July 2, 2020 at 1:58 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Law News Bulletin
Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives
Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress
Interested public. The digest is back this week with another bursting edition; thanks for bearing with me. Chicago Law published a new study on human rights violations in use-of-force regulations for police departments in cities across the United States, while law students in NY, NJ, and CT took action to voice their perspective on racial justice issues within their campuses. The US Supreme Court made the Director of the CFPB easier for the President to remove, while the House Oversight and Reform Committee took up the question of whether the Executive Branch lied to Congress about the legality of its proposal to eliminate the OMB and merge its remainder into the GSA. Attorneys have begun grappling with the beginnings of an eviction crisis as state moratoria on evictions come to a close, the ACLU in both Arizona and Michigan took steps to make prosecutors more accountable for misconduct, and attorneys in Las Vegas began their defense of Legal Observers arrested during recent protests.
As usual, you can find these stories and many others below.
Take care of one another,
Sam
Editor’s Choices:
COVID-19 & Remote Legal Practice
Across the United States, “[a]t least five law schools have unveiled plans for fully online classes in the fall, even though the majority of schools are hoping to offer a mix of in-person and online coursework amid the COVID-19 pandemic. ”
In Connecticut, “[t]he coronavirus crisis is having a devastating effect on the state court system and, short of a vaccine that returns life to normal, no one is prepared to predict how it will emerge as court administrators work to reconstruct the post-pandemic wreckage…Decades of austerity budgeting has left the Judicial Branch in the electronic stone age, unprepared and ill-equipped for a natural catastrophe. While court clerks in other states are accessing case files from digital data bases, Connecticut still relies on a criminal case filing system based on hand-written, paper records. ”
In Florida, “[a]mid pushback from law-school deans, graduates and lawmakers, the Florida Board of Bar Examiners on Wednesday canceled in-person exams scheduled for late this month and announced the tests will be administered online in August. ”
In Oregon, “[i]n a narrowly split decision, the Oregon Supreme Court voted 4-3 today to waive the July bar exam for 2020 graduates of Oregon’s three law schools. ”
In Alabama, “[t]he Supreme Court of Alabama has given the presiding judge for each circuit the authority to either resume in-person hearings or extend their suspension…And legal professionals in Birmingham have said remote hearings could be the way of the future. ”
In Canada, a PhD candidate at Osgoode Hall Law School argued that while “[m]any people are enthusiastic about [] virtual hearings and the possibilities they present [and t]he enthusiasm for keeping them as a permanent feature of our court system is good, [] this change is only a tiny antidote to the underlying systemic problems our courts have to face. We need to raise our ambitions as we think about modernizing our struggling courts. We need more than virtual hearings and ‘Zoom Court.’ ”
Immigration, Refugee, & Citizenship Issues
In Washington DC, “[i]mmigration judges are suing the Justice Department over a rule that prohibits them from discussing or writing about immigration policy in public, saying the restrictions violate their constitutional rights. ”
Also in Washington DC, “[n]early three-quarters of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services workforce will receive their notices of administrative furlough this week, which, due to their duration, were issued under reduction-in-force procedures. Officials at USCIS, a fee-funded agency, told employees in May that a significant drop-off in application receipts due to the novel coronavirus pandemic has led to an unexpected loss in revenue, potentially leaving the agency unable to meet payroll…One USCIS employee who spoke to Government Executive on the condition of anonymity said he will proactively look for a new job. ”
In New Mexico, “U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement told a [] federal judge that detainees can’t bring class claims over their alleged inability to speak with attorneys through free, private calls, arguing that each migrant’s case is too particular for class treatment. ”
Nonprofit Quarterly published “Immigration Courts: The Case for Independence from the Executive Branch ”
Non-Profit & Gov’t Management & Hiring
In Washington DC, “a recent study prepared by the staff of the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS) [found that] recruiting and hiring attorneys into the federal government is anything but straightforward. ”
Also in Washington DC, “the IRS released its annual disclosure of enforcement statistics. Every year, it’s an opportunity to measure how effectively the U.S. government has sabotaged its own ability to enforce its tax laws. ”
Also also in Washington DC, “[t]he leadership of the House Oversight and Reform Committee on Wednesday announced that the panel would investigate whether Trump administration officials lied in congressional testimony about the legality of the controversial proposal to eliminate the Office of Personnel Management and send most of its functions to the General Services Administration. ”
Again also in Washington DC, “Democrats in both chambers of Congress on Wednesday introduced legislation requiring greater oversight over proposed agency relocations by requiring making analyses of such proposals available for public review. ”
Also again also in Washington DC, “Republican Federal Election Commission Commissioner Caroline Hunter announced she would resign effective July 3, which is exactly four months from Election Day…[F]or the second time in less than a year, the FEC will be precluded from holding meetings, starting audits, creating news rules and imposing fines on those who violate campaign finance laws. ”
Also also again also in Washington DC, “[t]he U.S. Supreme Court ruled [] that the separation-of-powers principle embedded in the Constitution prohibits Congress from giving the director of the CFPB protection from being removed for cause. ”
In New York NY, “[a] new Robin Hood [Foundation] initiative, titled the “Power Fund,” is looking to back [nonprofit organizations that are solely run by people of color] in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic and nationwide protests after George Floyd was killed by police last month. ”
Student Loans & Student Debt
In Washington DC, “[t]he Bureau of Labor Statistics’ employee benefits survey for June 2019 reveal[ed] that 3% of civilian and private sector employees have access to student loan repayment plans [and a]lthough student loan repayment plans remain largely uncommon, utilization rates are accelerating. Per SHRM’s 2019 employee benefits survey, SLRPs doubled since 2018, with 8% of employers offering the benefit in 2019, jumping from 4% in 2018. ”
In New York NY, Washington DC, Philadelphia PA, and San Francisco CA, “[a] report by the Student Borrower Protection Center, a consumer advocacy group, analyzed previous borrower data prepared by regional Federal Reserve banks and the city governments of New York City, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia and San Francisco and found a commonality that students in majority Black and Latino neighborhoods are more reliant on student loans and shoulder a greater debt burden. ”
Access to Justice – Civil
In Fresno CA, a professor of sociology argued in the Fresno Bee that because “[e]xperts predict that these past months of economic downturn will bring on an ‘avalanche’ or ‘tsunami’ of evictions as states reopen…[a] right to counsel, guaranteeing legal representation for tenants, is critical. ”
In Colorado, “[t]he Colorado Judicial Department has opened the application process for the Eviction Legal Assistance Fund and there is additional funding available to help people impacted by the coronavirus pandemic. Nonprofits that provide legal assistance to people experiencing eviction can apply for grants from the fund. ”
In Charleston SC, “Charleston Legal Access, Nelson Mullins, and Jackson Lewis are expanding the S.C. Virtual Legal Clinic, the organizations said in a news release. The clinic, which launched in May to help businesses and nonprofits in the Lowcountry, is part of a nationwide program through the Lawyers for Good Government Foundation. ”
In Ohio, “[t]he Ohio Supreme Court’s [new] guide on home foreclosure disputes promote[d] mediation and technology as major avenues where local courts can forge remedies between homeowners and lenders. ”
Access to Justice – Criminal
Decarceration
In Oakland CA, “more than 10,000 people have signed a petition asking Gov. Gavin Newsom to release prisoners to stop the COVID-19 infections racing through San Quentin and other state prisons…Alameda County Chief Public Defender Brendon Woods…deliver[ed] the petition to Newsom and to Sen. Nancy Skinner, D-Berkeley[.] ”
In San Francisco CA, “[w]ith 2,582 incarcerated persons with active cases of COVID-19 in California prisons statewide, and over 1,100 people incarcerated in San Quentin testing positive, the San Francisco Public Defender’s Office is mobilizing to free people as quickly as possible to prevent the continuing spread. ”
In New York, “prisons are mainly testing inmates who show symptoms of coronavirus — despite federal recommendations for wider testing, prisoner advocates say. ”
In Washington DC, “[a] US District judge has ordered in a lawsuit that the DC Department of Corrections must reform its jail protocol in order to protect inmates from the coronavirus outbreak more effectively. ”
Criminal Justice Reform
In Washington DC, “lawmakers, those present at the events and legal experts said at a congressional hearing [that] [f]ederal law enforcement officers unnecessarily put the safety of protesters at risk and likely violated the law when they deployed forceful tactics and chemical irritants outside the White House [in June]. ”
In Sacramento CA, “[t]he city [] decided to drop charges against individuals accused of violating a curfew implemented during protests against police brutality last month. ”
In Louisiana, “[e]ighteen private law firms have teamed up with the ACLU of Louisiana in a litigation campaign to challenge discriminatory policing practices. Legal Director of the ACLU of Louisiana Nora Ahmed says they are trying to capture cases that were not economical to be taken to court. ”
