said UW won’t change its disclosure practices for other financial records it’s released in the past.
Still, that hasn’t really eased the minds of transparency advocates who worry this could set a bad precedent.
Comparisons with Other States
This legislation could set a new national example for hiding financial records tied to university athletics.
Colorado’s NIL law, for instance, only exempts records about a student athlete’s or prospective student athlete’s name, image or likeness, or any communication or material related.
Arizona’s law makes confidential all information collected by a post-secondary education institution relating to a student athlete’s contract to receive compensation for the use of the student athlete’s own NIL.
In South Carolina, lawmakers are looking at a bill that would exempt any information about college athlete NIL or revenue-sharing deals, including the total amounts public universities spend on athlete pay.
Potential National Impact
Let’s be honest—NIL laws tend to spread fast, and if Wisconsin passes this, other states might jump on board in a kind of quiet arms race to attract athletic talent.
Public universities have already used NIL as a reason to cut back on transparency, and this bill could push that even further.
For more detailed information, you can read the full article on Sportico.
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