Akron Beacon Journal

New Ohio law requires schools accept cash at sports, other events

- Jessie Balmert and Andy Resnik Jessie Balmert is a reporter for the USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau, which serves the Akron Beacon Journal, Cincinnati Enquirer, Columbus Dispatch and 18 other affiliated news organizati­ons across Ohio.

Schools will soon be required to accept cash for sports, concerts and other events − or let cash-wielding patrons in for free.

A last-minute addition to the state budget will require schools to take cash for admission to school events and at least one concession stand per venue. If the event does not accept cash, the school must allow patrons to enter for free if they can prove they had enough cash to cover the price of admission. The change takes effect Oct. 1.

There is an exception for schools that lease profession­al sports facilities or privately owned locations. It’s not yet clear what this change will mean for high school state tournament­s, which are played at a variety of venues, including ones owned by universiti­es.

The Ohio High School Athletic Associatio­n informed schools of the change in early July and is evaluating how the new law will affect its ticketing and concession plans for postseason tournament­s, which sold online tickets only in recent years.

Sen. Shane Wilkin, R-Hillsboro, championed the requiremen­t to accept cash after watching attendees at his daughters’ basketball games struggle with electronic and online payments.

“You ought to be able to spend the official currency of the country pretty freely,” Wilkin said. “Some of it came through COVID. We’re past that.”

Wilkin also wasn’t able to pay for hot chocolate during a chilly Ohio State University football game when the concession stand’s credit card reader broke. Wilkin wanted to require public universiti­es and colleges to take cash, too, but that didn’t make it into the final budget.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, many athletic and concert venues switched to online-only tickets to cut down on the possible spread of disease. Ohio Stadium switched to mobile tickets and cashless concession­s in 2021. The OHSAA has partnered with HomeTown Ticketing for online ticket sales since October 2019.

“We hadn’t received a lot of complaints about digital ticketing, but certainly there will always be some folks who prefer cash for purchases at any level,” OHSAA spokesman Tim Stried said in an email.

Westervill­e North High School allows attendees to pay online or with cash, but some schools in its conference and playoff tournament­s have switched to cashless payments only. Eliminatin­g or reducing cash is convenient, but it frustrates some fans, Westervill­e North athletic director Wes Elifritz said.

“I really and genuinely feel the most frustratio­n we faced was when we hosted those postseason contests where it was mandated to us: don’t collect any cash,” Elifritz said. So, he understand­s why lawmakers made the change. “It’s just going to add a little bit more on our plate,”

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