3 minute read

Student and professor team up to draft proposal on streaming royalty for musicians - and Rolling Stone takes notice

As a Willamette Law 2L, Jordyn Wickstrom JD’24 didn’t picture herself behind the scenes of a Congressional Resolution featured in a Rolling Stone article. But that’s where she ended up in the Summer of 2022, after working as a research assistant for Professor Rohan Grey, a primary drafter of a Congressional Resolution introduced by U.S. Reps. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) and co-sponsor Jamaal Bowman (D-NY) on August 11, 2022.

Jordan Wickstrom JD'24

The resolution proposes a new streaming royalty for musicians, offering payment on a per-stream basis. Although streaming services now provide the main avenue for listening to music, performing musicians are paid very little for their work.

Wickstrom became interested in helping draft the resolution and subsequent bill after taking Grey’s Contracts class as a 1L and working with him on Oregon public banking legislation. Despite her unfamiliarity with the subject matter, she dove in.

“I didn’t know anything about how music royalties are paid to artists and had to do a lot of research to familiarize myself with copyright law and the royalties artists get for their work,” she says. “I started by drafting a preamble of the resolution and looking into why this was important, comparing with other countries. I also tied in things that have happened that make this a noteworthy issue, such as the COVID pandemic, which caused musicians to earn significantly less.”

In addition, Wickstrom worked on the definition section of the bill, identifying terms like “record company” and “performance rights.” To do so, she read laws already in place to ensure the definitions were consistent with how the terms were used there.

The pay issue came to the forefront for Tlaib after she partnered with the Union of Musicians and Allied Workers.

Tlaib says in the Rolling Stone article that when she met with members of the union, it was obvious that the concept of paying musicians fairly was related to the pursuit of justice she was already focused on. The resolution is meant to build awareness, for both those who make the law and those who stream the artists’ music, that musicians aren’t being paid fairly.

Although the work is not complete, it is a step forward, she says. She introduced the resolution to Congress in mid-August 2022, with the full bill forthcoming.

Wickstrom isn’t sure of her future career plans as an attorney, but she says the experience was valuable. She learned the differences between a resolution and a bill and says the drafting skills were transferable to her work with the public banking working group. She appreciates that Grey, as a professor, always tries to ensure his students have experiential learning opportunities.

Grey, who has helped draft various legislative initiatives in collaboration with

Tlaib and other members of Congress, was thrilled with Wickstrom’s work.

“Jordyn is talented, driven and always up for a challenge,” Grey explains. “She assisted both with research and statutory language, and participated in strategy meetings with the Union’s campaign team and Congressional staff. She was fantastic, and some of her original text is in the final draft.”

In the short term, the resolution is making its way through Congress while Tlaib and Bowman look for additional co-sponsors to sign onto it. The full text of the bill is also being finalized in collaboration with legislative counsel and a team affiliated with the Cyberlaw Clinic at Harvard Law School.

Wickstrom and Grey will continue to assist with the legislative drafting process and anticipate the release of the full bill soon.

Professor Rohan Grey
This article is from: