Will College Athletes Finally Succeed in Legally Obtaining the Right to Earn a Wage?

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The NCAA is facing a new lawsuit; another attempt to get wages for hard working college athletes. The suit was filed by former Villanova football player, Trey Johnson, and alleges that college athletes should be categorized as employees and receive pay similar to students in approved work-study programs on college campuses.

Johnson filed the wage and hour class action lawsuit in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania federal court. In addition to the NCAA, Johnson listed 22 Division I universities as defendants. Currently playing in the Canadian Football League, Johnson asks for unpaid wages for the time he spent playing football for Villanova.

According to the lawsuit, the plaintiff believes that all athletes should receive pay regardless of which sport they play. Plaintiff’s counsel claims that the NCAA could accomplish this task by next fall if they buckled down and got to it simply by including the athletes in the same pool as the work-study students.

Trey Johnson’s lawsuit is the latest in a string of suits and challenges to the NCAA’s long-held practice preventing student athletes from making any money. The NCAA’s board of governors did recently announce that there are plans to modify the rule restricting athletes from accepting endorsement deals. This proposed change followed the passing of a California law making it illegal for California colleges to prohibit endorsement deals (effective 2023). The moves being made by NCAA administrators are an attempt to relieve pressure from both the federal and state level while still defending the NCAA against civil lawsuits that claim current practices violate antitrust laws.

Johnson claims every athlete for the college is an employee of the school and that as employees they deserve an hourly wage for their “work.” He also argues that the hourly wage offered should be equal or comparable to peers/other students involved in work-study programs who are performing other work on campus like stocking books in library shelves, or selling concessions at events, etc. This would typically mean a rate of $10-15/hour.

If you need to talk to someone about wage and hour law or if you need to file a wage and hour lawsuit, get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in any one of various law firm offices located in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.