Thursday, May 28, 2026   
 
Hernandez named Miss. State's chief human resources officer
Jason I. Hernandez (who holds an Ed.D. from Vanderbilt University in Education, an MBA from Union University in Jackson, Tennessee, and a B.S. degree in Biology and Social Science from Chapman University in Orange County, California) will succeed Leslie M. Corey, who is retiring July 1 after more than 31 years of service to the university, as Mississippi State's new chief human resources officer. "Leslie Corey has been a real hero during her outstanding career with MSU's Human Resources Management team," said MSU Provost and Executive Vice President David R. Shaw. "She has been a catalyst for stability, and at the same time brought innovation to MSU's human resources program. All of us at MSU thank Leslie for her service and wish her all the best." Hernandez previously served as vice president for human resources at FedEx Freight in Memphis, Tenn., and later as CHRO at Centerstone Healthcare. At FedEx, Hernandez led the company's global HR functions in one of the world's most complex and challenging business operations from 2007 to 2019.
 
Mississippi looks to capitalize on new critical minerals industry
Governor Tate Reeves (R) announced Wednesday that his office, along with the Mississippi Development Authority, was releasing a strategy to build out a new critical minerals industry in Mississippi. "It aligns with President Donald J. Trump's Energy Dominance agenda, and it will help strengthen America's economy, energy independence, and national security," Reeves said. "I'm excited about the opportunities this new industry can create for Mississippi and America." The Mississippi Development Authority report titled 2026 Mississippi Natural Resources Summit: Critical Minerals in the State outlines the strategy officials say will position Mississippi as a domestic producer of critical minerals. MDA executive director Bill Cork said Mississippi has everything it takes to compete and lead in one of the most strategically important industries in the world.
 
Many farmers, ranchers stare down an economic crisis
American farmers and ranchers are staring down a lot of financial pressure: fuel and fertilizer prices, the war in Iran, tariffs, drought, and more. In the West, it's that time when ranchers move their cattle to public grazing lands, so the cattle can eat. But the summer pasture that normally feeds cattle through the fall isn't very green and lush this year. "The big word is drought," said Jim Magagna, executive vice president of the Wyoming Stockgrowers Association. That means ranchers are looking to buy hay, Magagna said. Extra hay can cost $30,000 on the low end, and hundreds of thousands on the high end. "So many farmers are reporting, you know, that they're kind of on the brink of a crisis situation," said Aaron Lehman. A fifth-generation farmer, he grows corn, soybeans, and oats, and is president of the Iowa Farmers Union. Lehman said his costs are soaring, and so are his neighbors', for labor, health insurance, fuel, and fertilizer.
 
Factions inside the Trump administration wrestle over how to handle AI
President Donald Trump's sudden decision to scrap an AI executive order on May 21 has exposed a rift within the White House on how to regulate the emerging technology. There are three main camps in the West Wing, per two senior White House officials, granted anonymity to discuss sensitive internal dynamics. The first, which includes former AI czar David Sacks, favors less regulation to help the industry compete against China. It was Sacks who called the president last week and derailed the EO at the last minute due to industry concerns that the order could be too onerous for the relatively nascent industry. On the go-slow side: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and his undersecretary Emil Michael, a former Silicon Valley executive. They are pushing for greater barriers to Mythos-type models, according to the senior White House officials, over concerns that the technology could be used by rivals such as China. Then, according to the White House officials, there's the middle ground camp involving chief of staff Susie Wiles and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who have pushed for a regulatory framework in which AI companies voluntarily provide the U.S. government first glance at its new models. These disparate camps underscore the degree to which Trump administration policy is being shaped in real time, trying to respond to a rapidly-developing technology.
 
