Archive for Public Interest Jobs

Job o’ the Day: 2013 Graduate School Fellowship with Education Pioneers

Are you committed to using your law degree to help ensure that all children have access to a high-quality education? Education Pioneers recruits and develops talented business, law, policy, and education graduate students and recent graduates with diverse professional backgrounds and helps them launch high-level education leadership careers through the Graduate School Fellowship.

From the PSJD job posting:

Building on the success of the 10-week Education Pioneers Graduate School Fellowship, the Graduate School Fellowship Yearlong Placement is a 12-month leadership development program that places top professionals in roles outside the classroom with top education organizations.

The Fellowship provides hands-on, real-world experience as well as training in leadership skills and issues in K-12 education. Fellows also gain the unique support and networking opportunities offered by Education Pioneers and our robust and rapidly growing nationwide network of over 1,600 Fellows and Alumni.

Locations:

Austin, TX Bridgeport, CT Chicago, IL Dallas/Fort Worth, TX
DC Metro Area Denver, CO Detroit, MI Greater Boston Area
Houston, TX Los Angeles, CA Memphis, TN Nashville, TN
New Orleans, LA New York Metro Area Sacramento, CA San Francisco Bay Area
Seattle, WA

Total Number of Fellowship Positions (10-Week & yearlong placements):  425

Dates: June 2013 – May 2014

About Education Pioneers

Education Pioneers has been building a nationwide network of change agents since 2004. To date, we’ve connected more than 1,600 talented professionals with top school districts, charter school organizations and nonprofits.

Education Pioneers mobilizes and prepares a national network of talented leaders and managers to accelerate excellence in education and transform our education system into one that equips all students with the skills they need to thrive in college, career, and life.

Through the Graduate School Fellowships (10-week and Yearlong Placements), the Analyst Fellowship and Alumni programs, Education Pioneers increases the talent supply of top leaders in education to improve the leadership capacity in key education organizations—such as school districts, charter school organizations, and nonprofits—and to advance our goal to make education the best led and managed sector in the U.S. economy.

For more information on application instructions, qualifications and deadlines, view the full listing at PSJD.org (log-in required)!

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K Street Careers: A “Lobbying Degree” is Useful, but Becoming a Lobbyist Takes More

credit: KP Tripathi

Here’s a Washington Post article which looks at the value of degree and certificate programs for aspiring lobbyists.  But degree programs aside, this is worth a read for anybody who’s considering a lobbying career, particularly one in DC.  Lobbying is a strange mix of art and science.  A lot of lobbyists quoted in the piece emphasize the art side, i.e. good instincts, a friendly demeanor, and tact.

In short, you can go to school to learn about lobbying, but you don’t become a lobbyist by going to school. “I always start off the first night by saying, ‘If you thought when you finished this course you could be a lobbyist, you’re wrong,’ ” explains Julius W. Hobson Jr., a senior adviser at Polsinelli Shughart and former top lobbyist at the American Medical Association who graduated from the George Washington program in 1980 and has been teaching a course there twice a year ever since 1994. “Not everybody has the instincts to be a good lobbyist.”

[I]t’s not so much the culture you learn when you study lobbying as the nuts and bolts of the process and its various components, something its supporters call “applied politics,” compared with traditional political science, which is far more theoretical. “Let’s be candid,” says James Thurber, a political scientist who runs American’s lobby program. “It’s an area that pure academics look down on.” This semester, for example, George Washington’s 36 credit hour, two-year degree program in “political management” includes courses on fundraising, international lobbying, communications strategy and principled political leadership.

“One misconception about lobbying is that it’s simply hiring somebody who goes into Congress and talks to people to influence legislation. That’s a very narrow view,” says Thurber, adding that “what we think lobbying is, and what we teach, is that it’s important to develop a clear strategy.” These include everything from TV and print ads, social media, using survey research to evaluate how effective your lobbying campaign is to the public, developing grass roots and grass tops, coalition building, and knowing the law.”

