While the vast majority of American universities and colleges closed in response to the pandemic, Liberty University is a unique case.
The evangelical school in Virginia, founded by infamous televangelist Jerry Falwell Sr., is run by Jerry Falwell Jr., who said a month ago that he considers it “strange” that many Americans are “overreacting” to the crisis, adding that the “hype” surrounding the pandemic is intended to hurt Donald Trump politically.
Soon after, the News & Advance in Lynchburg reported that Liberty would defy the national trend and remain partially open. The policy included students living in on-campus housing, where they would continue to take classes online.
NBC News reported yesterday that the university’s policy has led to a lawsuit from a Liberty student who is demanding a refund.
The anonymous plaintiff said that if the university, established by Moral Majority founder Jerry Falwell Sr., is to remain open at full cost, then it should also make its full array of student services available, according the federal complaint filed in Lynchburg, Virginia, where the university is based. The school has moved all classes online, shut down on-campus recreation centers, converted all dining options to takeout only and ended all student activities — and it still wants to keep all tuition and other fees paid by spring-semester students, according to the lawsuit, which seeks class-action status to include other “similarly situated” students.
According to the lawsuit, “Liberty University is, in a very real sense, profiting from the COVID-19 pandemic — keeping its campus and campus services ‘open’ as a pretext to retain Plaintiff’s and the other Class members’ room, board and campus fees, despite no longer having to incur the full cost of providing those services, all the while putting students’ finances and health at risk.”









