Top American colleges accused of violating rights of Black athletes
Group says rules prohibiting compensation disproportionately impact Black students
A group that advocates for college athletes has filed a federal complaint that claims NCAA Division I schools are violating the civil rights of Black basketball players and major college football players by prohibiting compensation.
The National College Players Association announced Tuesday it had submitted a complaint to the Office for Civil Rights in the Education Department. The NCPA says NCAA rules prohibiting schools from compensating athletes disproportionately impacts Black students.
"I believe it's important to first acknowledge the reality of the business that is college football," Stanford football player Elijah Higgins said in a statement through the NCPA.
Citing a 2018 study by the University of Southern California's Race and Equity Center, the complaint said "Black men were 2.4 per cent of undergraduate students enrolled at the 65 [Power Five conference] universities, but comprised 55 per cent of football teams and 56 per cent of men's basketball teams on those campuses."
"This multi-billion college sports enterprise imposes discriminatory practices that disproportionately harms Black athletes, while predominantly white coaches and administrators make millions of dollars," said NCPA Executive Director Ramogi Huma, a former UCLA football player. "College athletes throughout predominantly white sports receive fair market compensation, but athletes in the only predominantly Black sports do not."
An NCAA spokeswoman declined comment on Wednesday.
Claim to be denied tens of thousands of dollars annually
The NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament generates more than $800 million US in revenue for the association, most of which is distributed to 358 schools that compete at that level.
The College Football Playoff, which operates outside the NCAA, is worth more than $470 million annually to the 10 conferences that run it, with the majority of that money going to the Power Five — the Atlantic Coast, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and Southeastern conferences.
The complaint also cites Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh's concurring opinion in last year's Alston case, in which the high court ruled unanimously to uphold a lower court's decision that found the NCAA in violation of antitrust law.
The court said the NCAA and college conferences could not cap benefits related to education that schools can offer to athletes.
"Nowhere else in America can businesses get away with agreeing not to pay their workers a fair market rate on the theory that their product is defined by not paying their workers a fair market rate," Kavanaugh wrote.