Yet there is widespread agreement that perhaps the only sine qua non to becoming a successful lobbyist is a prior job on the Hill. “It’s not just understanding the mechanics,” says House, “it’s having a feel for how Congress operates and the mood of Congress, and the only way to get that is to have been part of the process.”

 And for a career-related resource, check out Yale Law School’s 2012 edition of “Working on Capitol Hill.”

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Job o’ the Day: D.C. Legislative Lawyer with Immigration Equality

Immigration Equality (IE), based in New York, is a national organization dedicated to ending discrimination in U.S. immigration law, reducing the negative impact of immigration law on the lives of LBGT and HIV-positive people, and helping obtain asylum for those persecuted in their home country based on their sexual orientation, transgender identity or HIV-status. The organization provides information and support to advocates, attorneys, politicians and clients through education, outreach, advocacy and the maintenance of a nationwide network of resources.

I.E. is currently looking for a legislative lawyer to work in their Washington, D.C. office. From the PSJD job posting:

The Washington legislative lawyer will engage in legislative, administrative and regulatory advocacy and policy work on behalf of LGBT and HIV-positive immigrants and their families. This position will focus almost entirely on legal and policy issues that affect LGBT immigrant families. This is a policy position – there will be no direct representation and no asylum work.

The Washington legislative lawyer’s work will focus on legislative and administrative advocacy for LGBT and HIV-positive immigrants and their families. While the position may include some limited client “legal hotline” contact, it is primarily a policy position. This work will include:

  • Draft proposed legislation on a number of LGBT-related immigration issues;
  • Research and develop opportunities for administrative advocacy that would benefit LGBT immigrant families as a group as well as other LGBT and HIV related immigration issues;
  • Participate in meetings with immigration coalition members and government officials to address LGBT-specific immigration concerns;
  • Analyze proposed legislation and regulations for impact on LGBT and HIV-positive immigrants and expand on recommendations Immigration Equality has made on regulatory advocacy issues affecting LGBT/H immigrants;
  • Research and develop expertise on legal issues unique to LGBT immigrant families, including but not limited to: parenting issues; property ownership issues; tax issues; and inheritance issues;
  • Research and develop opportunities for impact litigation or amicus work in areas that would benefit LGBT immigrant families;
  • Represent Immigration Equality at conferences concerning LGBT immigration issues.

The organization is seeking applicants who are admitted to practice in at least one state, with experience working on legislative, policy and/or administrative advocacy issues. For more information on qualifications, salary, and application instructions, view the full listing at PSJD.org (log-in required)!

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Job o’ the Day: Project Attorney in the Alternative School Reform Project for the Center for Children’s Advocacy, Inc.

The Center for Children’s Advocacy is a non-profit organization dedicated to enforcing the legal rights of poor children. They are actively seeking an attorney for their new Alternative School Reform Project, an innovative program that advocates for systemic reform of alternative schools in Connecticut and impacts thousands of students The alternative schools usually have extremely low graduation rates and are often used to remove students from regular school who are low-achieving, have special needs, or poor school attendance. From the PSJD job listing:

The Project Attorney will work both in Hartford and with a coalition of community and government agencies in Bridgeport, Connecticut, to advocate for alternative school reform.

Responsibilities include:

  • researching and analyzing information regarding alternative schools in four Connecticut cities;
  • collecting case studies;
  • advocating for changes at individual schools found to be violating children’s education rights;
  • representing individual children impacted by inadequate alternative schools;
  • conducting media outreach;
  • developing advocacy products regarding alternative school issues;
  • educating parents about alternative school rights;
  • providing presentations to stakeholders regarding alternative school issues;
  • involving impacted families in advocating for systemic reform; and
  • advocating with state administrative agencies and legislators for alternative school reform.

This is a two-year position funded by a grant from a national foundation.

For more information on application instructions, salary and qualifications, view the full listing at PSJD.org (log-in required).

