Las Vegas Review-Journal

CCSD board to OK $500K settlement after lawsuit

Students hurt in 2013 initially asked for less

- By Amelia Pak-harvey Las Vegas Review-journal

The Clark County School Board on Thursday is set to approve a $500,000 settlement — an amount significan­tly higher than originally sought — for three former Canyon Springs High School students injured at a school event in 2013.

Bijo’n Perry, Gabriel Ureno and Gerad Davis sued the district in 2014 alleging that the district and school administra­tors, including former Principal Ronnie Guerzon, failed to ensure the safety of students at a senior breakfast in a school with a history of violence.

The district did not ensure that only students at the North Las Vegas school could attend the breakfast, the complaint said, and also did not have as many employees present as required by the district’s policies and procedures.

The students sustained physical, mental and emotional injuries from attacks during a melee at the breakfast, according to the lawsuit. All three also were struck with a firearm during the attack, the Review-journal previously reported.

A jury sided with the former students last year, but the district appealed to the state Supreme Court, It just screams waste — waste of judicial resources and time and money. They would not have incurred those attorney fees and costs had they resolved it at the time and had a more reasonable approach to litigation. which hasn’t ruled on the case.

The School Board is scheduled to vote at Thursday’s meeting on whether to approve $170,000 for Ureno, $165,000 for Davis and $165,000 for Perry. The proposed settlement, which would end the appeal, includes attorney fees and costs, according to the former students’ attorney Adam Ganz.

The district has a track record of fighting lawsuits in court, only to end up paying more than the amount initially sought, according to a Review-journal analysis of multiple cases.

In this case, the plaintiffs originally offered to settle for a total of $272,904 in 2017 — with each receiving under $100,000. The district rejected the offer, the case went to trial and a jury ruled in favor of the plaintiffs.

An amended judgment in March put the district on the hook for $708,882 in settlement­s, attorneys fees and costs — so it extended the legal battle by appealing the decision.

Ganz said the district would have saved time, energy and resources in this case as well if it had not perpetuate­d litigation for years.

“They should’ve … recognized that

we were trying to settle for a reasonable amount,” he said.

“It just screams waste — waste of judicial resources and time and money. They would not have incurred those attorney fees and costs had they resolved it at the time and had a more reasonable approach to litigation.”

The district did not respond to a request for comment.

The settlement comes shortly after the district cut $17 million from its budget for the upcoming school year by eliminatin­g 170 dean positions. The settlement roughly equates to the cost of four deans, who on average earn about $111,000 a year.

Rising legal liabilitie­s were one reason for the district’s deficit in 201718, after an actuarial assessment determined that it needed to set aside more money to cover potential legal losses in the future.

Contact Amelia Pak-harvey at apak-harvey@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-4630. Follow @Ameliapakh­arvey on Twitter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States