In Las Vegas NV, “[a]ttorneys for multiple legal observers who were arrested during Saturday night’s peaceful protest on the Las Vegas Strip called for de-escalating what they called military-style tactics used against legal observes and protestors. ”
In Pima County AZ, the ACLU of Arizona called voters’ attention to the records of several candidates for county attorney, stating “we think it crucial to inform voters about troubling misconduct in two candidates’ pasts, only discovered through a years-long investigation into prosecutor misconduct. The ACLU of Arizona is bringing this information to light because it points to a systemic problem within the criminal legal system: it is notoriously difficult to hold prosecutors accountable for misconduct. And it is equally difficult for the public to find out about it. ”
In Massachusetts, “[p]ublic arrest data has not been posted on the website of Massachusetts’ Executive Office of Public Safety and Security, as required by law. In 2018, Massachusetts passed a law mandating that all police departments submit arrest data to EOPSS. The law requires that data includes “the race, gender, and age of the arrestee.” It states that the department will post the data quarterly. The American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts wants those details. ”
In Missouri, the state Supreme Court ruled that “[p]ublic defenders are entitled to official immunity because they are public employees whose official statutory duties concern the performance of discretionary acts. ”
Permalink
June 19, 2020 at 9:11 am
· Filed under Public Interest Law News Bulletin
Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives
Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress
Interested public. Hope today goes well for you, wherever you are. Big stories this week include two decisions from the U.S. Supreme Court: the 1964 civil rights act protects gay, lesbian, and transgender employees from discrimination based on sex, and the Trump Administration’s attempt to eliminate the DACA program was improper under the Administrative Procedures Act. (Although the Court also declined cert. on many cases before it concerning the doctrine of qualified immunity.) Meanwhile, more district attorneys across the United States announced they will not prosecute protesters arrested in recent weeks. In New York NY, police responded by refusing to work with the DAs offices that issued such statements. Meanwhile, in other news, Washington State has discontinued its Limited License Legal Technicians program and Congress is once again criticizing Secretary DeVos’ handling of student loans.
These stories and more are in the links below.
Take care of one another,
Sam
Editor’s Choice
Public Defense
Immigration, Refugee, & Citizenship
Legal Practice & COVID-19
In Washington State, “faculty and administrators with the University of Washington School of Law were working with local law firms to find solutions for the dozens of students in need of the professional development experience that defines the summers between years of law school and often leads to a full-time job. Together, they came up with the COVID-19 Clearinghouse, a collection of short-term, remote, pro bono projects for private firms and nonprofits that mainly address legal questions specific to life during the pandemic. ”
In Oregon, “[a] tussle over whether newly minted law school graduates must pass the bar exam is dividing Oregon’s legal community. ”
In Ottawa ON, “when the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered family courtrooms to all but hte most urgent cases…a group of legal ‘grey hairs’…founded the Virtual Family Law Project, which can help parties resolve their differences outside the courtroom. ”
Across Canada, “a network of legal professionals offering free advice to people in the face of the COVID-19 lockdowns in March…has quickly become a massive access-to-justice [initiative] Canada-wide..[W]hen a person reaches out through the website at natcanlaw.com, they can be connected with a lawyer in their province for some pro bono legal advice on a range of legal issues including commercial leases and contracts. [Alex Don, President of the National Canadian Lawerys’ Initiative] stresses that they don’t offer legal representation. ”
In the United States, “[b]usinesses and schools are increasingly turning to coronavirus waivers to guard against potential lawsuits in the absence of a federal liability shield. ”
Non-Profit & Gov’t Managment & Hiring
In Washington State, “[t]he Washington Supreme Court [voted] by majority…to sunset the Limited License Legal Technicians (LLLT) Program. The majority also rejected the LLLT Board’s requested expansion of practice areas and proposed rule revisions. ”
In Minneapolis MN, “[i]n the few days following Minneapolis’ first protests, the tiny, volunteer-run organization [Minneapolis Freedom Fund] raised more than $31 million as donations poured in from all over the country. Two weeks later, some people have been wondering what’s happened to all of those donations. Overnight, the phrase “$35 million” started trending after the MFF tweeted that it had thus far spent only $200,000 on bail over the last few weeks[.]…But the situation that MFF finds itself in is one that’s common after a cause goes viral: A small organization has been overwhelmed with donations from well-meaning people, but doesn’t necessarily have an urgent need for that much money. At the beginning of the protests, the organization had earmarked $10,000 to help bail out protesters, and soon found itself with many times that amount. ”
