Bill to codify name‑image‑likeness rules for Nebraska high school athletes draws mixed reaction
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Summary
LB 10 46 would create a statewide statutory framework for high‑school NIL activity: allowing limited NIL opportunities while preserving eligibility and banning harmful sponsors. Sponsor said state policy needs consistent protections beyond private association rules; opponents worried about unintended recruiting incentives and market effects.
Sen. Terrell McKinney introduced LB 10 46, a bill to create statutory protections and a model policy for high school student name, image and likeness (NIL) activities. The proposal aims to preserve student eligibility while adding contract safeguards, disclosure requirements, financial education and prohibitions on certain sponsors (alcohol, tobacco, gambling, weapons, adult content) and on uses that amount to recruiting inducements.
Sponsor rationale: McKinney said high school students already engage in NIL activity under private NSAA policy and outside companies are using student images for subscription revenue without consistent protections. "This bill modernizes policy, not amateur athletics," he said, and argued the state should provide uniform due‑process protections, financial disclosure, and contract safeguards for minors.
Support and concerns: Proponents argued the bill protects students from exploitation and creates a statewide floor of protections. Critics, including some committee members, warned about potential destabilizing forces — early recruitment incentives, unequal enforcement, and commercial pressure — and asked if the NSAA or a federal framework would better handle the issue. Several senators noted colleges and recruiting markets are already creating incentives and that careful guardrails are necessary.
Outcome: Testimony was mixed; sponsor emphasized the bill preserves NSAA guardrails while adding statutory consumer protections for minors and requiring the State Board to adopt a model policy. The committee closed the hearing without taking action.
Provenance: SEG 3168–SEG 3669.
Speakers: Sen. Terrell McKinney (SEG 3168) and several proponents and one lay proponent (SEG 3596–SEG 3620).