 

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Public Interest News Bulletin – November 16, 2012

By: Steve Grumm

credit: rob shenk

Happy Friday, folks, from a blustery Washington, DC.  Two items of general interest before moving into to the public interest news:

Okay, on to the public interest news (of which there is much):

  • Mandatory pro bono in the ABA’s law school accreditation standards?
  • LRAP expansion in CO
  • Clinic funding at SUNY Buffalo
  • Rolling out a new foreclosure prevention program in OR
  • Cy pres in PA
  • Pro hac vice in NY (Vivat lingua Latina!!!)
  • Controversial expansion of pro se form use in TX
  • Possible defender layoffs in NOLA
  • Editorial supports bolstering NY’s indigent defense program
  • Federal courts fear the fiscal cliff
  • MO’s defender program chief fires back against a prosecutor’s criticism
  • Extending an indigent defense funding mechanism in MN
  • Sandy’s hobbled some NYC legal aid providers
  • CT prosecutors & defenders to see pay bump;
  • MI’s state house okays bill to create statewide indigent defense program
  • Atlanta’s Justice Café provides flat-fee services to moderate-income clients
  • Super Canuck Music Bonus!

The summaries:

  • 11.15.12 – LRAP expansion in Boulder.  “University of Colorado regents Thursday approved expansion plans for a law school program that helps graduates pay off their student loans if they take modest-paying public service jobs — especially in the state’s rural areas. The nine-member Board of Regents unanimously approved future plans for the law school’s loan repayment assistance program, which includes an ambitious $10 million fundraising goal to support an endowment.”  (Story from the Daily Camera.)
  • 11.15.12 – a new foreclosure prevention program in Oregon.  “Free legal assistance is now available to eligible low-income homeowners and renters facing foreclosure, Oregon Housing and Community Services announced today.  The state agency has contracted with Legal Aid Services of Oregon (LASO) to develop and deliver the new program.”  (Story from the Statesman Journal.)
  • 11.15.12 – the expansion in the use of cy pres funds to support legal aid in PA is a very welcome development for Pittsburgh’s Neighborhood Legal Services Association.  “[T]he Pennsylvania Supreme Court recently promulgated new rules that encourage the use of unused funds in State cases to help provide legal services to low-income Pennsylvanians. The rules require that 50% of residual funds be designated to Pennsylvania’s Interest on Lawyers Trust Accounts (PA IOLTA), a non-profit program that provides funding for civil legal aid. The remaining 50% either go to the PA IOLTA Board or to other charitable organizations such as NLSA that promotes the interests of the lawsuit’s objectives.”  (Blog post from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.) 
  • 11.14.12 – New York is allowing out-of-state lawyers to provide pro bono assistance to Sandy victims on a pro hac vice basis.  (Story from Thomson-Reuters.) 
  • 11.14.12 – “Despite widespread outcry among family lawyers, the Texas Supreme Court yesterday approved a set of pro se divorce forms for indigent couples with no children or real property. The high court will accept public comments about the forms through Feb. 1, 2013, and may modify the forms in response.  In explaining its decision, the high court wrote in its Nov. 13 order that it ‘is confident that these forms will be a useful tool in addressing the burgeoning population of litigants who cannot afford representation and are unable to obtain representation through a legal service provider….’  [I]n a dissenting statement, Justice Debra Lehrmann wrote that she’s concerned the court’s endorsement of the forms will increase pro se litigation by people who can afford lawyers, and it may ‘lull people who could and should receive the benefit of experienced counsel into believing that the form will adequately protect their interests’.”  (Story from the Tex Parte Blog.)
  • 11.13.12 – facing continued fiscal struggles, including a possible 33% funding cut in city funding, the NOLA public defender’s office may lay off attorneys.  From Gambit: “The office receives most of its $7 million annual operating budget from a combination of state funds and local court fines, but the local cut will mean the office — which represented about 80 percent of the city’s criminal defendants in thousands of felony and misdemeanor cases last year — will have to fire eight lawyers from its current staff of 55….”
  • 11.12.12 – the Albany Times-Union editorial board comes down squarely in favor of statewide indigent defense reform to get away from the current, patchwork county-by-county system.  The board also puts in a plug for continued support for civil legal aid.   
  • 11.12.12 – federal judges and court administrators worry that a ride off the so-called “fiscal cliff” could imperil the court system, or at a minimum slow up the wheels of justice.  (Story from the National Law Journal.)  
