December 9, 2011 at 4:21 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Jobs
The Alliance for Children’s Rights in protects the rights of impoverished and abused children and youth so that they have safe, stable homes, health care and the education they need to thrive. 
Since its founding in 1992, The Alliance has provided free legal services and advocacy to over 100,000 children and youth in Los Angeles County. For many of its clients, The Alliance is the only connection to a safer, brighter future.
The Pro Bono Manager will work under the general supervision of the CEO and Legal Director and will generally be the liaison between ACR staff and volunteer attorneys, law students and other volunteers.
The Pro Bono Manager will be responsible for interfacing with local and national law firms and law school externship and career planning offices to engage pro bono and student services; placing cases with pro bono attorneys and maintain volunteer hours data bases; recruiting for and oversee all internships programs, including the Alliance’s summer programs, assisting in preparation of volunteer training materials and with substantive legal trainings, and other duties.
Interested? See the listing at PSLawNet!
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December 9, 2011 at 12:09 pm
· Filed under News and Developments, Public Interest Jobs, Public Interest Law News Bulletin, The Legal Industry and Economy
By: Steve Grumm
Happy Friday, dear readers. Greetings from day two of the National Legal Aid & Defender Association’s annual conference. (It’s their centennial, in fact. Happy 100th, NLADA!) There is much terrific programming here. It’s heartening to learn of so many innovative approaches to delivering high-quality client services. And it’s great to catch up with friends and colleagues from the legal services community. But the dire funding circumstances which legal services providers – and defenders, for that matter – face are part of most conversations I’ve had. So there is much to celebrate, but some things to lament as well.
This week: legal services funding woes in North Carolina; ditto in Ohio; a “Justice Index” to measure the health of court systems?; an access-to-justice report in New York State.
- 12.8.11 – here’s a look at how funding woes impact legal services in North Carolina: “On Nov. 15, Congress cut $56 million from the federal Legal Services Corporation for 2012. This cut is as plain as it is severe: federal support specifically for the provision of legal services to low-income people will drop by 15 percent next year. In North Carolina, these cuts will directly reduce funding by about $1.5 million. The full picture is worse. Federal legal services funds for North Carolina were cut by $700,000 this year. Our state legislature sliced 25 percent from legal aid budgets this year. These cuts forced LANC to shut down four offices across the state and eliminate 30 staff positions. The 2012 cuts will likely cause more reductions in staff and services next year.” Read the full op-ed in the Charlotte Observer.
- 12.7.11 – bad news from Ohio: “Legal Aid of Western Ohio, Inc. (LAWO) announced it will close its Mansfield office due to severe funding cuts. The closing will also result in the elimination of two attorney positions and one administrative assistant position in the Mansfield office. The closing is scheduled to take place by December 31, 2011.” Here’s the story from WMFD.
- 12.5.11 – a “Justice Index” to measure the health and effectiveness of state court systems? Writing in the National Law Journal, David Udell and Cara Anna of the National Center for Access to Justice at Cardozo Law propose using data to help policymakers find solutions to access-to-justice problems: “Which states’ courts are in the worst condition? Which, despite the challenges, are making litigation simpler and less expensive? It’s hard to fix a problem when you can’t see clearly what’s going wrong. There’s no way to tell how one state’s legal system is performing or how it compares with others. It’s time to change that. We need a national Justice Index. A Justice Index follows on the innovative idea by Yale law professor Heather Gerken of creating a Democracy Index to evaluate America’s election system. A national Justice Index would be a high-profile annual ranking of each state’s approach to legal assistance and the way each handles civil and criminal cases. That ranking would be supported by published data that could be mined by policymakers, the media and the courts themselves.”
- 12.2.11 – the Task Force to Expand Access to Civil Legal Services released a report about the state of AtJ in the Empire State. From Thomson-Reuters: Access to civil legal services for low-income New Yorkers is severely lacking, which not only impacts the livelihood of poor litigants but drains precious resources from the state’s court system, according to a new report released by a task force created by the state’s chief judge. ‘At best, no more than 20 percent of the legal needs of low-income families and individuals are met, because civil legal services providers lack the resources to meet them,’ says the report issued Thursday by the Task Force to Expand Access to Civil Legal Services.” Here’s a link to the Task Force’s report.












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December 8, 2011 at 1:23 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Jobs
The Center for Death Penalty Litigation (CDPL) is accepting applications for a staff attorney position. CDPL is a non-profit law firm located in Durham, NC that provides direct representation in capital cases and serves as a resource for attorneys throughout North Carolina who provide representation in capital cases. 
