From Yahoo Sports:
“Paralympians are now paid the
same as Olympians for winning medals”
Paralympians and their Olympic
counterparts are now being paid the same amount of money for winning medals,
thanks to a rule that went into effect in Sept. 2018. The Tokyo Games is the
first Olympics that has taken place since the rule was passed, though it was
retroactively applied to the 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang. “Paralympians
are an integral part of our athlete community and we need to ensure we’re
appropriately rewarding their accomplishments,” United States Olympic Committee
CEO Sarah Hirshland said back in 2018 when the rule change was announced. “Our financial investment in U.S. Paralympics
and the athletes we serve is at an all-time high, but this was one area where a
discrepancy existed in our funding model that we felt needed to change." The
decision to make medal pay equal for the Olympics and Paralympics was just one
part of a movement to recognize the Paralympics on the same level as the
Olympics. The USOC changed its name to the United States Olympic and Paralympic
Committee in 2019.
How much less were
Paralympians paid before the rule? According to the New York Times in 2019,
Paralympians were paid $7,500 for gold, $5,250 for silver, and $3,750 for
bronze. The decision to equalize medal pay increased the payouts for
Paralympians by as much as 400 percent. Now Paralympians are earning $37,500
for a gold medal, $22,500 for silver and $15,000 for bronze.
Athletes like Oksana Masters, an
8-time Paralympic medalist in cross country skiing and rowing, celebrated the
decision as "life changing," as it finally demonstrated that
Paralympic athletes are equal to Olympic athletes. The Paralympics will begin
Aug. 25 and finish Sept. 5.
^ This is long over-due. ^
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