  • 11.11.12 – the head of Missouri’s indigent defense program fires back against a prosecutor’s  allegations of failed leadership.  “Eric Zahnd, president of the Missouri Association of Prosecuting Attorneys, has declared there is no Missouri State Public Defender caseload problem, just an imaginary crisis created by the leadership of the public defender system [“Much public defender work should be contracted out,” Oct. 29].  As proof, he points to the latest audit of the public defender system.  The audit he trumpets, however, does not support his conclusions…. Prosecutorial table-pounding does not change the facts found by each and every one of [recent studies]: Missouri’s public defender system has too many cases and too few lawyers to meet its constitutional obligations. Their findings are in fact supported by the findings of the audit, which states that ‘increases in the MSPD’s growth in caseload has outpaced its growth in staffing resources’ and that over the past 20 years, public defender caseload has increased by 70 percent as compared to staffing, which has trailed at a 58 percent increase.”  (Full piece in Missouri Lawyers Weekly.)  
  • 11.9.12 – The Minnesota Lawyer on indigent defense funding: “The Minnesota Board of Public Defense has asked that an increase in attorney registration fees to fund its office be extended through 2015.  The Supreme Court authorized an increase in 2009 and renewed it in 2011.  But Minnesota’s public defenders are handling caseloads that are 170 percent of state and national standards. The petition states that the board will ask the Legislature for funding but does not expect to receive enough to meet its needs, particularly with respect to advanced technology.  When the court approved the last fee increase, it said it would not do it again because the Legislature and the governor should provide adequate funding for the public defender system.  The complete notice is available here. http://www.mncourts.gov/?page=3862&item=56448. A hearing is scheduled for Jan. 15 and comments are due Jan. 7.”
  • 11.9.12 -Sandy didn’t just create more legal aid clients; she hobbled some legal aid providers: “As thousands of New Yorkers struggle to recover from Superstorm Sandy, three major legal aid providers seeking to help victims have been hampered by their own storm-related damage.  Legal Services NYC, the New York Legal Assistance Group and the Legal Aid Society were shut out of their downtown offices when Sandy struck last Monday and have been operating out of satellite offices or spaces borrowed from other non-profit groups and large law firms.”  Mad props to the NY/NJ legal aid lawyers who fought through their own Sandy setbacks to keep up with casework and intake.  I’m happy to write that there are too many of you to name.  (Story from Thomson-Reuters.)    
  • 11.9.12 – Connecticut prosecutors and public defenders are getting a pay bump.  Huzzah!  “A recent national study has found that pay for prosecutors and public defenders has barely budged since 2004. The situation is only a little better in Connecticut, where the public sector attorneys last got a raise in 2009. But that’s about to change. Next summer, Connecticut prosecutors and public defenders are slated to receive a 3 percent raise, adding about $1,850 annually to the current entry level salary of $61,900. Veterans with 10 years experience will see salaries increase from about $91,600 to about $94,000.  Jack Doyle, a prosecutor and president of the Connecticut Association of Prosecutors, the bargaining unit for the 250 prosecuting attorneys in the state, calls the raise overdue. He notes that other state workers have, overall, averaged 3.5 percent annual pay increases over the past decade….  The state’s public defenders, who are not union members and have no say in pay negotiations, get the same raises as prosecutors because of state law that requires equal pay for the two agencies.”  (The Connecticut Law Tribune article is password-protected.) 
  • 11.8.12 – The Michigan House approved a bill that would create the Michigan Indigent Defense Commission.  HB 5804 would create a 14-member board that would oversee the state’s underfunded indigent defense system.  The bill passed 71-36 after two substitutes.  According to the version that passed the House, the commission is charged with ensuring adequate funding for defense attorneys, which the bill describes as ‘equal partners with the prosecution, law enforcement, and the judiciary in the criminal justice system’.”   The bill’s gone to the Senate for consideration.  (Blog post from Michigan Lawyers Weekly.)
  • 11.7.12 – the latest example of the growth in flat-fee work for clients of modest means: “Many middle-income people seeking a divorce can’t afford to hire a lawyer but aren’t poor enough to qualify for legal aid. Michael and Shelia Manely hope to fill this gap with a new kind of family law firm, the Justice Café.  Located a block from the Fulton County, Ga., Superior Courthouse, the Justice Café will charge $75 an hour for a la carte help in divorces and other family law matters, with no retainer up front, unlike most family law firms.”  (Full story from the Daily Report.)