In Washington DC, “the Federal Reserve open[ed] public feedback on the expansion of its Main Street Lending Program in providing loans to ‘eligible’ small and medium-sized nonprofit organizations ‘that could benefit from additional liquidity[.] ’ ”
In Silver Spring MD, “[civil rights groups], including the American Civil Liberties Union, sued [] to block the U.S. Small Business Administration from denying Paycheck Protection Program loans to small business owners with criminal records. ”
In Humboldt County CA, “[a] deputy public defender is seeking thousands of dollars in damages from Humboldt County, alleging he was treated in hostile manner by the public defender’s office after a 2019 incident in which a judge called him a slur and shoved him off a boat at Lake Shasta. ”
In Los Angeles CA, “A former staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California has sued the nonprofit civil rights organization, alleging that as a Black woman, she was subjected to retaliation and discrimination for repeatedly complaining about systemic racism in the workplace. ”
Student Loans & Student Debt
Legal Technology
Access to Justice – Civil
Access to Justice – Criminal
Criminal Justice Reform
Permalink
June 12, 2020 at 3:12 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Law News Bulletin
Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives
Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress
Interested public. Major stories this week follow on the heels of last week’s events–many of which are ongoing. In particular, Public Defenders across the United States marched for racial justice this week. In the world of legal technology, the public learned more about the technological tools law enforcement has brought to bear against protesters while several major tech companies made commitments to refrain from selling specific technologies to law enforcement. Journalists continued their efforts to catalog the various efforts for pro bono assistance springing up in communities across the United States.
These stories and more are in the links below.
Take care of one another,
Sam
Editor’s Choice: Systemic Racism & the Unauthorized Practice of Law
Secret Police
Protest Responses
Defenders
Across the United States, “Public Defenders…are marching in remembrance of George Floyd, Bronna Taylor, Tony McDade, and the countless others who died because of white supremacy. ” The event was a “nationwide day of solidarity involving at least 70 [] public defenders’ offices[.] ” Some examples:
Cincinnati, OH .
New York, NY .
Los Alamos, NM .
Las Cruces, NM .
Aztec, NM .
San Francisco, CA .
Oakland, CA .
Santa Barbara, CA .
Fresno, CA .
Wilmington, NC .
Palm Beach, FL .
Miami, FL .
Tallahassee, FL .
Rochester, NY .
Detroit, MI .
Chicago, IL .
Columbus, OH .
Knoxville, TN .
Anchorage, AK .
Las Vegas, NV .
Pittsburgh, PA .
Salt Lake City, UT .
Worcester, MA .
Washington, DC .
In New York NY, “Porsha-Shaf’on Venable, a supervising public defender who staffs the Good Call hotline [a free arrest support hotline]” spoke with Elle about her experience working through the protests: “The first night of protest, I was slaughtered[.] I probably answered five to 10 calls an hour, and I’m low-balling the number…We’ve gone from maybe two to three lawyers during a night to 19 lawyers per shift. “
In California, “California Attorneys for Criminal Justice (CACJ), a statewide association of criminal defense attorneys in private practice and working in public defender offices, unveiled a package of legislative proposals to address ongoing racial bias in law enforcement and the judicial system. ”
Pro Bono Representation
Class Actions
Prosecutors
Legal Technology
In Washington DC, “[t]he Justice Department has granted the Drug Enforcement Administration, typically tasked with enforcing federal drug-related laws, the authority to conduct ‘covert surveillance’ on protesters across the U.S., effectively turning the civilian law enforcement division into a domestic intelligence agency. The DEA is one of the most tech-savvy government agencies in the federal government, with access to ‘stingray’ cell site simulators to track and locate phones, a secret program that allows the agency access to billions of domestic phone records, and facial recognition technology. Lawmakers decried the Justice Department’s move to allow the DEA to spy on protesters, calling on the government to ‘immediately rescind’ the order, describing it as ‘antithetical’ to Americans’ right to peacefully assemble. ”
In New York NY, digital and human rights groups argued that “[l]aw enforcement agencies should be banned from using racially biased surveillance technology that fuels discrimination and injustice…, amid protests over police brutality against black Americans. ”
In a letter to Congress, “IBM CEO Arvind Krishna said the company will not support any technology that could lead to mass surveillance, racial profiling or ‘violations of basic human rights and freedoms’ .”
