The insurance carrier for a Connecticut city paid $30,000 to settle a lawsuit filed by the family of a third-grader who was barred from school for several days because of Ebola fears.
School officials in Milford, Connecticut, initially told 7-year-old Ikeoluwa Opayemi to stay out of school for three weeks last October after she attended a family wedding in Nigeria. The girl showed no symptoms of Ebola and Nigeria had no known cases of the virus at the time. She was allowed to return to school after her father filed a federal lawsuit.
The New Haven Register sought the agreement under the Freedom of Information Act. The newspaper reported in June that the lawsuit was settled on Oct. 30 and the city’s insurance carrier sent a check for $30,000 to the attorney for the family.
The newspaper said the city’s insurer that paid the lawsuit settlement is Connecticut Interlocal Risk Management Agency (CIRMA), a provider of municipal risk financing and risk management services.
Topics Lawsuits Carriers Connecticut
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
The Big Dog Is Off the Tech Porch: State Farm as ‘Next Gen Good Neighbor’
US P/C Industry Underlying Growth Expected to Slow in 2026
Iran Consolidating Control of Hormuz With Checkpoints, Vetting and Sometimes ‘Fees’
WTW Sues Former Yacht Team, Howden US Over Defection 


