Anonymous wrote: You are not likely to win this,as maybe they are part time and you have not seen the kids. That is secondary.
If you signed on the dotted line, you need to keep to it.If all parents do this , how can they run the school ?
that is the reason schools have CONTRACTS.
Anonymous wrote:Op here - I'm gonna miss DCUM in CT ! I think I will go ahead and pay the school and send dc there. It's only 3hrs 4days a week and i don't believe her well-being s in danger. I don't want bad credit and I don't want ths to cost more than the tuition. I don't believe the director was truthful with me but I'm hoping the teachers and at least the 9other 4yos will be forthright !
Even though I read the contract I honestly thought if I changed my mind months before school starts there would be another person on the wait list to take the slot and I would not be obligated for the full tuition.... Lesson learned !
Anonymous wrote:OP, I would do a lot more research on the school. Are you able to visit and form your own opinions rather than go crazy over "some negative feedback". If I believed all the negative feedback on DCUM, I would never leave my house..probably would have never had kids! Form your own opinions and talk to the school about concerns. Leave after a year if it doesn't work out (barring safety concerns)
Anonymous wrote:Agree with 13:52. Unless they have some deal w/ someone who handles small claims, they would be crazy to litigate $7000. I'd be more worried about some sort of collections agent that they may send the debt to.
Anonymous wrote:Well, you could try to argue that they have a duty to mitigate their losses by trying to fill the spot with another student. In that case, you might be on the hook for whatever losses they actually incurred (advertising costs, staff costs spent on dealing with admission for that spot). Not sure you have the moral high ground here, though.
Anonymous wrote:Not to go against the current with all the goody two-shoes lawyers on here, and sure you signed a contract, but my vote is f-'em, OP. The moral high ground is you give up your deposit, don't pay the tuition, if the school is really in such high demand and the other schools are full, somebody else will take the spot and they won't bother coming after you. You are going to need that money for the baby, they will find another student. Anybody who says otherwise is not being very humanistic about the whole thing and is probably making their money denying people health care or refusing to pay business insurance claims.
Make sure there's no way they can take it out of a credit card you gave them or anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cases like this have been litigated before and the parents were ordered to pay the tuition even when the school filled the spot from a waitlist. You have a legal obligation to pay since you signed the contract- there is no way around it unless the school decided to negotiate with you.
Says you.
Anonymous wrote:asshole lawyers strike again, your toddler is crying for hours a day and hates the school but you signed the contract.