Public Interest News Bulletin – October 14, 2011

By: Steve Grumm

Happy Friday, dear readers.  Your PSLawNet Blog authors made a jaunt to the White House yesterday to watch as 16 Champions of Change, including two with PSLawNet ties, were honored for their extraordinary work in narrowing the civil justice gap.  I had hopes of starting a pickup basketball game with the president – as a youth I developed a pretty wicked crossover dribble on the Philadelphia playgrounds – but it was not to be.  Nice time all the same. 

This week: more on the Champions of Change event; a legal services office closure in Tupelo, Mississippi; former AppalReD exec. director sues the legal services provider for discrimination;  urging for a (limited) civil right to counsel in Wisconsin; O’Melveny & Myers pro bono counsel, David Lash, emphasizes the integral role of lawyers in narrowing the justice gap (great work, David!); federal honors attorney programs are shrinking considerably (boooo!!!!); “Police Women of Broward County” TV show puts bee in public defender’s bonnet; the Family Justice Center opens its doors as a one-stop-shop for DV victims in Sonoma County, CA; Congressional Quarterly looks at the legal services resources crisis.

  • 10.13.11 – the White House’s Champions of Change program shined the spotlight this week on lawyers throughout the country who lead the charge in promoting access to justice for the poor.  You can view the full slate of honorees here.  At the event, the honorees fielded questions from law students about launching public interest careers and what they can do to narrow the justice gap while still in school.  On Monday, 10/17, those discussions and blog posts from the Champions will be on the Champions of Change site.  Some additional notes/coverage:
    • The DOJ’s Access to Justice Initiative facilitated this event, and Attorney General Eric Holder led the ceremony and panel discussion.  Here is DOJ’s wrap-up of the event.
    • We at NALP are thrilled that longtime member Deb Ellis of NYU Law is among the Champions of Change honorees.  Throughout her career in legal education Deb has produced programming and resources that are freely shared with law schools throughout the country, ultimately enabling them to better assist students on public interest career paths.  In this sense Deb has played a role in launching countless public interest careers.  (And thanks for the PSLawNet shout-out, Deb!)   
    • We are also thrilled that Todd Belcore of the Shriver Center, who won NALP’s 2009 PSLawNet Pro Bono Publico Award (and has some great thoughts on how law students can develop leadership skills), is a Champion.  Way to go, Todd.
    • The Champions honorees also include four leaders at LSC-funded legal services programs.
  • 10.13.11 – and now, after that, here’s bad news on the access-to-justice front: “North Mississippi Rural Legal Services, which provides legal help for low income families, will remain in Oxford but a Tupelo office will close. Legal Services has five offices covering 39 counties. The Tupelo office served 10 counties.” (Blurb from an AP story appearing on The Republic’s website.)
  • 10.13.11 – and more bad news, this time out of Kentucky.  From the Herald-Leader:  “A woman who once directed the agency that is the main provider of civil legal help for poor people in Eastern Kentucky has alleged that its board fired her because of her gender and race.   Cynthia Elliott, who is black, also contended in a lawsuit that the board of the Appalachian Research and Defense Fund of Kentucky fired her in retaliation for firing white employees. The board dismissed Elliott in January. She had been director of the agency, known by the acronym AppalReD, since 2007, and had been one of its staff attorneys earlier.”
  • 10.12.11 – Legal Aid Society of Milwaukee executive director Thomas Cannon makes the case for a civil right to counsel in the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel: “Poverty qualifies more than a million Wisconsin residents for free legal services, but because of the chronic underfunding of civil legal aid programs, only about 5% of these individuals will actually get a free lawyer. The other 95% are on their own. Congress is proposing to cut the modest budget for federal legal services programs. In Wisconsin, Gov. Scott Walker and the Legislature eliminated all state funding for civil legal aid. Wisconsin is now one of a handful of states that provide no funding for civil justice. This dire situation could change if the Wisconsin Supreme Court enacts a proposed rule change that directs trial court judges to appoint lawyers at public expense in civil cases where basic needs – food, shelter, clothing, heat, medical care, safety and child custody – are at stake. The court recently held a public hearing on the rule change; it will discuss the matter in open session on Oct. 17 in Madison.”  Just as an interesting bit of trivia, Cannon notes that the Wisconsin Supreme Court established a criminal right to counsel all the way back in 1859.  I come from a civil legal services background, so I’m fairly ignorant on state-by-state criminal right-to-counsel jurisprudence predating Gideon. This was a surprise to me.
  • 10.10.11 – David Lash, managing counsel for pro bono at O’Melveny & Myers (and friend of the PSLawNet Blog), penned a great piece about the vital role of lawyers in providing access to justice at a time when more and more people fall into poverty.  Writing in the L.A.-based Daily Journal (and writing in his individual capacity, not on behalf of his law firm), Lash highlights the growing numbers of Californians living in poverty (over 16% of the state population) and notes that many more people are technically above the poverty line but hardly able to make ends meet.  He then lists concrete examples of the work that pro bono and legal aid lawyers do to serve those clients on society’s margins, and closes the piece as follows: “So let us not forget that although our greatest hopes lie in the greatest judicial system the globe has ever seen – that system is daunting, intimidating and overwhelmingly complex for those who are unrepresented. Democracy’s promise sometimes is entirely dependent on access to the justice system; access that requires a lawyer to navigate its intricacies and nuances. So as we debate budget cuts, let us remember the key role of the legal system. It is a worthy investment where every dollar spent is leveraged through the generous largesse of everyday lawyers devoting their time and skills to save lives.”  Well said.  Alas, the article is password-protected, so we can’t provide a link to it.
  • 10.10.11 – from the Santa Rosa Press Democrat, we learn that the newly opened Family Justice Center of Sonoma County offers a broad array of support services for domestic violence victims:   “A study determined victims of domestic violence, sexual assault and crimes such as stalking and elder financial fraud could be required to visit two dozen different agencies if they wanted to use public services available to them. Since many victims can lack transportation, be financially strapped or be pursued by an abuser, advocates determined it would be best to put all the assistance for them under one roof. The county bought and renovated a former office building with grants and donations of about $6 million and invited more than a dozen victim advocates from organizations like Catholic Charities, the Council on Aging, the YWCA and the Inter-tribal Council. The center is staffed by police and district attorney employees, an immigration adviser, an advocate for the deaf and a civil attorney who provides advice about harassment and getting restraining orders.” 

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