Judge allows Trump to implement mail-in voting executive order in loss for Dems
A U.S. judge on Thursday, May 28, declined to block President Donald Trump's executive tightening rules on mail-in voting in a loss for the Democratic Party, whose lawyers argued that it could disenfranchise millions of voters. The decision comes as Trump's Republicans are locked in a tight battle to keep control of both houses of the U.S. Congress in the November midterm elections. Trump has for years pushed the false claim that his 2020 election defeat was the result of widespread voter fraud and has criticized voting by mail. The executive order signed by Trump on March 31 directed his administration to compile a list of confirmed U.S. citizens eligible to vote in each state and to use federal data to help state election officials verify who is eligible to vote. It also required the U.S. Postal Service to only deliver ballots to voters on each state's approved mail-in ballot list, and required states to preserve election-related records for five years.
 
Oxford's 'Thacker Mountain Radio Hour' Expands Into Television
Lucy Gaines started her first day on the job as director of "Thacker Mountain Radio Hour" in 2024, navigating the crew's van through the narrow backroads of Neshoba County. "When you sign up for a job and are walking into your first day, the first things that pop in your head are like, 'OK, I need to act professional; I need to dress professional,'" the Jackson, Mississippi, native later told the Mississippi Free Press. Instead, she arrived on the job to see the rest of the crew dressed in casual wear, ready to start loading up the van in the summer heat. Hours later, the group was sitting in bumper-to-bumper traffic on dirt roads built only wide enough for one car. Closer to the Neshoba County Fair, she had to squeeze through several tight turns to avoid hitting any cabins built on the grounds. The rest of the day was a blur. After arriving in the 100-plus degree weather, she set to work coordinating all the little details required to set up for a radio show. The politicking, music and aromas of the Neshoba County Fair that surrounded the new director and her crew surprised her. "I had never been; it was like stepping into another world," Gaines said.
 
At a Mississippi anti-redistricting rally, voters say the 'headwinds suggest that a storm is here'
us after bus and van after van rolled up to the War Memorial in Jackson last Wednesday. Mostly older, Black Mississippians spilled out. The weather forecast had threatened rain. A deep heat foreshadowed the storm to come. Wearing shirts speaking out against "Jim Crow" and apparel encouraging voter participation, the attendees walked past a waiting pair of counterprotesters. After marchers arrived at the convention center, the array of voters in attendance listened to speakers. Organizers and attendees alike are hoping to use the summer to boost voter turnout in November. Jackson State University student Malik Alexander found out about the rally from a mentor. He now wants to work toward bringing awareness to more young people like himself ahead of the midterms. "Honestly, people who don't show up, sometimes they may feel like they, oh, I'm not needed in this space or I shouldn't be here, but no, we need everybody here," he said. "I told all my people at JSU, pull up. We gotta pull up, y'all in the city of Jackson, you ain't doing nothing right now, why you not here?"
 
Jackson State offers numerous summer camps for year-long learning and fun
Parents looking for summer activities for their children while school is out have to look no further than Jackson State University. JSU is offering a variety of summer camps and programs to keep students engaged. Camps will be hosted across several colleges, including the College of Business, College of Education, and the College of Science, Engineering and Technology. While sign-ups for some camps have ended, many programs are still open and accepting participants.
 
Auburn University appoints Timothy M. Chester as vice president for information technology and chief information officer
Auburn University has named Timothy M. Chester as vice president for information technology and chief information officer, Kelli Shomaker, senior vice president for business and administration and chief financial officer, announced today. His appointment is effective Aug. 1. Chester currently serves as vice president for information technology at the University of Georgia, where he has led enterprise technology efforts since 2011. Since 2022, he has also served as vice chancellor for information technology and chief information officer for the University System of Georgia, overseeing enterprise systems and network infrastructure supporting 26 institutions and more than 350,000 students statewide. As Auburn's vice president for information technology and CIO, Chester will oversee the university's enterprise technology strategy, operations and security initiatives while supporting Auburn's mission of instruction, research and extension. Chester holds a doctorate and master's degree in sociology from Texas A&M University and a bachelor's degree in political science from the University of Texas at Tyler.
 