Music!  Northward to Canada for a great tune from the Tragically Hip.  (Thanks to PSJD Blog friend Bob Glaves for the recommendation.  Good stuff, Mr. Glaves.)

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Job o’ the Day: Bilingual Staff Attorney with the Victim Rights Law Center in Boston!

The Victim Rights Law Center (VRLC) in Boston was established in 2003 as the first nonprofit legal organization in the country solely dedicated to serving the needs of rape and sexual assault victims. With the help of pro bono and staff attorneys, the organization helps to restore lives after an attack through direct legal and social services.

The VRLC is currently looking for a new addition to its team of committed attorneys. From the PSJD job listing:

The Victim Rights Law Center (VRLC) is a nonprofit law center based in Boston, MA, with a satellite office in Portland, OR. The VRLC provides free legal representation to victims of sexual assault in Massachusetts, and legal technical assistance nationally to lawyers, advocates, law enforcement officers, prosecutors, state sexual assault and domestic violence coalitions, tribes, medical providers, educational institutions, and other grantees of the Office on Violence Against Women.

Responsibilities:

  • Conduct intakes with English and Spanish speaking clients.
  • Provide brief consultations to sexual assault victims outlining range of options and remedies.
  • Provide full representation to sexual assault victims in the following areas: privacy, safety, immigration, employment, education, housing, financial compensation, and public benefits. Representation includes, but is not limited to, motion practice, restraining order hearings, privacy hearings, administrative hearings, and extrajudicial proceedings.
  • Participate in weekly intake and case assessment meeting with other staff attorneys.
  • Conduct outreach and trainings on legal issues and issue spotting throughout Massachusetts.
  • Collaborative with statewide service providers, including rape crisis centers, medical and mental health providers, district attorney’s offices, and law enforcement.
  • Provide case mentorship for pro bono attorneys.
  • Manage client services database and assist in client services data gathering and grant reporting.

For more information on application instructions and qualifications, view the full listing at PSJD.org (log-in required)!

 

 

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Job o’ the Day: Summer 2013 Legal Internship with the Habeas Corpus Resource Center!

Do you have a commitment to indigent defense and criminal law? Check out today’s Job o’ the Day, located in San Francisco:

Legal interns will assist case teams in various facets of the representation of death row inmates in post-conviction proceedings. Interns work on a variety of projects that fall into three general areas: (1) legal research and writing; (2) non-legal research; (3) and factual development of legal claims.

Qualifications include: Knowledge of substantive and procedural legal principles of criminal and constitutional law, criminal procedure, provisions of the United States and California Constitutions, and the rules of evidence and conduct of proceedings in California courts is preferred but not required.

While the position is unpaid, it’s guaranteed to provide practical, hands-on experience with representing death row inmates in post-conviction proceedings. For more information on how to apply, view the full listing at PSJD.org (log-in required).

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Job o’ the Day: Legislative Counsel/Lobbyist with the ACLU’s Washington, DC Legislative Office!

Are you a lawyer with experience working on legislative and policy matters, with a a commitment to human rights? The ACLU’s Washington Legislative Office is looking for a lobbyist to also serve as Legislative Counsel and work under the supervision of the office’s Chief of Staff. From the PSJD job listing:

The primary focus of the position will concern a portfolio of issues related to human rights. The Counsel will also be responsible for responding to emerging priorities as identified by the office.

ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES

  • Prepare and deliver testimony on pending legislation before Congressional committees;
  • Research and draft legislative memoranda on federal bills and propose administrative rules and regulations affecting civil liberties;
  • Lobby members of Congress, their staff and administration officials to support ACLU positions on pending legislation and policy initiatives;
  • Coordinate and conduct in-depth civil liberties briefings for Congressional and Executive Branch staff;
  • Participate as the ACLU representative in meetings of ad hoc lobbying and policy coalitions;
  • Work with national and local media to brief them on legislative and executive branch priorities;
  • Collaborate with other ACLU national and affiliate staff and representatives of coalition allies. Organize, lead, and work with outside groups to bolster support for ACLU policy goals or to minimize opposition to those goals;
  • Coordinate efforts across the organization including legal projects, communications staff, state strategists, and affiliates around the country to keep them abreast of and enlist their support for ACLU lobbying work on the relevant portfolio of issues; and
  • Supervise an administrative staff person, ACLU volunteers and interns.

For more information on application instructions, salary and qualifications, view the full listing at PSJD.org (log-in required)!

 

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Recap: Public Interest Job Search Program at NCCU Law

By: Steve Grumm

I dislike writing about myself, and I dislike pictures of myself even more.  But I had a great time meeting with North Carolina Central University School of Law students last week, and my friend Phil Guzman at NCCU put up a blog post to offer the key points of my presentation. Thanks, Phil, photo notwithstanding.

As Phil notes, it’s important for job-hunting law students to remember that bad job-market news is what makes news.  Media are not nearly as likely to cover the hiring of 10 public defenders as they are to cover the laying-off of 10 defenders.  What does this mean?  It means that job-seekers shouldn’t feel too disheartened if they encounter these bad-news items.  The job market is tough these days – no doubt.  But nonprofit and government law offices are hiring, and we are posting jobs on PSJD every day.

And while it’s tough to wade through bad news, following the news that affects public interest law offices is very important.  Why?  By following funding-related and other developments, job seekers will know where the jobs are.  Jobs follow funding.  So, for instance, state attorneys general throughout the U.S. have been channeling millions of dollars to civil legal aid providers so that they can serve clients with housing problems.  This funding comes from a huge national class-action settlement pertaining to fraudulent foreclosure practices; almost every state AG was engaged in this settlement.  So if I’m looking for a legal aid job, or if I’m looking to propose an Equal Justice Works or Skadden fellowships, I’m looking hard at the housing arena.  (An easy way to keep up with national news is to look at my weekly Public Interest News Bulletin, published every Friday).

Phil also touched on the value of professional networking.  That would require a much longer blog post from me.  Suffice to say, check out our networking (thanks for sharing, Harvard Law) and other job-search resources on PSJD’s Career Central page.

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Job o’ the Day: Staff Attorney Fellowships at the Center for Appellate Litigation in NYC!

The Center for Appellate Litigation (CAL) is currently accepting applications from recent graduates interested in helping some of society’s most disenfranchised citizens: sentenced prisoners. Located in lower Manhattan,  CAL handles appeals and post-conviction proceedings on behalf of criminal defendants in cases assigned to them by the Appellate Division, First Department.

From the PSJD job listing:

There are funded Staff Attorney Fellowship positions available starting in September 2013.

These paid positions provide attorneys with extensive exposure, not only to appellate practice, but to all aspects of post-conviction proceedings. Fellows have the opportunity to write briefs and argue in the Appellate Division, as well as to appear in trial court on re-sentencing matters, motions to vacate based on constitutional violations or newly discovered evidence, and community notification proceedings in sex offender cases. CAL’s close supervision process, varied practice, and supportive environment provide an ideal experience for a new attorney.

The openings are for two-year positions. The application deadline for the September 2013 openings is November 15, 2012.

Law graduates (current 3L’s) with strong writing backgrounds and a demonstrated interest in criminal law and helping the disadvantaged are welcome to apply.

Experienced criminal appellate attorneys may also apply. Those applicants must have at least one year of relevant post-law-school criminal appellate or judicial clerkship experience, and be admitted to the New York bar (or be awaiting admission).

For more information on qualifications, salary and application instructions, view the full listing at PSJD.org (log-in required)!

 

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