University of Chicago settles admissions suit alleging it favored wealthy applicants

The University of Chicago has agreed to pay $13.5 million to current and former students as part of an antitrust lawsuit brought against 17 prestigious schools, claiming the institutions artificially inflated tuition prices by keeping financial aid packages low.

The settlement, which was announced Monday, still needs to be approved by the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. Under the settlement, the university has not admitted to any wrongdoing and officials maintain theyโ€™ve done nothing wrong.

The University of Chicago is the first of the universities to settle in the lawsuit, which was brought against them by five former university students in January of 2022.

The other institutions are: Brown University, California Institute of Technology, University of Chicago, Columbia University, Cornell University, Dartmouth College, Duke University, Emory University, Georgetown University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Northwestern University, University of Notre Dame, Rice University, University of Pennsylvania, Vanderbilt University and Yale University.

Per the suit, the institutions were a part of the 568 Presidents Group, an organization made up of universities that allegedly met frequently to swap information about financial aid practices and create a method to assess need-based aid.

The students accused them of violating Section 568 of the Improving Americaโ€™s Schools Act of 1994, which granted universities an exemption to antitrust laws by enabling them to admit students on a need-blind basis, meaning they wouldnโ€™t consider their financial backgrounds when deciding whether to accept them.

However, the suit accuses the institutions of conspiring to favor wealthy applicants during the admissions process, thereby disfavoring students who needed financial aid. The process was also implemented when deciding whether to admit students onto waitlists, the suit states.

The suit called the universities โ€œgatekeepers of the American dream.โ€

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