In the Mojave, U. of Tennessee students attempt a rocket record
Rockets are having a big year. NASA launched the Artemis II mission, sending a crew to orbit the moon. It's the 100-year anniversary of Robert H. Goddard's pioneering work in liquid-fueled rockets. And now University of Tennessee at Knoxville students are attempting to break a world record in liquid rocketry. The group is a part of the Student Space Technology Association, a student-run organization with more than 200 members in such fields as robotics and rocketry. The group runs a workshop on campus, develops projects -- including a winning hypersonic team ‒- and hosts events, including the Student Space Tech Conference earlier this year, which connected university students and space technology personnel like Space Force Association CEO Brigadier General Damon Feltman. The UT team is now in California's Mojave Desert waiting to launch Big Liquid Mk II as the students try to break the altitude world record for a liquid rocket built by students.
 
Texas tuition freeze to continue as Abbott orders colleges to keep rates flat
Gov. Greg Abbott ordered Texas universities to keep tuition flat for the upcoming academic year, maintaining the freeze he's mandated since 2023. Two years ago, Abbott ordered public higher education institutions to freeze tuition for the 2025-2026 and 2026-2027 school years. In 2023, he signed a law requiring tuition freezes for the 2023-24 and 2024-25 years. In a letter Wednesday, Abbott told college and university presidents that the "directive remains fully in effect," warning them not to raise tuition or fees in the forthcoming year. He specified his order applies to all public universities and colleges, including health institutions and community colleges. Robert Kelchen, a higher education professor at the University of Tennessee specializing in finance, said tuition freezes often strain university resources unless accompanied by a large boost in funding. "The way to freeze tuition over the long term is either investing more money into the system, or it's allowing for... costs to be cut dramatically," Kelchen said. Freezes often respond to concerns the data doesn't support, Kelchen said. Though private university tuition can reach $75,000 per year, most public universities charge between $10,000 and $12,000 for annual in-state tuition, he said.
 
Departing Michigan State Leader Says Board Dysfunction Created 'Unsustainable Situation'
Outgoing Michigan State University president Kevin Guskiewicz minced no words about what drove him away from East Lansing and to Clemson University where, on Wednesday, he was named president. It was Michigan State's board, which has a long history of dysfunction. In his goodbye message posted on the Michigan State website, he wrote: "Effective university leadership requires a shared commitment to collaboration, trust, and a forward-looking vision. While many across this university community have embraced that spirit, it has become increasingly clear that there are differing perspectives within the Board of Trustees regarding how best to move MSU forward. At times, too much energy has been spent revisiting past conflicts and internal disagreements rather than focusing collectively on the opportunities and aspirations ahead of us." He didn't stop there.
 
A New Blueprint for Construction Training
Starting next spring, students at Southeast Technical College won't only learn how to build homes in the classroom; they will help meet housing needs in the Sioux Falls area while training for high-demand construction careers. The public technical college in South Dakota this month announced the Wells Fargo Homebuilding Lab, a campus expansion that will provide students with further hands-on construction experience while supporting regional affordable-housing efforts. Cory Clasemann, president of Southeast Technical College, said the home-building lab is intended to align the college's technical education programs with regional workforce needs. "It's our responsibility as a community partner to continue training more people in this field and help more graduates enter the workforce," Clasemann said. "That way employers have the workers they need to continue building and growing the city."
 
Fired for Criticizing Charlie Kirk, They're Now Getting Big Payouts
Ball State University in Indiana has agreed to pay $225,000 to a former administrator who was fired for her Facebook post accusing Charlie Kirk of spreading fear, the latest legal settlement awarded to a worker dismissed for criticizing the conservative activist after he was assassinated. "As a public university, Ball State cannot fire an employee for protected speech made as a private citizen," the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana, which sued on the administrator's behalf, said in a statement this week announcing the settlement. Employers in several states have also settled with or reinstated workers. Scores of people -- health care workers, lawyers, journalists, waiters and waitresses -- were fired or faced other repercussions for their negative comments about Mr. Kirk, igniting a debate over how far employers can go in restricting employees' political expression that occurs outside the workplace. The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression said it was tracking 13 lawsuits in federal court from people who had been disciplined or terminated for their comments about Mr. Kirk. Greg Greubel, a lawyer for the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, said that while public pressure campaigns have been around forever, the efforts to shame and punish private citizens, with the endorsement of political leaders, was new and troubling.
 
