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Memorandum 1 (September 2013)

handle is hein.nccusl/nccpub3681 and id is 1 raw text is: MEMORANDUM

September 2013
Background on the UAAA and Issues to be Considered at the October Drafting
Committee Meeting
I. Background
The Uniform Athlete Agents Act (UAAA) was promulgated by the Uniform Law
Commission (ULC) in 2000, and drafted in response to the urging of the National Collegiate
Athletic Association (NCAA). With the immense amount of money at stake for a wide
variety of professional athletes and those that represent them, the commercial marketplace
in which athlete agents operate is extremely competitive. While seeking to best position
one's clients and to maximize their potential income is both legal and good business
practice, the recruitment of a student-athlete while he or she is still enrolled in an
educational institution can and will cause substantial eligibility problems for both the
student and the school, which can in turn lead to severe economic sanctions and loss of
scholarships for the institution. The problem becomes even more acute where an
unscrupulous agent misleads a student, especially where the athlete is not aware of the
implications of signing the agency agreement or where agency is established without notice
to the athletic director of the school.
In general, the UAAA does the following:
- Defines athlete agent and sets the scope of the act to apply narrowly to the conduct of
directly or indirectly inducing or attempting to induce a student-athlete into an agency
contract. However, the act applies broadly to any type of individual that engages in such
conduct.
- Defines student-athlete as an individual who engages in, is eligible to engage in, or may
be eligible in the future to engage in, any intercollegiate sport. Under that definition, high
school students were clearly student-athletes because the individual may be eligible in the
future to engage in intercollegiate athletics.
* Except under limited and temporary circumstances, prohibits an individual from acting as
an athlete agent without registering in the state. The act provides for a uniform
registration system and criminal history disclosures, including required disclosure of his or
her training, experience, and education, whether he or she or an associate has been
convicted of a felony or crime of moral turpitude, has been administratively or judicially

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