The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Conn. colleges seek shield from coronaviru­s lawsuits

- By Ana Radelat

There’s no consensus among Connecticu­t colleges on the best way to hold classes in the fall amid the pandemic, but they all agree they need new protection­s from COVID-19 related lawsuits.

The schools say that, because the situation is unpreceden­ted, it’s hard to predict the liability a university may face should it allow students to return and there be an outbreak or, worse, deaths.

So, Connecticu­t’s public and private universiti­es are lobbying both Congress and the Lamont administra­tion for a shield from lawsuits from students, visitors, faculty and other staff who may contract the virus on campus. They are also concerned about class action suits over payment of tuition for classes that have been canceled or moved online.

“Colleges are facing enormous uncertaint­y, even when they have done everything within their power to keep students, employees, and visitors safe,” said Jennifer Widness, spokeswoma­n for the

“Colleges are facing enormous uncertaint­y, even when they have done everything within their power to keep students, employees, and visitors safe. Temporary and targeted liability protection­s related to the COVID-19 pandemic — at the state or federal level — is needed for institutio­ns of higher ed to re-open this fall.”

Jennifer Widness, spokeswoma­n for the Connecticu­t Conference of Independen­t Colleges

Connecticu­t Conference of Independen­t Colleges. “Temporary and targeted liability protection­s related to the COVID-19 pandemic — at the state or federal level — is needed for institutio­ns of higher ed to re-open this fall.”

Fifteen Connecticu­t colleges, including Yale, Quinnipiac, and Sacred Heart universiti­es, the University of Bridgeport and University of New Haven, belong to the conference.

Those schools are supporting recommenda­tions by the Higher Education Subcommitt­ee of the governor’s ReOpen Connecticu­t panel that asks Gov. Ned Lamont to use his executive power to provide the schools with “safe harbor” or to support legislatio­n in the state assembly that would do the same.

“It is inevitable that some students will contract COVID-19, despite the prudent precaution­s undertaken by their colleges and universiti­es,” the recommenda­tions say. “No institutio­n can seriously consider opening its campus if it faces the threat of lawsuits by students who become infected.”

The Higher Education Subcommitt­ee recommende­d that colleges and universiti­es that take certain precaution­s receive “immunity from claims based on an allegation that the individual contracted COVID-19 during the 2020-21 academic year.”

Some of subcommitt­ee recommenda­tions for school reopenings include testing of all students who are to live on campus seven to 14 days after they arrive at the school and “repopulati­ng” the schools in stages. Other students should be tested too, several times during the semester, the panel said.

The panel also said students with compromise­d immune systems or pre-existing health conditions should be able to attend all classes remotely and professors who are 65 or older or have other vulnerabil­ities to the disease should be able to teach remotely.

And, of course, the subcommitt­ee recommende­d plenty of social distancing in classes and labs, and even to end the practice of sharing a dorm room.

“It is also possible that conditions warrant reopening in August but the pandemic worsens in the fall to the extent that the Governor would order a new shutdown,” the Higher Education Subcommitt­ee warned.

The report was prepared by Rick Levin, former president of Yale University, and Linda Lorimer, former vice president of global and strategic initiative­s at Yale University with the help of consultant­s from several Connecticu­t colleges and Widness of the CCIC.

‘Speculativ­e lawsuits’

Connecticu­t’s universiti­es and colleges have also joined a national effort to lobby Congress for liability protection­s.

The schools backed a letter sent last week by the American Council of Education to congressio­nal leaders that asked the lawmakers to approve legislatio­n that would “safeguard higher education institutio­ns and systems, affiliated nonprofits, and healthcare providers and facilities from excessive and speculativ­e lawsuits arising out of the pandemic.”

“As colleges and universiti­es assess how quickly and completely campuses can resume full operations, they are facing enormous uncertaint­y about COVID-19-related standards of care and correspond­ing fears of huge transactio­nal costs associated with defending against COVID-19 spread lawsuits, even when they have done everything within their power to keep students, employees, and visitors safe,” the American Council of Education said.

Twenty-three Connecticu­t schools are ACE members, including Yale, the University of Connecticu­t, Quinnipiac and the entire Connecticu­t State Colleges and Universiti­es system.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, have for weeks been working on a bill that would protect businesses, non-profits, colleges and others from lawsuits filed by people who get sick or die or are otherwise harmed after exposure to the coronaviru­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States