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UI, regents settle racial discrimination lawsuit for $4.2 million with former Iowa football players

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The Iowa Athletics department will pay nearly $2.2 million in the settlement, as well as work with a UT-Austin professor for DEI initiatives.




Chloe Peterson, Sports Editor
March 6, 2023


The University of Iowa and state Board of Regents plan to settle a racial discrimination lawsuit with 12 former Iowa football players for $4.2 million on Monday.
The case’s plaintiffs — Akrum Wadley, Jonathan Parker, Marcel Joly, Aaron Mends, Maurice Fleming, Reggie Spearman, Kevonte Martin-Manley, Darian Cooper, LaRon Taylor, Brandon Simon, Javon Foy, and Terrance Harris — brought a lawsuit against the UI, the regents, and multiple Iowa football coaches in 2020, accusing the Hawkeye football program of racially motivated discrimination and harassment.
Head coach Kirk Ferentz, offensive coordinator Brian Ferentz, linebackers coach Seth Wallace, former strength and conditioning coach Chris Doyle, and athletic director Gary Barta were all dropped from the lawsuit earlier this week, leaving the UI and Board of Regents as the only defendants.

The Iowa Athletics department will pay exactly $2.175 million of the settlement costs, while the UI asked the state to pay $2 million from the taxpayer fund.
The settlement, which is pending State Appeals Board approval, involves a total of $4.175 million in attorney fees, legal costs, and a payout of settlement claims to the players. The players originally demanded $20 million in the lawsuit.
State Auditor Rob Sand, however, said he will not vote in favor of the settlement as long as Barta is still at Iowa.
The board is made up of three members: the auditor, the treasurer of state, and director of the department. The board needs just a majority to approve the money coming from taxpayer dollars.
Iowa Athletics has paid out multiple settlements in the past 10 years, including $6.5 million in a Title IX lawsuit from former field hockey coach Tracey Greisbaum and $400,000 to four women’s swimmers in a separate Title IX suit.
This is the first time the UI is requesting the state pay a portion of the settlement through the taxpayer fund, according to the Des Moines Register.
“Enough is enough,” Sand said in a statement to other board members. “Clear personal accountability is necessary. I will not support taxpayers funding this settlement unless Gary Barta is no longer employed at the university and forfeits any severance or similar pay. I encourage you to join me. Real accountability will help prevent discrimination, protecting both taxpayers and future victims.”
Other settlement terms
The UI will put $90,000 total toward the plaintiffs’ graduate or professional school tuition expenses, which will be reimbursed directly from the athletics department. The plaintiffs must submit for reimbursement before June 1, 2026, and it is capped at $20,000 per plaintiff. The university will also provide mental health counseling services for a one-year period beginning between March 15, 2023, and March 15, 2024.
As part of the settlement, the UI will pay for registration and travel expenses for up to 10 Hawkeye student-athletes to go to the Black Student Athlete Summit for the next three years.
The athletics department is also mandated to have nondiscriminatory access to pro day events and a recruiting plan for African American candidates for coaching internships.
The Iowa Athletics department will also work with Leonard Moore, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin, to help with the operations of the five-year diversity, equity, and inclusion plan.
Moore’s agreement with the athletics department runs from this March to May 31, 2024, and he will be compensated no more than $35,000 for the year. According to the settlement, Moore will work with Barta and other members of the athletics leadership team, including the senior associate athletic director for academic services and assistant athletic director for diversity, equity, and inclusion.
He will also meet with student-athletes and coaches twice in-person during the year and make recommendations on national opportunities for speakers and other programming.

