Brigette Honaker  |  March 25, 2020

Category: Covid-19

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teens on an education first tour

A recent class action against Education First claims that the company refuses to refund consumers for trips canceled due to the coronavirus.

Plaintiff Natalia Grabovsky says that her minor child was scheduled to go on an Education First tour, which was canceled due to the global coronavirus pandemic.

Although canceling trips is a proactive way to prevent high school children from contracting the coronavirus or bringing it home to vulnerable adults, Grabovsky claims that Education First has implemented an unfair policy which refuses to refund trip participants.

Education First allegedly includes a “No Public Health Emergency Cash Refund Clause” in their trip contracts in order to refuse full refunds to their customers.

Have your travel or study abroad opportunities been affected by the coronavirus outbreak? Get legal help by clicking here.

This clause reportedly states that, if a trip is canceled due to a public health issue or quarantine, Education First will not give out full cash refunds. Instead, customers will be given a travel voucher for the cost of their trip, less various “non-refundable fees.”

On March 10, the company allegedly sent a letter to one of their customers refusing to issue any cash refund. On March 16, in response to an earlier complaint made by Grabovsky to the Arizona Office of Attorney General, Education First said that they would only refund the plaintiff $2,200 instead of the full $3,200 she paid out-of-pocket.

Grabovsky argues that this response is confusing and inconsistent. The company has reportedly failed to provide any details about the terms of the newer partial refund.

“In canceling the EF Tours in response to the Virus Epidemic the EF Defendants have until only very recently relied on the No Public Health Emergency Cash Refund Clause to deny EF Class Members […] anything but what the No Public Health Emergency Cash Refund Clause vaguely describes as ‘EF future travel voucher[s] for all monies paid,’” the Education First class action lawsuit claims.

“In constantly changing their position as to what they may allow EF Class Members as a cash refund, the EF Defendants have caused utter confusion concerning what their actual position is.”

The plaintiff notes that Education First hasn’t explained why a “flat $1,000” penalty is reasonable, regardless of the amount a consumer has paid. While Grabovsky paid only $3,200 out-of-pocket, other customers reportedly paid up to $15,000 out-of-pocket.

Based on these actions, Grabovsky argues that Education First violated California’s Unfair Competition Law and the California Consumer Legal Remedies Act.

The Education First class action argues that the company’s inclusion of their no cash refund clause was “procedurally and substantively unconscionable” due to the “potentially calamitous effects” of a global pandemic such as COVID-19.

Student in library looking stressedThe plaintiff also alleges that she and other customers were “intentionally lulled into a false sense of security” by the company’s representations that they had the best interest of children and their parents at heart.

Allegedly, the company encouraged this through sponsors from public and private high schools in the United States, as well as using full-time teachers as middlemen.

Finally, the Education First class action claims that the company knew or should have known that a worldwide public health emergency would make rescheduling their tours virtually impossible.

The company allegedly should have known that such an outbreak would result in significant financial consequences, compromising Education First’s ability to provide a future rescheduled trip.

According to Grabovsky, the company should have predicted “that the likely impact of such a cancellation on EF Class Members would be that they would lose some or all of their pre-paid deposit to the unfair financial benefit of the EF Defendants.”

Grabovsky seeks to represent a Class of individuals who entered into an Education First 2019-2020 adhesion contract for a tour arranged through their high school which was scheduled to leave after Jan. 31, 2020. Putative Class Members are included if their tour was canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic and they were refused a full refund for their trip.

The Education First class action seeks at least $5 million in restitution damages and injunctive relief preventing the company from refusing full cash refunds.

Grabovsky and the proposed Class are represented by William McGrane and Matthew Sepuya of McGrane PC and Michael J. Hassen of RealLaw APC.

The Education First Tour Class Action Lawsuit is Grabovsky v. EF Institute for Cultural Exchange Inc., et al., Case No. 3:20-cv-00508-GPC-BLM, in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California.

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30 thoughts onEducation First Class Action Says Tour Company Canceled Trips Over Coronavirus, Refuses Refunds

  1. D Bake says:

    Our $700 due to trip cancellation from the tour company. It was a hardship paying the monthly payments and they just cancel and still make money.

  2. Lucero says:

    They reschedule me 3 times and then transfer me to ef languages for this month for singpore and then it got cancelled it because of covid restrictions! And then they want me to pay an extra 2 k on top of 4.8k How do I get on this!

  3. Shaleka McCrimmon says:

    My Niece and I were going to Ecuador last year. We also bought this so called insurance and they still withheld $1000 from us. We have yet to this day been able to determine what the money was used for considering that our trip was cancelled almost 60 days before departure. We felt that situation was not handled properly at all. How do we get in on the class action suit

  4. Melissa says:

    If you bought travel insurance you can submit a claim for full amount minus the $200 cost of insurance. You can write out of work involuntary due to covid shut down I got full price minus $500 back and submitted a claim for the additional $300. I’m sure it will take months but hopefully I will get it Good luck to you all!!

    1. Shaleka says:

      Last year this was not an option for us. So now I’m wondering if it’s too late to even file a claim

  5. Janet Thiel says:

    My daughter was going to Peru last year. They will take $500. How do I get included in this class action?

    1. Bryan says:

      We had our flight canceled on our way home. Ended up having to pay our own way back, now they won’t refund our money!!!

  6. Cristina avalos says:

    How can I join or begin a claim. This is the second time the trip is cancelled not by us and I am being charged 500.00 dollars.

    1. Melissa says:

      I was told that we can submit a claim stating we had loss of work and would be able to get $300 back we will see. I’m filing my claim now

  7. Jamie M says:

    I had an EF group schedule to travel this March to Costa Rica. Our tour was cancelled by EF. My students are being penalized the $350, their insurance money and their deposit. I called and tried to get the money back for the kids who earned it buy they said they could only offer a full voucher. The problem is that they cannot guarantee a trip or a rescheduled date. I would love to join this lawsuit. In total EF tours refused to refund over $15,000 in fees. This money belongs to the students who earned it. What I hate the most is that they used me (the teacher) as the middle man. People in my community trusted me and now I look like dishonest person. EF tours is a dishonest company.

  8. Sonia Hedditch says:

    My son’s trip was cancelled twice. They want to keep $500 of $3200 we paid as they claim they invested time in planning the trip. I feel this is unjust enrichment on the part of ef tours.

  9. Anne Sanchez says:

    I need to join this suit. my sons trip was also cancelled by ef explore and they are withholding $350 fee plus $194 in insurance and deposit.

  10. KC Hogan says:

    Are there any class action suits in Colorado? Our students have lost $350 – $600 which was withheld by EF as non-refundable fees. Many of us purchased the travel insurance, believing that this would protect our investment. While it is not EF Tours fault that this pandemic occurred, it is also not the fault of our children. The fees that EF Tours is keeping seems excessive, and punitive to families and their children who are struggling during this pandemic. We would like a full refund for the monies that we invested in the tour that our children were scheduled to attend, and were not able to due to the pandemic.

    1. K. D. says:

      I too am interested in Colorado.

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