Citing 'severe' math deficits, U. of California faculty demand a return to SAT tests for STEM applicants
More than 600 University of California faculty members, led by mathematicians at UC Berkeley, are calling on the system to reinstate standardized testing requirements for science, technology, engineering and mathematics applicants, saying that six years of test-free admissions has not reliably assessed readiness and professors are often teaching middle school math to incoming students. Without standardized testing in admissions, professors said they don't know whether incoming students can handle college-level math. The open letter, addressed to top UC leaders, asks for SAT or ACT exams to be required beginning in fall 2027 and for STEM faculty to be given formal oversight of readiness standards in their majors. "We now observe preparation gaps so severe that instructors must reteach middle-school mathematics while simultaneously teaching the material students need for sciences, engineering, economics, and other quantitatively demanding fields," they warned. UC gained national attention in May 2020 when regents unanimously voted to suspend SAT and ACT testing requirements and eliminate them entirely by 2025. Board members cited concerns the tests were biased against students of color and those from lower-income families -- including students who did not have access to prep courses.
 
What the Education Department Projects for Workforce Pell
After the U.S. Department of Education finalized regulations for Workforce Pell last week, the looming question centers on what its impact might be -- how quickly and widely Pell Grants will roll out to low-income students in short-term training programs. Department officials estimated over 100,000 students could benefit in the initial years of the program, though they acknowledged in their final rule that making programs eligible for Workforce Pell will take time and come at some cost for states and higher ed institutions. Programs eight to 15 weeks long are eligible if at least 70 percent of students enrolled complete the program and find a related job within 180 days. State governments also need to determine the programs are high skill, high wage or in demand. The department projected 184,000 students could take advantage of Workforce Pell in fiscal year 2027–28, the second year of implementing the policy, according to estimates based on an analysis of Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System data. Further, over the next 10 years, the department expects enrollment to increase at least 3 percent to 191,000 by the 2037–38 academic year. Over all, the program is projected to have a net budget impact of $3.2 billion over a decade.
 
3 Things to Know About Trump's Higher Ed Grant Competitions
Over the last two months, the Department of Education has announced a series of higher education–related grant programs collectively worth more than $600 million. The results of those competitions, which are slated to play out in the months ahead, could offer a key glimpse into how the Trump administration intends to use taxpayer dollars to advance its political agenda, higher education funding experts say. Colleges and other groups are seeking funding to support college access, student success and underresourced institutions, among other programs. As of Thursday, applications for nearly all the key awards overseen by the Office of Postsecondary Education have opened. Some are still live and open to applications. Others have since closed and are now being evaluated. Grant competitions are traditionally a rather bureaucratic process that attracts little public attention. But now, as the Trump administration outsources grant oversight to other agencies, proposes major cuts to federal funding and declares that any awardee that doesn't align with the administration's interpretation of civil rights law could lose access to federal funding, policy experts are following the process closely.


SPORTS
 
State Makes First Women's College World Series Appearance In Program History
The No. 20 Mississippi State softball team will make its first Women's College World Series appearance this week, opening play in the first game of the tournament at 11 a.m. CT on Thursday against No. 4 Texas Tech. The Red Raiders are a familiar foe for the Bulldogs. Texas Tech ended State's season in the Lubbock Regional last year. That game was part of MSU being the only team to play three games in 2025 against the final four teams at the 2025 Women's College World Series. Despite the season-ending loss, the Bulldogs did open the year last year with an extra-innings victory over the Red Raiders. Kiarra Sells drove in the game-winning run with her first career hit in that game. Sells is 4-for-7 against the Red Raiders in her career, and Morgan Stiles is 4-for-9. Should the Bulldogs win on Thursday, they will advance to play the winner of No. 6 Texas and No. 8 Tennessee at 2 p.m. on Saturday. That game will air nationally on ABC. In the event of a loss, the team plays the loser between the Longhorns and Lady Vols at 6 p.m. on Friday with the game airing on ESPN2.
 
