A proposal
to amend the Athletic Bylaws of the
Nebraska School Activities Association to impose limits on the
number of baseball games played during the spring season was passed
in five of the six NSAA districts in recent Second District Meetings. District I NSAA
representatives (Lincoln area) passed the proposal in its Second
District Meeting on January 7th, followed by District III the
following day. The other four districts held their Second
Meetings on January 14th, where the proposal was approved in three
districts but was defeated unanimously, 79-0, in District II (Metro),
the district with by far the most baseball programs. (See
Voting Results chart below.) Passage of the proposal in
at least three districts means that it now advances to the April 3rd
Annual Meeting of the NSAA Representative Assembly where it will be
voted on by that 49-member legislative body. The affirmative
vote of thirty delegates in the Representative Assembly will result
in the proposal becoming effective in 2010.
The proposal sets a cap of twenty "dates" on which
varsity games may be played. Doubleheaders would count as one
"date" as would tournaments. A maximum of four tournaments,
other than districts and state, would be allowed. The twenty
"date" proposal was submitted by Westside for strategic
purposes after a similar
seventeen-date proposal had previously been submitted by Beatrice.
Although Westside Athletic Director Dr. Bob Reznicek stated that he
felt that most baseball schools preferred the "status quo", i.e., no
contest limits, visible support for the seventeen-date cap in
other districts prompted Westside to submit a proposal that would
provide an alternative to the seventeen-date cap and give baseball
schools something they could live with if contest limits for
baseball became a reality.
Two of the five districts that voted in favor of
baseball contest limits, Districts V and VI from the western part of
the state, have no member schools with baseball programs.
| |
|
Voting Results on Baseball Contest Limits
Proposal By District |
|
District |
Votes For |
Votes Against |
Abstain |
#Schools |
#Baseball
Schools |
|
I |
19 |
0 |
|
51 |
13 |
|
II |
0 |
79 |
|
89 |
37 |
|
III |
17 |
0 |
|
60 |
2 |
|
IV |
5 |
1 |
* |
61 |
3 |
|
V |
5 |
3 |
16 |
24 |
0 |
|
VI |
27 |
0 |
|
27 |
0 |
|
|
* The NSAA website reports no abstentions in
District IV voting, however, as many as fifty votes were cast on
other proposals in District IV, thus one would conclude that there
were 44 abstentions on this issue. Likewise, it appears that
District III had a number of abstentions.
The next and final step in deciding whether contest
limits for baseball will be put into effect is the vote of the
Representative Assembly on April 3. A three-fifths
majority vote of the delegates actually voting is required to pass a
proposal, thus, thirty affirmative votes would be required for passage
(assuming that all 49 delegates vote). Conversely, twenty
votes against the proposal would be required to defeat it.
District II, which was unanimously opposed to the proposal in voting
last week, will send seventeen delegates to the Representative
Assembly. If all seventeen vote against the proposal,
only three more negative votes from delegates from other districts
would be needed to defeat the proposal.
The number of delegates sent to the Representative
Assembly from each district is based upon student population, with
one delegate for each 3,000 students in grades 9-11 in that district
as of the end of September. Since District II has nearly 51%
of the state's population in grades 9-11, it would seem that
District II would hold enough votes on its own to prevent the proposal from
being adopted. However, the population-based representation
formula is skewed by the fact that, not only do the population-based
delegates vote in the Representative Assembly, but so do the four
District Managing Committee members in each district. Adding
these additional four votes to less populous districts Districts V
and VI increases their voting power from one vote to five -- an
increase of 400%. Meanwhile, adding the four DMC votes to the
thirteen population-based delegates in District II increases the voting power
in that district by only 31%. The addition of the DMC votes
results in a dilution in District II's voting power in favor of
Districts III, IV, V and VI. (For example, District V has only
three percent of the state's student population, yet has a ten
percent share of the voting power in the Representative Assembly.)
Thus, District II will need to find votes from other districts for a
proposal that it would be able to unilaterally defeat if the
Representative Assembly were based strictly on population.
(See Chart of NSAA Representation
figures.)
It seems probable that District II will be able to
find the three votes needed to kill the twenty-date contest limit
for baseball. If not, the proposal would go into effect for
the 2010 season.
Other NSAA Proposals Considered in Second District
Meetings
Starting the spring baseball season later.
A proposal to delay the start of baseball practice by two weeks was
defeated in all six districts, however, a proposal to study the
start date of various spring sports, including baseball, was passed
in four districts and will advance to the Legislative Assembly.
Elimination of the Western Geographic-Based
District in Class A Volleyball, Basketball, Soccer and Softball.
