Columbia University to pay Trump admin $200m to settle dispute

The University of Columbia agreed to pay $ 200 million for the accusations that Trump could not protect Jewish students.
The settlement, which will be paid to the federal government for more than three years, was announced in a statement made by the university on Wednesday.
On the other hand, the government agreed to return a $ 400 million in the federal grants, which was frozen or terminated in March.
Columbia was the first school directed for preventing anti-Semitism among the Israeli-Gazze war protests last year. In March, he had already accepted a series of demands from the White House.
Education Secretary Linda McMahon said that the agreement with Columbia University was “a seismic change in the struggle of our nation” to keep the universities responsible.
“This agreement points to an important step forward after a sustainable federal examination and institutional uncertainty,” Columbia’s President Claire Shipman said: “
Columbia is one of the Trump administration on a list of universities on protests against Israel’s war campaign in Gaza and transgender athletes and other issues, including transgender athletes and diversity, equality and containing programs.
According to a viewer of the American Progress Center, which is a liberal thinking tank, the government targeted more than 4,000 grants at more than 600 universities and colleges in the United States.
A month after Trump swear to the office, his administration issued Federal funds of $ 400 million on the allegations of anti -Semitism.
Frozen funds immediately pushed a threat to the university’s research and said that Mrs. Shipman reached a “overturning point” in June.
The White House’s decision pushed Columbia to enforce the Campus changes requested by the administration, including the reorganization of the Middle East Research Department and to hire a “Special Officer” team with the authority to remove and arrest the campus.
As part of the monetary settlement, Columbia said that the vast majority of canceled or paused grants would be restored.
The agreement includes that the college codes many changes announced earlier and that a commonly selected independent monitor will be appointed to assess the implementation of the agreement.
Some of these arrangements require that disciplined students, who are part of the camp on the campus of the university as part of Gaza protests, require protesters not allowing facial masks during demonstrations, further supervision of student groups and expansion of civil servants on the campus.
The university said that the agreement is not the acceptance of making wrong.
“This agreement is taking an important step forward after a sustainable federal examination and institutional uncertainty.” He said.
“The settlement was carefully prepared to protect the values that define us and to allow our basic research partnership with the federal government to return.”
The authority added that the conditions of the agreement will maintain the independence of the school.
Columbia’s desire to comply with the university in March was greeted with intense criticism of some of the people who felt that Ivy League College had accepted their independence.
Harvard adopted an opposite approach.
Although the government has suspended billions of funds from the university and has taken action to end the ability to register international students, Harvard suits the administration.
Harvard, the richest university in the country and the country’s highest government branch White House, began on Monday.
The Trump administration showed that schools hoped to go more in the direction of Columbia.
McMahon called Columbia’s reforms “a roadmap for distinguished universities who want to regain the trust of the American people”.
“I believe that they will fluctuate in the higher education sector and change the course of campus culture for years,” he said.