How broccoli became Mississippi State's rallying symbol during WCWS run
If you've watched any of Mississippi State's softball run this postseason, you more than likely have noticed a peculiar vegetable in the dugout and throughout the stands. That's because Jim Stewart Allen, now lovingly referred to by Bulldog fans as the "Broccoli Guy," decided to bring what he calls "nature's pom pom" to the Eugene Regional. While Allen -- an outright sports fan from the Pacific Northwest who aims to bring "energy" and create "synergy" at every ballpark he visits -- was originally attending the Eugene Regional to cheer on the Oregon Ducks, he said it took just one minute of being inside Jane Sanders Stadium for his postseason fandom to shift to the maroon and white. "Our energy collided," Allen recounted on Good Things with Rebecca Turner. "I'm not making this up. Within the first minute of getting to seat in the bleachers, I started dancing and (Mississippi State utility player) Ally Supan saw me. She started dancing along with me, doing my moves, and I said, 'You know what? I like this team. I like this team.'"
 
Softball: State Charted Course To OKC Long Ago
To arrive at a desired destination, it's best to know where you're going and how to get there. Aimlessly wandering and hoping for the best isn't a sound strategy. To the outside world, it might look as though this year's Mississippi State softball team used the risky latter plan to reach this year's Women's College World Series. After all, the Bulldogs are the only unseeded team in the field in Oklahoma City. To get there, they had to pull off a road regional win in Oregon before toppling mighty Oklahoma on its home field in the super regional round. None of this was a fluke though, as evidenced by the fact MSU literally charted its course to Oklahoma City months ago. "We did it early in the fall," State's Morgan Stiles said. "We came up with this idea, because we knew what our goal was. We knew we wanted to get to the World Series and we knew we had the ability to. We knew we had the pieces we needed and had something special. "So, we had the idea to kind of put it on paper -- put it in a place we all could see and look at to keep it at the front of our minds. We ended up drawing it all out on the glass right outside the team film room because we walk right by that glass every day." The Dawgs plotted every part of this magical journey, from the first day they were together as a team up until now.
 
Mississippi State softball will face Texas oil money and the sport's richest pitcher
Mississippi sports writer Rick Cleveland writes: This history-making Mississippi State softball team already has written a fascinating story, lifting an often largely ignored sport in the Magnolia State's headlines. Win or lose at the Women's College World Series, which begins Thursday in Oklahoma City, that story is about to get all the more intriguing. At this point, State is playing with house money. Nobody expected this. Problem is, Texas Tech, the Bulldogs' first opponent, is playing with real money -- West Texas oil money. Millions. ... Now then, let's jump ahead to what the Bulldogs face Thursday at Oklahoma City. This is where a good story becomes captivating. State plays Texas Tech in the eight-team, double elimination tournament's first game at 11 a.m. And I know what many non-softball fans are thinking: Hmmm, Texas Tech softball, where have I heard about them before? Well, it was probably on July 24, 2024, when Texas Tech made front page news, the lead story on ESPN Sportscenter, signing former Stanford pitching star NiJaree Canady to a $1 million contract to switch schools and lead Tech to college softball's promised land.
 
Football: Kick Times, TV Info For First Three Games Announced
The Southeastern Conference announced kickoff times and television networks for the first three weeks of the 2026 season on Wednesday. Mississippi State will open its season against Louisiana Monroe at 6:30 p.m. CT on Saturday, Sept. 5. That game will be broadcast on ESPNU. The Bulldogs will travel to Minneapolis for the first time in program history to take on the Minnesota Golden Gophers. The week two contest is set for a 2:30 p.m. CT kickoff on CBS. This game will be the first of a home-and-home series with Minnesota. Week three will see State travel to Columbia, S.C., to open SEC play against the Gamecocks. Kickoff is set for 3:15 p.m. CT, with the game broadcast on SEC Network.
 