The attorneys at CDPL provide direct representation to a significant number of death-sentenced inmates who are in post-conviction litigation. In addition, a number of staff attorneys represent indigent defendants facing a capital trial and also represent death-sentenced defendants on direct appeal.
CDPL currently has a staff of eight attorneys and two investigators. They are looking to hire one attorney to provide direct representation to indigent defendants facing a capital trial. In addition, the attorney would represent death-sentenced defendants in post-conviction proceedings.
Interested? See the listing at PSLawNet!
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December 7, 2011 at 1:45 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Jobs
Independent Police Monitor’s Legal Internship is designed to provide students with experience in legal research and writing and also with practical skills such as case assessment, analysis, interviewing and community organization. 
The primary duties of law school interns are to conduct research, analyze data, and prepare reports on policy issues related to police oversight and misconduct, as well as preventing and detecting fraud and abuse.
They will also conduct complaint intake after appropriate training. Interns will review completed investigations of complaints of misconduct against NOPD police to determine whether the investigations performed by the NOPD Public Integrity Bureau comply with substantive and procedural due process standards.
Interested? Check out the listing at PSLawNet!
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December 6, 2011 at 1:38 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Jobs
The Young Women’s Project is a dynamic, brave organization that develops leaders, takes on institutions, and builds youth power in DC. YWP is looking for a versatile, scrappy, tenacious intern who is committed to youth empowerment and reproductive justice and is looking to build skills in training, research, and policy analysis. 
This position will offer a significant level of leadership and growth and the chance to make a huge difference in the lives of hundreds of teen women, and reshape DC institutions. It’s a great stepping stone to move into a more senior position at YWP.
The Peer Health and Sexuality Education (PHASE) is a teen-adult partnership that works to improve DC teens’ reproductive health by expanding comprehensive sexuality education, ensuring access to community and school based reproductive health care, and engaging teen women and men as peer educators and decision makers on reproductive health issues.
PHASE is guided by two main goals: 1) To expand Comprehensive Sexual Health Education (CSHE) for DC youth and 2) To ensure youth have accessible, high quality reproductive health care services.
The PHASE intern will work with the PHASE Manager, PHASE Coordinator and 18 teen staff trainers to build and support PHASE as described above.
The RJ Intern will be expected to work at least 20 hours a week including Mondays and Wednesday from 3-7pm (which is when our teen staff are in the office) and will run from mid January through mid May.
Interested? See the listing at PSLawNet!
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December 5, 2011 at 1:56 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Jobs
The National Center for Lesbian Rights is looking for a highly skilled, enthusiastic, articulate, and motivated Youth Project Director/Staff Attorney based at its national office located in San Francisco. NCLR wants someone with a law degree and a minimum of 3-5 years of legal or professional experience that prepares the applicant to lead NCLR’s Youth Project work in juvenile justice, child welfare, and other settings. 
NCLR is a national legal organization committed to advancing the civil and human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people and their families through litigation, public policy advocacy, and public education. Since its founding nearly 35 years ago, the National Center for Lesbian Rights has asserted bold and strategic national leadership at critical moments in the struggle to win marriage and family rights, expand immigration and asylum efforts, support youth safety, create and promote a positive sports culture, as well as work on elder law and transgender law.
Sound interesting to you? Check out the listing at PSLawNet!
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December 2, 2011 at 1:44 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Jobs
The NYCLU is looking for a Legislative Counsel who, under the supervision of the Legislative Director, will play a key role in the organization’s efforts to promote and defend civil rights and civil liberties in the legislative and public policy arenas. 
The New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU) is one of the nation’s leading advocates on behalf of constitutional rights and liberties. Founded in 1951, as the New York affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union, the NYCLU is a not-for-profit, nonpartisan organization with 48,000 members statewide.
Interested? Check out the listing at PSLawNet!
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December 2, 2011 at 9:48 am
· Filed under Legal Education, News and Developments, Public Interest Jobs, Public Interest Law News Bulletin, The Legal Industry and Economy
By: Steve Grumm
Happy Friday (and December), dear readers. On this date in the year 1409, the University of Leipzig opened. Never forget. Also, on 12/2/70 the EPA began operations. It is surprising to many that President Nixon established the EPA. Guess what other federal agency he established. It’s the Legal Services Corporation. And LSC figures prominently in this week’s Bulletin, which includes coverage of:
- state court systems feeling the fiscal pinch;
- Maryland’s governor pressures law school clinic to back off environmental suit;
- Tennessee’s high court launches a pro se assistance website;
- OPM provides details on the new federal gov’t internship programs;
- an update on the deferred-associates-take-public-interest-placements phenomenon;
- a Florida legal services program’s fiscal struggles;
- the LSC funding cut’s impact in the Empire State;
- exciting law student pro bono news;
- outlook for state budgets bleak, according to new report;
- a Missouri legal aid lawyer fights for equal smiles under law;
- declining Biglaw pro bono hours – temporary or here to stay?
