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COVID class-action splurge continues: university near White House pays $5M for shutting down class
Just the News ^ | January 4, 2024 | Greg Piper

Posted on 01/05/2024 5:47:18 AM PST by george76

Comparably sized but more prestigious Cornell paid far less this fall, suggesting big payouts could continue into 2024. Cheers from GWU law professor who encouraged students to sue university.

Class-action lawyers may have frowned when Cornell University agreed to pay just $3 million last fall to settle a lawsuit seeking tuition refunds from its shutdown of classroom instruction early in the COVID-19 pandemic – a far cry from Ivy League peer Columbia's $12.5 million payout for the same actions two years earlier.

They are likely grinning now that a comparably sized but less prestigious private university, blocks from the White House, has agreed to pay much more than Cornell, raising the prospect of more big payouts for class counsel well into 2024.

George Washington University reached a $5.4 million settlement in a class-action suit filed by students and parents that will give the class representatives up to $10,000 each, other eligible students "approximately" $193 each and no more than a third of the total for plaintiffs' lawyers.

Class members have until March 11 to file objections and exclude themselves from the settlement to preserve their legal right to sue GWU. They can also comment on its "fairness" to U.S. District Judge Richard Leon at an April 2 hearing for final approval.

....

Cheering for the litigation and resulting settlement: one of GWU's most vocal and feisty law professors, John Banzhaf, who pioneered public interest lawsuits against Big Tobacco and has needled the administration on free speech and students' rights for years.

Banzhaf took a victory lap Thursday after GWU alerted eligible students, noting he publicly encouraged Revolutionaries and students nationwide to sue for refunds from COVID dorm evictions and warned colleges resuming "Zoom U" amid the Omicron variant surge they were legally vulnerable.

He also promoted and celebrated early rulings against universities, such as a Florida federal court's rejection of Barry University's argument that in-person and online education were functionally the same, which laid the groundwork for a $2.4 million settlement in fall 2021.

"This is kind of like purchasing a Cadillac at full price and receiving an Oldsmobile," U.S. District Judge Jose Martinez wrote Oct. 30, 2020 – a quip quickly cited by his Sunshine State federal peer Judge Rodolfo Ruiz as well as the Michigan Court of Appeals and Massachusetts Superior Court in similar cases.

It's not clear how many colleges have been sued for pandemic closures, but Times Higher Education reported last March that about 300 suits had been filed in the U.S., with then-recent settlements of $2.5 million to $9 million at both high-profile and lesser known universities. It cited the pending deadline for colleges to spend federal COVID aid as a key factor.

The University of Colorado followed in April with a $5 million settlement, and University of Delaware in June with $6.3 million, which covers "academics and extra-curricular activities," according to a Stateline review of class-action suits in August.

A federal judge approved the University of Minnesota's $3.25 million settlement last month, under which more than 50,000 students will get a paltry $38-40, KSTP reported.

While more class-action suits "continue to appear on court dockets," McDermott Will & Emery lawyers shared "promising trends" for universities in an Inside Higher Ed opinion essay last month.

Judges often reject motions to dismiss but have shown more reservations at the class-certification stage when it comes to whether common issues among class members "predominate over" individual issues, lawyers Lisa Gerson and Michael Ferrera wrote.

"Universities are seeing the greatest success at the summary judgment stage," because their student handbooks expressly cover emergency closures, local laws forced them to close or they incurred financial losses in transitions to remote learning, according to the essay.

GWU wasn't so lucky in March 2022 when the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit reinstated claims that it breached "implied-in-fact contracts for in-person education" and "impliedly promised to provide on-campus activities and services in exchange for some of the student fees at issue."

But it took another 16 months until Judge Leon received a 71-page proposed settlement from the parties, and the settlement web address was registered the same day, July 31. The settlement says they engaged in "extensive discovery" after the suit's reinstatement and reached an "agreement in principle" during a "full-day mediation" on May 22.

