Thu. Mar 6th, 2025
A basketball player wearing a green Cal Poly uniform holds an orange Wilson basketball while standing on a gymnasium court. The player appears focused, with a determined expression. The background features wooden bleachers with green padding, and part of the image is framed by an out-of-focus foreground element. The player is wearing white sneakers and a black undershirt beneath their jersey.
A basketball player wearing a green Cal Poly uniform holds an orange Wilson basketball while standing on a gymnasium court. The player appears focused, with a determined expression. The background features wooden bleachers with green padding, and part of the image is framed by an out-of-focus foreground element. The player is wearing white sneakers and a black undershirt beneath their jersey.
Annika Shah, a senior business administration student, during basketball practice at Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo on Feb. 3, 2025. Photo by Julie Leopo-Bermudez for CalMatters

Millions of dollars for basketball and football players from private donors. Thousand-dollar deals with the Biden Campaign, the former crypto-currency company FTX and clothing brands like Crocs and Aeropostale. 

In a first-ever look, CalMatters’ Adam Echelman and Erica Yee obtained and analyzed California universities’ records of college athletes’ brand deals. Some records mention popular athletes, such as UCLA gymnast and Olympic gold-medal winner Jordan Chiles, but most of the data is anonymized and comes with important caveats. 

Still, it offers a glimpse into how name, image and likeness money is changing college sports

Since 2021, when California became one of the first states to allow student athletes to cash in on sponsorship deals, college football and basketball players have earned the most, including multiple six-figure deals at UCLA and UC Berkeley. 

But much of that money comes from private donor groups, known as collectives, rather than traditional brands. Donors offer that money in exchange for a service, such as an autograph, but most experts say it’s just a means to support top-performing athletes — and discourage them from seeking better deals elsewhere.

  • Anaiya Singer, a freshman on the UCLA women’s rowing team: “Those big sports do bring in the most revenue, and they’re the most watched, (but rowers) deserve much more than we’re getting.” 

Except for a few star players, most female athletes earned very little. While gymnasts at UCLA reported earning over $2 million in the last three school years, university records show that players on the UCLA women’s water polo team earned just $152 during the same time frame — despite winning the national championship last year. 

Read more here.


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Rural counties at risk of missing out

Momentum for Health facilities in San Jose on Dec. 19, 2023. Momentum for Health provides behavioral health care for youth and adults in Santa Clara County. Photo by Loren Elliott for CalMatters
Momentum for Health facilities, which provide behavioral health care for patients in Santa Clara County, in San Jose on Dec. 19, 2023. Photo by Loren Elliott for CalMatters

Small and rural California counties that are in the most need of mental health resources may miss out on Proposition 1 funds, according to local officials who testified at a legislative oversight hearing Tuesday.

As CalMatters’ Kristen Hwang explains, the $6.4 billion bond that voters narrowly passed last year provides counties money to build treatment beds and facilities, as well as support housing for people with mental health issues and substance abuse disorder. 

Prop. 1 is one of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s major mental health initiatives, and his administration is moving quickly to distribute billions of dollars by May. But in doing so, counties that don’t have the personnel or expertise to navigate the complex grant requirements may get excluded.

Susan Holt, Fresno County’s behavioral health director, said the county submitted nine grant applications for care beds to treat short-term patients, but it received no money.

  • Holt, at Tuesday’s hearing: “Moving this money out fast does come at a cost, because there will be some who are left behind.”

California has historically awarded counties that can provide services and are better-resourced in developing “launch ready” projects, which can be completed on a faster timeline.

Read more here.

Government secrecy?

A legislative chamber with ornate wooden desks and green leather chairs is seen in the foreground. Each desk is equipped with microphones and nameplates. The room has high ceilings, decorative columns, and an intricate green carpet. In the background, people in formal attire are engaged in conversation, while others are seated at their desks. An electronic board displays information, and the American flag hangs near the front of the chamber.
Lawmakers on the Assembly floor at the state Capitol in Sacramento on May 31, 2022. Photo by Miguel Gutierrez Jr., CalMatters

In January Sen. Susan Rubio came under scrutiny over her possible involvement in a federal corruption investigation related to bribes from a cannabis company. The West Covina Democrat denied accepting bribes and said she was “not involved” in the probe, which by then had ensnared a handful of other San Bernardino County officials.

During our own look into the investigation, CalMatters’ Ryan Sabalow requested copies of federal law enforcement subpoenas and search warrants dating to 2020, as well as invoices showing how much money the Legislature spent on legal bills related to federal criminal investigations.

The requests were denied. The Assembly and the Senate cited the same reasons for the denials, including that “the public interest served by not making the record public clearly outweighs the public interest served by disclosure of the record.”

This has advocates for government transparency alarmed. David Loy, the legal director for the First Amendment Coalition, said deploying the reasoning of not serving the public interest “is the last refuge of the scoundrel.”

  • Loy: “Even if (secrecy) might be allowed under the letter of law in some circumstances, that is not a position that I think serves the public well. We should err on the side of disclosure. The public has a right to know.”

Legislative leaders Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas of Salinas and Senate President Pro Tem Mike McGuire of Santa Rosa did not respond to CalMatters’ request for interviews.

Read more here.

And lastly: Fremont backtracks homelessness rule

A tall doom-like structure made out of tarps and other materials can be seen next to an area with several personal belongings for unhoused residents including bicycles, shopping carts, boxes, an American flag and more.
A section of a homeless encampment in Fremont on Feb. 6, 2025. Photo by Dai Sugano, Bay Area News Group

In February the Fremont City Council approved an ordinance that would have made aiding and abetting a homeless encampment a misdemeanor. But Tuesday night the council voted to reverse course. Find out why from CalMatters’ Richard Procter



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