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Florida officials let public universities free up millions to pay student-athletes

USF kicker John Cannon celebrates winning the most valuable player award for the Hawaii Bowl in Honululu on Dec. 24, 2024. makes a game-tying 41-yard field goal in the final seconds of the fourth quarter to send the Bulls to overtime against San Jose State in the Hawaii Bowl on Dec. 24, 2024, in Honolulu. Cannon's kick made the score 27-all. USF eventually won the game 41-39 after five overtimes.
USF Athletics
USF kicker John Cannon celebrates winning the most valuable player award for the Hawaii Bowl as Bulls coach Alex Golesh, left, looks on in Honululu on Dec. 24, 2024. Cannon made three fields goals, including a game-tying 41-yard fielder that bounced in off the right upright goal in the final seconds of the fourth quarter to send the Bulls to overtime against San Jose State. The kick made the score 27-all. USF eventually won the game 41-39 after five overtimes.

The rule comes ahead of a landmark legal settlement going into effect July 1 allowing schools to directly pay their players for the use of their name, image and likeness.

Florida's public universities can free up $22.5 million a year to compensate student-athletes under an emergency rule approved by a state board Wednesday ahead of a landmark legal settlement allowing schools to pay their players through licensing deals.

The sprawling $2.8 billion antitrust settlement, going into effect July 1, allows schools to directly pay their pay their players for the use of their name, image and likeness. It's upending the way college sports have been run for more than a century and has sent universities across the country scrambling for new revenue streams in the hopes of gaining an edge — or at least keeping pace — in the rapidly evolving and highly competitive field of college athletics.

Public universities in Florida, which is home to some of the country’s most high-profile college sports teams, will now be able to dip into the funding reserves of campus auxiliary programs like bookstores, food service, student housing and parking in order to cut checks to student-athletes. Under the policy approved Wednesday, the funds can be issued as a transfer or a loan.

ALSO READ: What the NCAA legal settlement means for the USF athletic program

“Athletic departments are already currently recruiting student-athletes for fall 2025, and they need clarity on the available funding to retain and recruit the best talent for their rosters,” said Alan Levine, vice chair of the board of governors, which oversees Florida's state universities. “If the universities cannot react to the settlement immediately, there will be irreparable harm to the athletic programs and to the financial welfare of our institutions."

Florida's emergency rule goes into effect immediately and will last 90 days, at which point the board of governors can reassess the issue.

Other schools are also taking actions because of deficits in their athletic departments. Last week, University of Kentucky trustees approved a $31 million operating loan for the athletics department as it begins making direct payments to athletes.

Meanwhile, Louisiana is poised to hike taxes on sports betting to pump more than $24 million into athletic departments. And Arkansas this year became the first to waive state income taxes on payments made to athletes by higher education institutions.

Kate Payne is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

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