- Prairie State Legal Services’s $ struggles;
- the LSC funding cut’s impact in the Mountain State;
- boosting pro bono among retiring and retired lawyers;
- the LSC funding cut’s impact in the Old Line State
- the LSC funding cut’s impact in the Garden State.
This week:
- 11.30.11 – hardly surprising, but budgetary belts are tightening in state court systems throughout the country. From the National Law Journal: “Deep state court budget cuts are hurting access to justice, according to a recent survey issued by the National Center for State Courts. The survey, released on Nov. 29, tabulated a poll of state courts conducted from July through October. Results indicate widespread recent budget cuts, including 42 states with substantial court budget decreases; 39 states where clerk vacancies were not filled; 34 states where court staff were laid off; and 23 states with reduced court operating hours.”
- 11.30.11 – a few days back my colleague Kristen posted about the Maryland governor pressuring a U of Maryland Law clinic to back off an environmental suit against a poultry farm. (This gives me an opportunity to gratuitously refer to the poultry industry as “Big Chicken,” which I find funny.) Where were we? Oh, a Washington Post editorial takes aim at Governor O’Malley: “Mr. O’Malley’s Nov. 14 missive was a misguided protest against the school’s environmental law clinic and its involvement in a lawsuit against Perdue Inc. and Alan and Kristin Hudson Farm, a Maryland-based operation that works for Perdue.” Here’s some more detailed coverage and background from the Baltimore Sun. Here’s Dean Phoebe Haddon’s – hey she was my torts professor! – reply to the governor.
- 11.30.11 – Tennessee’s high court is hands-on in addressing the justice gap. From the Daily News Journal: “The Tennessee Supreme Court launched a new website this week to provide the public with valuable resources to help navigate the court system. The new site, JusticeForAllTN.com <http://www.justiceforalltn.com/> , is intended to assist people with civil legal issues who cannot afford legal representation. The Justice for All website includes downloadable court forms, resources for representing yourself in court, information about common legal issues and an interactive map with resources for each of the state’s 95 counties. Thanks to a partnership with the Tennessee Alliance for Legal Services and the Tennessee Bar Association, the site also gives visitors the ability to email a volunteer attorney with questions.”
- 11.29.11 – lots of changes affecting employment pathways into federal government. From Government Executive: “The Office of Personnel Management plans to launch the federal government’s new internship program by May…. The [Student Pathways Initiative] will consolidate several federal internship programs into three pathways, replacing the Federal Career Intern Program…. The initiative’s three options are an internship program for current students, a new Recent Graduates Program and the Presidential Management Fellows Program for graduate students. OPM confirmed that all three pathways will be launched simultaneously, and that the organization aims to be ready in time for the Recent Graduates pathway to accommodate students graduating in May 2012.”
- 11.29.11 – in Florida, Gulfcoast Legal Services has been battered by the recession. IOLTA revenues in the Sunshine State have plummeted from $40 million to $6 million. And the governor vetoed a $1 million appropriation that would have gone to GLS and other providers. GLS has also seen other grants dry up. “Because of the fallout [GLS], which started 2011 with 20 staff attorneys at its five offices, will end the year with 13. Read more from the Bradenton Times.
- 11.29.11 – here’s a pair of stories about law school pro bono developments:
- at GW Law, six new pro bono programs are up and running according to Dean Paul Berman, including a new Street Law initiative, a homeless advocacy project, and a pro se resource project at the DC administrative hearings offices. GW Law also launched an Innocence Project last year.
- from a Charlotte School of Law press release: “A pro bono student services organization at Charlotte School of Law has assisted more than 450 homebuyers file $3 million in claims against a multi-million dollar restitution fund supported by Beazer Homes U.S.A. The outreach is being offered to homebuyers who were victims of the fraudulent business practices acknowledged by Beazer in July 2009 as part of a deferred prosecution agreement reached with U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina.”
- 11.29.11 – we’ve focused a lot recently on the federal legal services funding cut, but it’s important to remember that state-level legal services funding has declined in many jurisdictions too. And as noted in this Washington Post piece, state governments face tough times ahead: “Things have improved since the worst of the recession, but states still face a dire fiscal situation, according to a report…released…by the National Governors Association (NGA) and the National Association of State Budget Officers (NASBO). The Fiscal Survey of States says that even as states struggle with tepid revenue growth, they will be called on to spend more because of the economic distress caused by continued high unemployment.” Here’s a link to the report.
