Archive for March, 2018

PSJD Public Interest News Digest – March 30, 2018

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Hello there, interested public! It’s been an eventful week. Many folks have worked to make sense of the many changes wrought last week in Congress’ omnibus bill. A judge in Georgia explained how important law schools are to the access-to-justice ecosystem while mourning the loss of Savannah Law School. And, of course, a tidbit I’ve created a special highlight for immediately below.

Until next week,
Sam

Highlight: Character & Fitness

  • The Practice published a conversation exploring potential reforms to the way our profession attempts to ensure ethical conduct through its character & fitness requirements. As with intimated changes to federal hiring & firing (see below), these kinds of ideas would have a profound effect on who attempts to become a lawyer and how attorneys’ work is reviewed. Here’s a representative snippet:

    “The more I study this, the more the whole process feels arbitrary, often because the people who make the decisions at the bar associations are people who don’t have experience with the criminal justice system. They don’t understand things like reentry, rehabilitation, and all of the collateral consequences of coming out of prison. And they don’t understand addiction issues either.

    [I]f the goal of character and fitness is to weed out lawyers without integrity, it is not working…[A]s a profession, I think that we should spend a lot less time worrying about character and fitness at entry and more time and more resources monitoring the conduct and behavior of practicing lawyers. I realize that it’s much easier to just keep people out at the front end and not have to deal with issues once somebody becomes a lawyer, but that system is not working.”

Federal Hiring

Student Loans

Immigration

Legal Technology

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Music Bonus!

Janelle Monae, “Django Jane” [clean]

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Job’o’th’Week (Experienced Edition)

Bilingual Immigration Attorney

Help Wanted

Transgender Law Center works to change law, policy, and attitudes so that all people can live safely, authentically, and free from discrimination regardless of their gender identity or expression.

Transgender Law Center provides legal assistance and information to more than 2,200 transgender people and their families each year, and also engages in selective high-impact litigation to advance transgender rights, such as the recent groundbreaking EEOC decision in our case Macy v. Holder.

The Position

TLC’s Trans Immigrant Defense Effort was created as an emergency response to the current administration. That effort involves organizing support for local transgender and gender nonconforming (TGNC) immigrants, legal and policy advocacy, and direct pro bono legal assistance for TGNC immigrants. One critical element of the project is ensuring high quality, culturally appropriate representation for TGNC immigrants in their immigration petitions and immigration court proceedings therefore 50% of this position will be providing legal intakes to TGNC immigrants.

Ready to lead a noble cause? Check out the posting on PSJD.

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PSJD Public Interest News Digest – March 23, 2018

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Hello there, interested public! The big news this week is out of the Philadelphia DA’s office; if you haven’t read Larry Krasner’s memo yet, it’s well worth a look. On a related theme, “The Nation” magazine discusses ways in which law schools are attempting to step into the legal aid gap in the face of federal indifference. (There’s a lot of access to justice news this week, but those are the two standout bits.)

Until next week,
Sam

Student Loans

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

Music Bonus!

Marvin Gaye, “Inner City Blues”

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Job’o’th’Week (Fellowship Edition)

Help Wanted

Photo: Brenda Gottesman – CC License

Martin Luther King Jr. Fellowship

The Organization

Southwestern Pennsylvania Legal Services, Inc..  is the principal funder and oversight agency for organizations that provide legal assistance to low income residents of Pennsylvania. The Pennsylvania Legal Services system is a community of legal services provider organizations committed to the aspirational goal that: Every resident in the state will have access to the full range of legal services and legal remedies regardless of where they are in the state.

The Position

Pennsylvania Legal Aid Network, Inc. is currently seeking applicants for a Martin Luther King, Jr. Fellowship that will be located at Southwestern Pennsylvania Legal Services beginning in September 2018.

About Our Fellowship Program

In 2003, an evaluation of the Martin Luther King Jr., Summer Internship Program revealed that, while the internship experience had been a very positive one for Pennsylvania Legal Aid Network Inc. (PLAN) interns, clients and programs, the goal to enhance cultural and ethnic diversity within the programs was not being realized.

In response, PLAN Inc. created the Martin Luther King, Jr. Fellowship Program in 2004. In partnership with a sponsoring regional or specialty program, law school graduates and attorneys who are new to practice are hired as full time staff attorneys for a two-year fellowship.

Fellows are assigned mentors and supervised by experienced attorneys. Salary and benefits are determined by the host program. In addition, loan repayment assistance (LRA), up to $5,500, is available per fellowship year. Fellows are required to apply for LRA through the PA Bar Foundation IOLTA LRA Program, their law school, and/or the Legal Services Corporation (LSC) in order to receive PLAN Inc. LRA. The 2018-19 IOLTA-PA Bar Foundation Program application is expected to open in early September 2018. This fellowship is intended to support and promote new lawyers who are interested in long term public interest careers.