Leon gave the settlement preliminary approval Dec. 12, according to the court docket, but Just the News could not find any announcement from the university or news media before this week. Google cached the settlement website Dec. 28.

The GW Hatchet implied the settlement notice had just been sent to students in its Jan. 3 report, which said the administration answered questions earlier in the day. The campus newspaper paraphrased a spokesperson as saying the university "celebrates its quick transition to remote instruction" in the spring semester.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia; US: Florida; US: Maryland; US: New York
KEYWORDS: college; cornell; cornelluniversity; covid; covid19; education; gwu; university; yale

1 posted on 01/05/2024 5:47:18 AM PST by george76
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To: george76
$193 each

Chump change compared to private university tuition costs. Even the $10k to the named plaintiffs isn't spectacular. (Tuition is $32,350 a semester per a quick internet search; the $193 doesn't even cover the annual "Student Fees" of $290.)

2 posted on 01/05/2024 5:57:56 AM PST by PAR35
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To: PAR35

It’s not a lot of money, true. But these lawsuits and payouts will help to deter future lockdowns. That is a definite plus.


3 posted on 01/05/2024 6:04:34 AM PST by Blennos ( Byaasea)
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To: george76

We need to see lawsuits brought because big pharma suppressed evidence that the vax was 1) ineffective in many cases 2) harmful in many other cases and 3) they mislead the people to believe that the vax they were getting was approved. As far as I can tell, only one vax (Comirnaty) was approved but it was never available in the US 4) that the government and big pharma colluded to illegally experiment on the people with unproven therapies that had NEVER been successfully tested and ha FAILED when attempted on lab animals.


4 posted on 01/05/2024 6:24:40 AM PST by Blood of Tyrants ( "It is easier to fool people than to convince them they have been fooled."- Mark Twain)
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To: PAR35

I never enter class action lawsuits because they are designed to make the lawyers rich and everyone else gets a pittance.


5 posted on 01/05/2024 6:26:41 AM PST by Blood of Tyrants ( "It is easier to fool people than to convince them they have been fooled."- Mark Twain)
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To: george76

Alumni, students and applicants should also sue because 1) college is a scam to launder federal money through school loans to leftist school staff at the expense of students and 2) the value of a diploma has been diminished by the schools dropping academy excellence and focusing on ideology, and 3) blatant discrimination and abuse of minorities.


6 posted on 01/05/2024 6:41:52 AM PST by UnwashedPeasant (The pandemic we suffer from is not COVID. It is Marxist Democrat Leftism.)
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To: Blood of Tyrants

Blood of Tyrants - I can relate to your thinking. OTOH, it is somewhat satisfying/useful to see the beatdown upon the particular defendant at the end of the class-action litigation. And I don’t think winning a class-action is just a slam-dunk in every case.


7 posted on 01/05/2024 8:51:14 AM PST by Honest Nigerian
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To: PAR35
Chump change compared to private university tuition costs. Even the $10k to the named plaintiffs isn't spectacular. (Tuition is $32,350 a semester per a quick internet search; the $193 doesn't even cover the annual "Student Fees" of $290.)

Yea, first thing I noticed right away. Granted, the students still did receive the "education", just as remote classes instead of in-person. Good for some, but I think most would prefer in-person. So I'm sure that's why the total amount wasn't closer to full tuition for every student.
8 posted on 01/05/2024 9:46:50 AM PST by Svartalfiar
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To: george76

Contaminated: We’ve Been Their Lab Rats All Along!
SONIA ELIJAH JANUARY 15, 2024

An increasing number of prominent medical professionals have called for an immediate halt in the use of the alleged, “safe and effective” COVID-19 mRNA shots.

Now, the Florida State Surgeon General, Dr. Joseph Ladapo, has joined the ever-growing list.

https://brownstone.org/articles/contaminated-weve-been-their-lab-rats-all-along/


9 posted on 01/16/2024 4:32:50 PM PST by Grampa Dave ("Every single one of us should lose any hope with the Biden am and Joe Pedo Lover!)
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