As a result of the "Great Compromise of 2007," a new district
assignment system was implemented for Class A Volleyball,
Basketball, Soccer and Softball in which Wild-Card Points Standings
are used to assign teams to the six eastern-most districts, and a special
geographic-based seventh district was created to which the
western-most schools are assigned. For example, Grand Island,
Kearney, Norfolk and North Platte have their own district for Class
A boys basketball. Meanwhile, the other twenty-four eastern
teams are assigned to one of six districts based upon their Wild
Card Points average prior to district tournaments. Obviously, if the four western schools were thrown into
the general wild-card hopper and assigned accordingly, they would
face stiffer competition to reach the state tournament. (Note: because baseball only has two
"western schools" -- Grand Island and Norfolk -- there are only six
districts for baseball and no special western district.)
A proposal to eliminate the special western district
has now been passed in three districts and will advance to the Representative
Assembly. Not surprisingly, the voting followed geographic
lines with Districts V and VI voting against it. The vote in
District IV was evenly split 2-2, with numerous abstentions.
Implementing Merit-Based Districts for Class B
Volleyball, Basketball and Softball. Following the success
of merit-based districts in Class A in 2008, a proposal was
introduced to extend that system to Class B for Volleyball,
Basketball and Softball. The three separate proposals - one
for each sport - would have divided the state into three regions,
two in the east and one in the west, and assigned teams to districts
within those geographic districts based on Wild Card Point
standings. The proposals were defeated by an overwhelming vote
in five districts with District II voting unanimously in
favor of all three proposals. Class B baseball currently uses
the merit-based system of district assignments.
Extending NSAA's Regulatory Control to Middle
School Activities. The NSAA representatives voted in favor
of numerous proposals that would extend the reach of the NSAA to
middle school activities. A package of eighteen
proposals to implement regulation of middle school activities (grade
six and above) came out of a special Committee on Middle School
Governance established by the NSAA Board of Control. The only
middle school proposals that were not approved by at least three
schools were those that imposed contest limits for the various
sports and one that would allow sixteen year old students to compete
at the middle school level.
The threshold question of whether the NSAA has the
requisite authority to regulate non-member schools such as middle
schools seems to have been overlooked in the middle level governance
discussions and voting. The NSAA is a private non-profit corporation
comprised of 312 member high schools. The "enabling" proposal
which extends the NSAA's power to middle schools is believed by many
observers, including your author, to exceed the NSAA's authority
under its Articles of Incorporation. Those articles
state that “the
acts of the Association shall be limited to the performance of
educational functions directly
related to the members.” Since middle schools are
not currently members of NSAA, clearly the NSAA lacks any regulatory
powers over them. The NSAA has tried to dance around this sticky
issue with the following "enabling" proposal that was approved in
three districts:
Whenever a school system has a high school that
becomes a member of the Nebraska School Activities Association,
all interscholastic activities involving students enrolled in
grades above the sixth shall be enrolled and governed by the
rules of the NSAA.
In essence, the NSAA is saying that if a middle
school is within the same school system as an NSAA member high
school, participation in interscholastic activities by that middle
school shall be subject to NSAA governance. The logic of this
proposal is illusive at best since the school district is not a
member of the NSAA -- only the high school is. It's a bit like
saying, "if an older brother joins the priesthood, his younger
brother shall be subject to his vows of chastity." Such
lateral "imputation" of membership to the middle school just because
a high school in the same school system is a member is clearly
illogical and exceeds the NSAA's limited authority.
Dual Participation. A number of
proposals dealing with dual participation issues were introduced in
First District Meetings in November but none were advanced.
The term "dual participation" refers to an athlete competing for
both his school team and an outside sports program or club during
the season of a sport. Currently, the NSAA bylaws prohibit
such dual participation except in limited circumstances, including
where an athlete has qualified to participate in the activities of
an Olympic Development Program or has been selected to participate
on a national team. A legislative bill (LB
1135) was introduced by Senator Ken Rogert of Tekamah in the
2008 Legislative Session that would have prevented the NSAA from
adopting rules "that bind the high school student athlete from
participating, training and competing in their high school sport in
addition to a club sport as recognized by the US Olympic Committee
for the same type of sport during the same season." That bill
was not advanced to the floor of the Legislature by the Education
Committee.
Last spring the NSAA appointed a Committee on Dual
Participation to study the issue. Out of that committee arose
various legislative proposals, all of which were defeated in First
District Meetings in the various districts. Senator Rogert has
introduced a new bill this session (LB
228) which prohibits any school from belonging to any
organization which prohibits a student from participating in any
activity duly sanctioned by the national governing body for that
activity.
The current prohibition on dual participation
requires a student to choose whether to play for his school team or
a club team. The critical issue for proponents of dual
participation is whether the NSAA has the right to tell students and
their parents what the student may or may not do in his free time if
the student has met all of the requirements for participating in his
high school sport.