Is this your dream opportunity?  See the full-post on PSJD.

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PSJD Public Interest News Digest – March 16, 2018

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Hello there, interested public! Student loans made for the most noteworthy news again this week, as the Department of Education weighed in on state government’s recent efforts to regulate lending. The LSC also announced a new disaster legal aid initiative. For these stories and more, read on!

Until next week,
Sam

Student Loans

Immigration

Legal Technology

Disaster Legal Aid

Criminal Justice Reform

Music Bonus!

Thundercat @ NPR Music’s Tiny Desk Concert Series (10/25/17)

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Job’o’th’Week (Internship Edition)

Summer Legal Intern

Help Wanted

Kids in Need of Defense (KIND) is an innovative partnership among the Microsoft Corporation, Angelina Jolie and other interested philanthropists, law firms and corporate supporters. As the leading national organization that works to ensure that no refugee or immigrant child faces immigration court alone, KIND is dedicated to providing pro bono representation as well as positive systemic change in both law and policy to improve the protection of unaccompanied immigrant and refugee children. KIND also assists children who are returning to their home countries through deportation or voluntary departure to do so safely and to reintegrate into their home communities. In addition, we work to ensure the voices of these children are heard and we help them become their own advocates. Launched in fall 2008, KIND is headquartered in Washington, DC and has 10 field offices across the United States.

The Position

KIND’s Fresno satellite office is looking for a legal intern to assist us in providing pro bono legal representation to unaccompanied children in immigration court proceedings. The position will be unpaid, but we are happy to assist you with externship credit, work study, or securing funding from external sources.  The position is located in Fresno, California, and will include frequent communication and interaction with staff in San Francisco.

Ready for this new opportunity? Check it out here on PSJD.

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Job’o’th’Week (Experienced Edition)

Attorney IV (Human Rights Advocate)

Help Wanted

The Alaska State Commission for Human Rights is the state agency which enforces the Alaska Human Rights Law. The Commission consists of seven persons appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Legislature. The Commission employs a staff and maintains an office in Anchorage. The Commission has statewide powers and accepts complaints from all regions of the state.

The Position

 

The Commission is seeking a Human Rights Advocate/Attorney IV to prepare and present discrimination cases at public hearings, conduct discovery, coordinate the Commission’s appellate work, review investigative files and make recommendations regarding the sufficiency of the evidence, and conciliate resolutions to complaints in which the Commission has found substantial evidence of discrimination. This position requires a thorough understanding of Alaska Human Rights Law and court rules, well developed litigation, negotiation, and analytical skills, a high degree of professionalism and organization, and excellent written and oral communication skills. Candidates for this position must be able to practice independently. The Human Rights Advocate supervises an Attorney II/III and a Law Office Assistant I.

 

Ready to lead a noble cause? Check out the posting on PSJD.

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PSJD Public Interest News Digest – March 2, 2018

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Hello there, interested public! The digest is a bit abbreviated this week, as I write to you from NALP’s Newer Professionals Forum. I look forward to putting what I’m learning here to work for all of you in the weeks and months ahead. (And if you’re at the conference, feel free to come find me!)

The big news this week involves a student loan tidbit you won’t want to miss! (Read below.)

Until next week,
Sam

Student Loans

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Law School News

Music Bonus!

C2C, “Happy” (feat. Derek Martin)

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Job’o’th’Week (Entry-Level Edition)

Attorney (2 Positions)

Help Wanted

The Legal Aid Society of Cleveland’s attorneys represent individual clients in a variety of legal issues that impact shelter, health/safety, and economic security.  Areas of practice include housing, consumer, public benefits, education, family/domestic violence, employment/barriers to employment, and tax.

The Position

In addition to providing legal assistance to individual clients, Legal Aid attorneys engage in broad-based advocacy to impact client groups and communities.  Legal Aid attorneys work in partnership with other service providers to address community issues and engage in community legal education.  For example, Legal Aid is currently building partnerships with schools and other providers to serve the needs of families with small children, with a goal of stabilizing families so that children are able to succeed in school.  Legal Aid attorneys also collaborate with local, state and national colleagues.

One attorney hired during this process will represent clients in a variety of immigration matters, but especially focused on serving those immigrants whose physical safety is at risk – victims of domestic violence, crime, and human trafficking.  The other attorney’s assignment will be determined.

Ready to lead a noble cause? Check out the posting on PSJD.

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