- 11.28.11 – an attorney with Legal Services of Eastern Missouri has found an interesting niche practice: orthodontics. LSEM’s Anne Morrow, now an attorney but formerly a nurse, “has secured orthodontics for 89 children in eastern Missouri who had previously been rejected under the state’s prohibitive Medicaid standards for orthodontics set by a dental advisory committee under MO HealthNet.” State officials argue, however, that Morrow’s advocacy has the unintended consequence of setting back other children who have severe dental needs because her clients jump to the front of the line. Read all about it in the Saint Louis Post-Dispatch.
- 11.28.11 – Fortune magazine looks at the recent declines in Biglaw pro bono hours: “Law firms are lagging in donating legal help because ‘they are anxious, and they don’t staff up quickly to meet the increase in client demand when the economy begins to improve,’ says Esther Lardent, chief executive of the Pro Bono Institute. ‘Much of the pro bono work is done by younger lawyers, but when they are in short supply, paid work is the priority’.” Pro bono stakeholders are looking for new solutions in case this marks a systemic change and not a short-term fluctuation. The piece reviews the ideas of building more pro bono into associates’ training curricula, and ramping up law student pro bono.
- 11.28.11 – in Illinois, funding cuts have forced Prairie State Legal Services to make significant cuts: “The agency has lost almost half its staff this year because of budget cuts and just last week congress approved another 14-percent budget cut. Because of limited resources, Prairie State can only help people with ‘basic human needs’ such as orders of protection, housing cases, and utility cases.” Prairie State just announced that it’s cutting its telephone intake hours in half, according to WIFR.
- 11.28.11 -the LSC funding cut’s impact in West Virginia, reported by the State Journal: “West Virginia legal aid attorneys are searching for solutions following a congressional agreement that would cut services in the state by more than $400,000…. Adrienne Worthy, executive director of Legal Aid of West Virginia, said the state’s program has been fortunate to experience growth in the past few years. ‘But as funding cuts have started to happen, we have gotten leaner and leaner,’ Worthy said. ‘There is no way we can lose those kinds of dollars and it not to have an impact on what we’re doing every day’.”
- 11.25.11 – the LSC funding cut’s impact on the Maryland Legal Aid Bureau, courtesy of The Gazette: “[the] bureau received $4.3 million from [LSC] in fiscal 2011 and is slated to receive $3.7 million in fiscal 2012. [The figure is preliminary.] Maryland’s shortfall is roughly equal to the salaries of 11 of the bureau’s 154 staff attorneys, each of whom makes about $60,00 annually, [bureau official Shawn] Boehringer said. Although bureau officials have not yet decided how to fill the funding gap, they likely will look to first cut travel and office expenses in order to avoid direct cuts in services to clients, Boehringer said.”












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December 1, 2011 at 2:12 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Jobs
Here’s an extra Job o’ the Day for ya.
This World AIDS Day, apply to work for the largest community-based HIV/AIDS medical provider in the nation. 
AIDS Healthcare Foundation’s mission is to provide cutting edge medicine and advocacy, regardless of ability to pay. Through their healthcare centers, pharmacies, health plan, research and other activities, AHF provides access to the latest HIV treatments for all who need them.
AHF is looking for a staff attorney — the staff attorney provides or assists in the provision of legal counsel to specified organizational units of AHF. Performs standard legal work and/or participates in the performance of complex legal work to include such areas as research, policy review, legal compliance issues, contract reviews, property sale/acquisition, and employment. Participates and/or assists in the conduct of litigation as assigned.
If you’re interested, check out the listing at PSLawNet!
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December 1, 2011 at 12:43 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Jobs
The Afghanistan Legal Education Project is looking for a fellow to serve in Kabul, Afghanistan. 
The Afghanistan Legal Education Project (ALEP) at Stanford Law School is dedicated to developing innovative legal curricula to help Afghanistan’s universities train the next generation of lawyers and leaders. The primary task of the ALEP post-doctoral fellow will be to act as ALEP’s representative within Afghanistan. The fellow will establish and maintain relationships with legal and justice sector policymakers, practitioners, and academics in Afghanistan, collect relevant source materials (new laws, proposed legislation, reports, studies, etc.), and stay abreast of all significant rule of law developments.
Sound interesting to you? Check out the listing at PSLawNet!
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