Track & Field: State Punches Three Tickets On Day One
Mississippi State track and field began the NCAA East First Rounds in Lexington, Kentucky, with three athletes qualifying for national championships. Throwers Tuomas Narhi, Kaden Cartwright and Juha Narhi all punched tickets in their events for the NCAA Outdoor Championships in June. Tuomas Narhi and Cartwright finished sixth and ninth in the javelin, respectively, to earn spots in the national championships. Juha Narhi tossed a 66.06m throw in the third round to qualify in the hammer throw. On the track, four Bulldogs will advance to the quarterfinals held on Friday. Nicholas Fakorede crossed the line in 10.08 in the 100m to earn an automatic qualifying spot in the next round. In the 800m, Keayari Lee, Harry Ross-Hughes and Sam Navarro each earned a "big Q" to advance to the final race of the meet.
 
City, restaurants, businesses preparing for NCAA Hattiesburg Regional
For the second year in a row, the city of Hattiesburg is hosting an NCAA baseball regional. Southern Miss baseball won 44 games this season, earning the No. 9 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament bracket and the opportunity to host a regional from May 29-June 1. As the start of the regional draws near, the excitement in the city is growing. Lining the streets of Downtown Hattiesburg are signs that read "Southern Miss vs. All Y'all." You won't make it far driving down 4th Street without seeing Southern Miss flags flown by residents and businesses alike. The city's support for the Golden Eagles is year-round, but it amplifies this time of year. "The electricity is just different," longtime Hattiesburg resident and owner of 4th Street Bar Slade White said. "I'm talking about when you can feel the energy around here, the hype, the buzz. Even your normal baseball fans, and I'm not knocking them, that aren't here day in and day out, come and the town just gets electric in general." Most businesses are waiting for the arrival of fans to see an increase in business, but Campus Book Mart, a local store that sells Southern Miss apparel, is already seeing the benefits of the Golden Eagles' successful season.
 
SEC requiring sports gambling education for all student-athletes
The Southeastern Conference is looking to crack down on sports betting among its student-athletes. Commissioner Greg Sankey announced Wednesday at the conference's spring meetings in Florida that student-athletes will soon be required to watch an educational video related to sports betting. The video must be shown to all SEC athletes prior to the start of their first regular season game during the upcoming 2026-27 athletic year. Per conference officials, the video will serve to educate and safeguard student-athletes amid the growing prevalence of sports gambling nationwide. It is also an extension of the SEC's efforts to monitor gambling activities when partnering with IC360, formerly US Integrity, in 2018. The video comes as sports betting activity among young people has skyrocketed in the U.S. in recent years. SEC officials cited a report showing that 58% of people between 18 and 22 years old have placed at least one wager, with rates climbing to 67% among students living on college campuses.
 
Greg Sankey says SEC 'strongest football league by far' despite national title drought
A three-year championship drought is not stopping the SEC from asserting its power and position as still the top conference in college football. "If you look at the entirety of our league, we are by far the most competitive, the strongest football league by far," commissioner Greg Sankey said Wednesday, addressing reporters after Day 2 of the SEC's spring meetings. The SEC won 13 national titles from 2006-22, never going more than two years without one, and only once (2014) not sending a team to the championship game. Since then, the Big Ten has won three straight national titles (Michigan, Ohio State, Indiana), and the SEC has not had a team play in any of the last three championship games. The Big Ten is 4-0 against the SEC in head-to-head College Football Playoff matchups during that time. Sankey pushed back on the notion -- based on that four-game sample -- that the SEC has fallen behind the Big Ten. "So that's a pretty narrow band," he said.
 
With expansion argument brewing, Smart hints at SEC secession
Conversations around conference expansion have dominated the college football spring meetings thus far, and Kirby Smart's comments on Tuesday about the SEC essentially seceding have created plenty of questions. The Georgia coach suggested that if an agreement can't be reached on expansion, spending in the NIL era and beyond, perhaps the SEC should try to go it alone. "I've said this for a long time to our president," Smart said on Tuesday. "I've been a huge advocate that if we can't find rules that everybody plays by, then we should play our own. I'm not afraid of that. I'm not afraid to break away and say that our conference is strong enough to go out and play. The argument at front and center is whether to expand the College Football Playoff to 16 or 24 teams from the current 12-team model. For a change to occur, the conferences -- most notably the Big Ten and SEC -- must agree on a format. The Big Ten, ACC, Big 12 and Notre Dame are all on board for expanding to 24. The SEC is against that model at this time. Smart's comments come after Georgia president Jere Morehead told On3 last week that if federal legislation isn't enacted to curb what he has called "anarchy" in the sport, he's prepared to "be ready to vote on creating an SEC mechanism and SEC rules. That's what we have to do."
 
