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The National Operating Committee on Standards for Athletic Equipment, known as NOCSAE, hired Locke Lord Strategies LP, according to a lobbying registration filed last month. NOCSAE, which includes physicians and sporting goods industry officials, sets voluntary test standards for football helmets and other sporting goods. But the group's website notes that manufacturers test their own helmets and that "NOCSAE does not possess a surveillance force to ensure compliance with the standards."
NOCSAE's executive director and general counsel, Mike Oliver, said his group hasn't taken a position on the bill.
"NOCSAE has no experience in D.C., and my personal experience has been limited and ineffective, but with the scope of the legislation, it seemed wise for us to get someone involved who can make sure we don't miss anything and who has experience in dealing with Congress," Oliver said. "We share the same goal -- to do everything we can to make sure athletes are as safe as possible when they take the field."
"We agree more must be done to protect athletes," he added. "This is why NOCSAE has invested more than $3 million since 2000 toward developing a deeper understanding of sports-related concussions. We are supporting research by the foremost experts in sports medicine and science."
NOCSAE's board of directors includes representatives from groups such as the American College of Sports Medicine, the American College Health Association, the Athletic Equipment Managers Association, and the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association, an industry trade group.
The nonprofit research and advocacy group Consumers Union has lobbied for passage of the bill.
"Your bill will help to make helmets more protective of the millions of American children who play football every year," the group wrote in a letter to Udall.
Tom Cove, president and chief executive of the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association, said his group has concerns about the federal government getting into regulating sporting goods. Cove recently gave a presentation on the bill to member companies and officials from the NCAA and the National Federation of State High School Associations.
He said his message about the bill was that "it was important and far-reaching and serious, and that it had implications far beyond football helmets."
"The bill language gets into areas that are new for us in terms of legislative oversight of our standards," Cove said. "So we're taking it extremely seriously."
[Associated
Press;
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