Degree completion program

The settlement mandates the athletics department provide tuition assistance for the plaintiffs, as well as other student-athletes who did not graduate, to finish their undergraduate degree at the UI.
The Iowa Athletics Degree Completion Program will help former student-athletes finish their degrees at the UI.
“The Athletic Department remains committed to providing an inclusive and welcoming environment for every student-athlete and staff member involved in our program,” Barta said in a statement. “The Hawkeyes overarching goal to win every time we compete, graduate every student-athlete that comes to Iowa, and to do it right, remains our focus.”
The Student-Athlete Academic Services Office, head coaches, and sports administrators will try to reengage athletes who have 30 or fewer credits to graduate and intend to complete the program.
To be eligible for the program, student-athletes had to have completed their eligibility at the UI and received athletic aid in the process. While in this program, the students will qualify for up to the same percentage of aid they received as an athlete — not including room and board.

Dismissal of defendants

As part of the lawsuit, the plaintiffs agreed to file documents with the Polk County District Court to nonsuit or dismiss Kirk Ferentz, Brian Ferentz, Doyle, and Barta.
The plaintiffs will also dismiss the UI and regents with prejudice, meaning they cannot refile a case against the parties.
If the State Appeals Board does not approve the settlement, however, the UI and regents will toll any limitations for six months following dismissal or nonsuit, according to settlement documents.


 
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I was never following this that closely, but I haven't even heard of most of those players. Nice payday for them.

"The Iowa Athletics department will also work with Leonard Moore, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin, to help with the operations of the five-year diversity, equity, and inclusion plan."

That will probably be prohibited by state law before the duration of the five years.
 
Lawyers win and this thing remains in the media,... I think the University just wants this gone...
That's my guess. Even if the University wins it being tied up in a trial pertaining to race and discrimination is enough to make all the assholes clench.

And I'm not sure Barta is to blame for much of anything.
 
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Has that dumbass Gazette writer put out another hit piece on KF about this yet? If not, it's only a matter of time.
 
I see this as similar to people who were never exposed to Christianity not getting into heaven.
I mean black people in Iowa have to be so rare that your coaches probably didn't know that what they were doing was wrong.
 
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That's my guess. Even if the University wins it being tied up in a trial pertaining to race and discrimination is enough to make all the assholes clench.

And I'm not sure Barta is to blame for much of anything.
I don't blame Barta for this particular lawsuit.

The field Hockey boondoggle is the one I thought he was at fault for....
 
I don't know much of the details of everything that went on but from the outside looking in, agreeing to pay $4 million certainly seems like an admission of guilt by the University (even though I'm sure there will specifically not be an admission of guilt in the settlement).
 
You would never get me to settle on something I didn’t do. Also, if the U of I is settling on claims of racism by the football program against players that just plays into the narrative that some racist actions were taking place. Obviously the dismissal by Chris Doyle cemented that a couple years ago.

I don’t think this is the “it will just go away” that many posters thought it would be. Especially after settling. The only thing worse is being found guilty. I have to believe there was smoke. Not to mention, opposing coaches will get mileage for years to come out of tying the Iowa football program and racism together.
 
Something tells me that for this to get signed off on, blood will indeed be squeezed from the 4 turnips dismissed from the lawsuit.

One's already gone, 3 to go. And before y'all turn on me for throwing the Ferentzi and Barta under the bus, I felt like there wasn't rock solid proof they were truly guilty of overt racism so much as a whole lot of tone deafness.

But that apparently was enough for a settlement. And like I say, I get the feeling that $2M will get "paid back" to the state in some fashion one way or another by those 3 that remain employed.

Be patient, folks. It'll all eventually come out in the wash.
 
Wonder how many of the 12 players actually got their degree. It's certainly a nice payout for them none of which to my knowledge made it in pro football.
 
You would never get me to settle on something I didn’t do. Also, if the U of I is settling on claims of racism by the football program against players that just plays into the narrative that some racist actions were taking place. Obviously the dismissal by Chris Doyle cemented that a couple years ago.

I don’t think this is the “it will just go away” that many posters thought it would be. Especially after settling. The only thing worse is being found guilty. I have to believe there was smoke. Not to mention, opposing coaches will get mileage for years to come out of tying the Iowa football program and racism together.
Well Kirk on the stand could have looked bad at least nationally. Old White Dude and he can come across arrogant/stubborn at times.
 
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