Soaring Athletics Costs Raise Alarms
The University of Georgia's president and head football coach both sounded the alarm over the rising costs of athletics in recent days. Kirby Smart, the head football coach, said at the Southeastern Conference summer meeting that he is worried that exploding expenses for his sport threatens to crowd out Olympic sports, and that other universities are unable to spend at the rate that Georgia is, according to ESPN. Mike Elko, head football coach at Texas A&M University, said the growth in spending on name, image, likeness, or NIL, costs is unsustainable. "If we don't get some level of regulation within the market, a lot of people are going to go bankrupt," he said. Jere W. Morehead, Georgia's president who attended the same meeting, said college athletics are approaching a state of "anarchy" and are in need of regulation a year after the House v. NCAA settlement went into effect. Institutions participating in that settlement will increase the amount they pay athletes to $21.3 million this summer.
 
Key senators look to break college sports logjam in Congress with a bipartisan bill
Two key senators involved in a long-simmering debate over fixing college sports will introduce a bipartisan bill designed to break a congressional logjam that would regulate payments to players, limit them to one "free" transfer over their careers and create a "Lane Kiffin Rule" to restrict coach movement during the season. Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., the chair and ranking member of the Senate Commerce Committee that oversees college sports, briefed The Associated Press on details of the bill they crafted in hopes it can get the 60 votes needed to clear the Senate. "This is a stability bill, not just an NIL bill," Cruz said, referencing the name, image and likeness payments that have led to football rosters with $30 million payrolls and reshaped the industry. Cantwell said she and Cruz teamed up on the legislation "because he and I really do believe the college sports system is in a bit of chaos."
 
Senate panel releases NIL bill, plans hearing
The top lawmakers on the Senate Commerce Committee released a bill Wednesday aimed at addressing the myriad issues with college athletics stemming from its largely ungoverned name, image and likeness era. In a call with reporters, a Republican Commerce Committee aide said the panel plans to hold hearings and mark up the "Protect College Sports Act" in June. The measure, released along with a summary, was largely worked out by the panel's GOP chairman and Democratic ranking member, Ted Cruz of Texas and Maria Cantwell of Washington. The Cruz-Cantwell measure might be the only college sports overhaul measure with a chance of passing both chambers. A House version that had been crafted largely by Republican leaders, known as the "SCORE Act," had to be pulled from the floor schedule last week. The Congressional Black Caucus, in announcing opposition to the House bill, cited silence from major athletic conferences and institutions on Black voting rights and political power. And a handful of GOP members had concerns the House version would have been too tilted toward big schools and conferences. One of the biggest differences between the bills is the Senate measure would etch into law more-specific NIL rules than the House version, which would give the NCAA more power to craft new nationwide guidelines.
 
Congress' Latest College Sports Reform Bill Still Faces Steep Odds
U.S. Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and U.S. Senator Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) -- the chair and ranking member, respectively, of the Commerce Committee -- are set to release a new bill, the Protect College Sports Act, that attempts to thread the needle of reforming college sports without creating new problems. The bill will likely face political and legal hurdles, though it reflects a bipartisan approach that might attract significant support. The Protect College Sports Act contemplates a targeted antitrust exemption related to eligibility and transfers, media rights pooling and a hard cap on school spending, among other components. It's the latest effort in what has thus far been a futile movement within the college sports community and on Capitol Hill to facilitate legal changes to the relationship among the NCAA, conferences, colleges and athletes. More than 40 college sports bills have been introduced in Congress over the last six years, and none has advanced, despite some garnering significant media coverage and confident statements by lawmakers. The newest bill contains features that might give it a better chance, though it still faces high odds and could still be challenged in courts. Most noticeably, the Protect College Sports Act avoids a declaration that college athletes aren't employees.



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