
Columbia University agrees to pay $220M in deal with Trump administration
Columbia University has reached a deal with the Trump administration to pay more than $220 million to the federal government to restore federal research money that was cancelled in the name of combating antisemitism on campus, the university announced Wednesday.
Under the agreement, the Ivy League school will pay a $200 million US settlement over three years, the university said. It will also pay $21 million US to settle investigations brought by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
"This agreement marks an important step forward after a period of sustained federal scrutiny and institutional uncertainty," acting university president Claire Shipman said.
The Trump administration pulled the funding because of what it described as the university's failure to squelch antisemitism on campus during the Israel-Hamas war that began in October 2023.
Columbia then agreed to a series of demands laid out by the Republican administration, including overhauling the university's student disciplinary process and adopting a new definition of antisemitism.
Agreement contains no admission of wrongdoing
Wednesday's agreement — which does not include an admission of wrongdoing — codifies those reforms while preserving the university's autonomy, Shipman said.
The school had been threatened with the potential loss of billions of dollars in government support, including more than $400 million US in grants cancelled earlier this year.
"The settlement was carefully crafted to protect the values that define us and allow our essential research partnership with the federal government to get back on track," Shipman said. "Importantly, it safeguards our independence, a critical condition for academic excellence and scholarly exploration, work that is vital to the public interest."
As part of the deal, Columbia agreed to a series of changes previously announced in March, including reviewing its Middle East curriculum to make sure it was "comprehensive and balanced" and appointing new faculty to its Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies. It also promised to end programs "that promote unlawful efforts to achieve race-based outcomes, quotas, diversity targets or similar efforts."
The university will also have to issue a report to a monitor assuring that its programs "do not promote unlawful DEI goals."
The pact comes after months of uncertainty and fraught negotiations at the more than 270-year-old university. It was among the first targets of U.S. President Donald Trump's crackdown on pro-Palestinian campus protests and on colleges that he asserts have allowed Jewish students be threatened and harassed.
Columbia's own antisemitism task force found last summer that Jewish students had faced verbal abuse, ostracism and classroom humiliation during the spring 2024 demonstrations.
Other Jewish students took part in the protests, however, and protest leaders maintain they aren't targeting Jews but rather criticizing the Israeli government and its war in Gaza.
WATCH | Protesters clash with police at U.S. university campuses:
U.S. campuses see clashes, arrests as Canadian encampments grow
1 year ago
Disciplinary action against student protesters
Columbia's leadership — a revolving door of three interim presidents in the last year — has declared that the campus climate needs to change.
Yesterday, the university announced disciplinary action against students who participated in a pro-Palestinian demonstration inside the school's main library before final exams in May and an encampment during alumni weekend last year.
A student activist group said nearly 80 students were told they have been suspended for one to three years or expelled. The sanctions issued by a university judicial board also include probation and degree revocations, Columbia said in a statement.
Wednesday's settlement also contains an agreement by Columbia to ask prospective international students "questions designed to elicit their reasons for wishing to study in the United States," and establishes processes to make sure all students are committed to "civil discourse."
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Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account What's truly lazy is the platform's approach to pricing transparency. Abusive pricing is abusive pricing, regardless of convenience. DoorDash, a dominant player in the food delivery economy, is now at the centre of a major legal challenge. In June 2025, the Competition Bureau filed an application with the Competition Tribunal alleging that DoorDash misled consumers by advertising deceptively low prices, only to reveal unavoidable fees — service charges, regulatory recovery costs, and small-order surcharges — at the final stage of checkout. Known as 'drip pricing,' this tactic is precisely what recent amendments to the Competition Act were designed to eliminate. 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When essential purchases are subject to opaque pricing models, it undermines not just trust but fairness in the market. DoorDash has now responded by claiming that all fees were 'prominently displayed' before customers confirmed payment. They also argue that consumers had alternatives: Subscribe to DashPass, choose pickup, or spend more to avoid certain charges. From a legal standpoint, these defences may hold weight. But from a food economics perspective, they miss the point. If the price consumers click on is not the price they ultimately pay, then price signals are distorted — and markets cease to function efficiently. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Consumer protection laws are meant to ensure pricing clarity, not reward platforms for building in workarounds. For some users, especially older adults or people with disabilities, these apps can be overwhelming. Complexity is not an excuse for opacity. 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