The NFL is considering a change to full-time officials. Currently, the job is just part-time for the 120-man force, which consists of 17 seven-man crews. The officials work their full-time job and the part-time gig from May through the Super Bowl with two weekends off during the season. Major League Baseball and the NBA employ full-time umpires and referees because their seasons are so long and teams play more than once a week. Roger Goodell said last month that the NFL will consider employing 10 full-time officials. "This is the first time that we're really going to examine it in the off-season," Carl Johnson, the NFL's vice president of officiating, said. NFL officials are paid about $70,000 to $180,000, depending on their experience, plus travel and lodging expenses and a health-club allowance. Each season they need to pass specific body-fat measures that vary by age and officiating position.