http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootbal ... se-at-nlrb
Essentially, athletes at Northwestern attempted to unionize. The National Labor Relations Board decided in favor of the athletes, declaring that athletes should be treated as employees instead of student-athletes and should have the right to unionize.
This ruling only affects private universities, because public school athletes would have to appeal to their state's labor board instead of the national one. This probably isn't going to affect schools like Duke and Stanford, which can afford to pay their athletes. But Drake, Bradley, Evansville? This could make it impossible for smaller private schools to afford college athletic programs.
The relevant goals of the union are as follows:
2. Raise the scholarship amount.
3. Prevent players from being stuck paying sports-related medical expenses.
6. Prohibit universities from using a permanent injury suffered during athletics as a reason to reduce/eliminate a scholarship.
8. Eliminate restrictions on legitimate employment and players ability to directly benefit from commercial opportunities.
10. Guarantee that college athletes are granted an athletic release from their university if they wish to transfer schools.
11. Allow college athletes of all sports the ability to transfer schools one time without punishment.
And of course, as employees they could eventually lobby for a stipend or wage in addition to scholarships, thought that is not currently one of their declared goals. Still, this could be disastrous for half the MVC. If the state labor boards uniformly side with the national labor board it could be end of the mid-major conferences as we know them.