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Parents of Bearspaw student strangled by lanyard settle lawsuit but dollar amount remains secret

The family of a southern Alberta boy who was catastrophically injured when he was strangled by a lanyard has reached a settlement agreement with the Rocky View school board butthe dollar amount will remains a secret.

Nicholas Kitzul, 8, suffered severe brain injury after he was found hanging from a lanyard at school

Nicholas Kitzul, shown at age 8, spent months in hospital after a 2012 accident at his Bearspaw school left him with a severe brain injury. (Veronika Kitzul/Facebook)

The family of a southern Alberta boy who was catastrophically injured when he was strangled by a lanyard has reached a settlement agreement with the Rocky View school board, althoughthe dollar amount will remaina secret.

After a 2012 accident at his school in Bearspaw, a rural community northwest of Calgary, Nicholas Kitzul then age 8was left with a severe brain injury andspent four months in hospital.

Now, seven years later, at age 15, he continues to require 24-hour carefrom two nannies, wheelchairs and specialized equipment.

"The progress is very, very slow but the family are so devoted to him, I wouldn't be surprised if he was walking one day," said Tara Pipella, the Kitzul family'slawyer.

The money will go toward things like rehabequipment, mobility devices and hisin-home care, takingsome of the pressure off hisparents who are "exhausted,"said Pipella.

"If you have the opportunity to meet Nicholas, he's a beautiful soul. He's riding with a modified bike, he's swimming in a pool."

Nicholas Kitzul was left with a severe brain injury and spent four months in hospital when he was eight years old. (Veronika Kitzul/Facebook)

In a Calgary court on Thursday, CBC News and other media outlets including CTV, Global, Postmedia and Chorus opposed a partial sealing order that prevents the publication of thesettlement amount

But Court of Queen's Bench Justice Alice Woolleysaid in this case, settlement privilegewhich prevents the disclosure of settlement figures trumps theopen courts principle.

"It is the only way to ensure we have a system that encourages settlement discussion and the avoidance of litigation," said Woolley in delivering her decision.

In 2012,Kitzul wasin Grade 3 when his teacher gave him a lanyard to sign out of class to use the washroom.

About four minutes later, another student found theboy hanging by the lanyard, which had caught on a bathroom cubicle door.

Nicholas Kitzul continues to require 24-hour carefrom two nannies, wheelchairs and specialized equipment. (Veronika Kitzul/Facebook)

Parents Kamila and GrantKitzulsued the school and other related parties for more than $17 million in 2014.

The defendants included the Rocky View Schools Division, the Alberta Teachers' Association, the company that donated the non-breakaway lanyards and two school employees.

This past December, the Kitzuls reached a settlement agreement with the school board, meaning their three-week 2020 trial could be adjourned.

Nicholas Kitzul, now 15, smiles from a balcony. He's a 'beautiful soul,' says Tara Pipella, the Kitzul family'slawyer. (Kitzul family )

Media outlets argued against a partial sealing order, saying the public had a right to scrutinize the settlement.

"The absence of that information will only encourage scepticism and suspicion," said Matthew Woodley,who represents themedia consortium.

But lawyers for the family and the school board said it was necessary to protect the family's privacy.

"Confidentially was an essential term of the settlement," saidPipella.

Woolley agreed, finding people would bediscouraged from settling if dollaramounts were made public.

"One of the biggest advantages to settling outside court is that it's private," said the judge.