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Mark Emmert: 'Highly probable' federal legislation for how college athletes are compensated

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Tebow worried about negative fallout from Fair Pay To Pay Act (2:02)

Tim Tebow has concerns about the potential negative effects of California's Fair Pay To Play act on college athletics. (2:02)

NEW YORK -- NCAA president Mark Emmert said Wednesday it is "highly probable" federal legislation will be passed that sets national guidelines for how college athletes can be compensated for the use of their names, images and likenesses.

Emmert, who spoke at a forum sponsored by the Sports Business Journal, said he is spending most of his time trying to figure out how the NCAA and its hundreds of member schools will allow college athletes to get that kind of compensation under the auspices of amateur athletics.

He said he is also spending a lot of time in Washington meeting with lawmakers, often with university presidents and other representatives from individual schools.

Last week, Sen. Chris Murphy and Sen. Mitt Romney announced the formation of a bipartisan congressional working group that will examine the compensation of college athletes.

"They want to hear from their home universities," Emmert said. "Members of Congress care about college sports. They recognize how important it is to American society. They don't want to do harm. They want to make it better. But it's going to be a long road. It's not going to be something that happens overnight."

The issue gained urgency after California passed a law in October that will give college athletes the right to make money on things like endorsement deals and promoting businesses or products on their social media accounts. That law does not go into effect until 2023.

Since then, more than 20 other states have moved on similar legislation, with some states saying they would like new laws to be in place as soon as next year. That would make it almost impossible for the NCAA to operate with consistent rules for all its members.

A federal law would eliminate that potential problem, but the NCAA wants a say in what that looks like.

"If you had a completely unfettered sponsorship model like some state bills are anticipating, the nature of that can slide very quickly into an employee-employer relationship," Emmert said.

The NCAA has had a working group sorting through name, image and likeness compensation since the summer. In November, the Board of Governors voted to allow college athletes to be compensated for their names, images and likenesses. Now that group is working on how to change NCAA rules. The board gave its sprawling membership a deadline to make legislative changes by 2021.

Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby is part of the working group.

"This hasn't, frankly, been the most enjoyable NCAA service that I have been involved with," Bowlsby said. He said the timetable the NCAA has set is "doable."

Ultimately, what the NCAA does is likely to be dictated by lawmakers.

Temple athletic director Patrick Kraft said he knows compensating athletes is on its way to becoming a reality. He said he is "not losing sleep" over the issue. "I just want to know how am I going to protect my institution and protect [the athletes]," he said.