In today鈥檚 issue, our five hand-picked stories explore what鈥檚 driving change in Hong Kong, President Trump鈥檚 influence over his party, how gun control politics shifted in one state, an all-natural answer to flooding in Houston, and newfound independence on the high seas.
First, California is famous for its earthquakes. On Monday, we saw the first cracks of a seismic shift in college sports: fair pay for athletes.聽
Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law that allows and hire agents starting in 2023. It means a football player can earn royalties from a video game, or a golfer can collect a check for wearing a Nike cap, or a soccer player can get paid for giving lessons.聽
The NCAA 鈥 the governing body for college sports 鈥 decries this law as a violation of the principle that students should earn a degree, not money. But that ideal ignores the fact that college sports, especially football and basketball, are now a multibillion-dollar industry with colleges, coaches, and broadcasters reaping huge sums. Yes, college jocks often get a 鈥渇ree鈥 education for playing, but that contract hasn鈥檛 changed as revenues have soared.聽
The NCAA may try to prevent schools in other states from playing against ones in California. But the state law has a clever three-year delay, effectively making it a national catalyst for fair pay. At least seven states are already moving to pass similar legislation. No wonder, California now has a college recruiting edge.聽
As California state Sen. Nancy Skinner said: 鈥淏y restoring student-athletes鈥 rights, we鈥檝e sent a clear message to the NCAA, our colleges and the entire sports industry: 鈥