The State Board of Education has approved a settlement in a multimillion-dollar legal dispute between the University of Idaho and a private tech company.

But nearly a week after the board’s public vote, all details remain under wraps. The board took up the issue in open session Wednesday — spending just two minutes discussing the settlement in cryptic terms, then voting unanimously to approve it.

The settlement addresses an April 2024 lawsuit the U of I filed against Iowa-based Involta LLC. The dispute centers on ownership of a block of 93,000 IP addresses — and the U of I’s claim that Involta has used the university’s addresses free of charge.

Both the U of I and Involta have claimed ownership of the IP addresses, dubbed the “Westnet Legacy Block.”

“In October 2018, Westnet transferred the entire Westnet Legacy Block to the University of Idaho to hold in trust on behalf several other public universities, including Boise State University and Idaho State University,” the U of I lawsuit says.

Involta says it acquired the block in 2011, when it bought a company named SolutionPro — which had acquired the addresses when it bought Micron PC, according to the lawsuit. “However, Involta has failed to provide any evidence of this chain of title.”

If Involta had paid the standard market rate for the addresses, the U of I says it would have received lease payments of $2.4 million to $4.9 million, or more.

Involta has not filed a response to the U of I’s lawsuit. Citing this lack of response, the U of I in April asked a Latah County district judge to rule in the university’s favor. That motion remains unresolved.

The parties have been working toward a settlement for months, according to court documents. Attorneys on both sides have agreed that “litigation should be suspended pending the resolution in this case,” according to minutes from a May 1 conference on the case.

“The parties seek to resolve their dispute without conceding any liability or damages,” State Board staff wrote in a report, prepared for last week’s meeting.

Idaho Education News obtained the staff report Monday — five days after the board vote. It does not appear in the 1,009-page packet of briefing materials prepared for the board meeting.

Board members discussed the dispute in a closed executive session Tuesday, under a section of state law that allows closed-door meetings on litigation. They did not discuss the settlement in any detail during their two-minute discussion Wednesday. (Click here for video of the meeting; the board begins discussing the Involta lawsuit at the 46-minute mark.)

On Friday, Idaho EdNews filed public records requests with the State Board and the U of I, seeking a copy of the settlement, and supporting materials provided to the board by Kim Rytter, the U of I’s general counsel. As of Monday afternoon, EdNews has not received any of these documents.

Kevin Richert

Kevin Richert

Senior reporter and blogger Kevin Richert specializes in education politics and education policy. He has more than 35 years of experience in Idaho journalism. He is a frequent guest on "Idaho Reports" on Idaho Public Television and "Idaho Matters" on Boise State Public Radio. He can be reached at krichert@idahoednews.org

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