In Redmond WA, “Microsoft Corp. [said] it would await federal regulation before selling facial recognition technology to police, making it the latest big firm to back away from the business following protests against law enforcement brutality and bias. ”
In Seattle WA, “Amazon announced [] a one-year moratorium on police use of its facial-recognition technology, yielding to pressure from police-reform advocates and civil rights groups. ”
On the internet, “[a] consumer advocacy group [] slammed Zoom Video Communications Inc.’s plan to only offer strengthened encryption protections to paying users. ”
Meanwhile, TechCrunch asked “[t]he protests and unrest of the last week have produced enormous volumes of footage documenting police brutality and other crimes. Where is the platform for this important evidence to be collected, collated, and made public? If a major tech company doesn’t step up to the plate soon it can only be attributed to hypocrisy and cowardice. ”
Immigration, Refugee, and Citizenship
Student Loans
COVID-19 & Decarceration
Access to Justice – Civil
Access to Justice – Criminal
Criminal Justice Reform
Permalink
June 5, 2020 at 1:26 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Law News Bulletin
Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives
Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress
Interested public. I compile this digest each week (well, most weeks) to bring you public interest law news. This week, the news is that public protests and the forces of the law are in perilous tension. After Minneapolis law enforcement slowly murdered a Black man in their custody in broad daylight and in full view of multiple witnesses and cameras, people across the United States have been moved to protest against systemic racial oppression. Law enforcement officers have responded with brutal violence while many mayors demonstrated bipartisan disinterest in police accountability. The President of the United States has placed the District of Columbia under military occupation and threatened sovereign U.S. states with similar treatment rather than consider meaningful reforms. Retired and serving members of military leadership have begun to remind soldiers of their Constitutional oaths while the U.S. Attorney General deploys heavily-armed, unmarked forces in downtown DC.
The legal community, in response, has begun bringing lawsuits. Lawyers across the country have committed to serving protestors pro bono. The Supreme Court of the United States weighed whether to revisit the doctrine of “qualified immunity” for law enforcement. The Supreme Court of Washington issued a challenge to the legal community:
“As lawyers and members of the bar, we must recognize the harms that are caused when meritorious claims go unaddressed due to systemic inequities or the lack of financial, personal, or systemic support. And we must also recognize that this is not how a justice system must operate. Too often in the legal profession, we feel bound by tradition and the way things have “always” been. We must remember that even the most venerable precedent must be struck down when it is incorrect and harmful. The systemic oppression of black Americans is not merely incorrect and harmful; it is shameful and deadly. ”
Finally, as the New York Attorney General says “she’s prepared to legally challenge President Donald Trump’s threat to send in the military ”, at least one legal commentator (Elie Mystal of the Nation ) questioned the relevance of a legal response to a military encounter: “If the military is told to occupy New York City or Los Angeles, they’ll go. If they’re told to secure the streets, in violation of the constitutional right to peaceable assembly, they’ll do it. If they’re told to round up and arrest protesters, or members of the press, they’ll do it. They won’t even have to open fire on a crowd of unarmed civilians—the threat that one of them might is more than enough to vitiate any pretense of constitutional democracy…People have to think [] about how to stop a man who is above the law, using all the peaceful tools (always the peaceful tools) available to us. ”
These stories are in the links below.
Take care of one another,
Sam
In Washington DC, “Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said [] George Floyd, the African American man who died following a violent arrest in Minnesota, was “murdered” at the hands of the Minneapolis Police Department….Appearing on CNN a short time later, she was even more blunt calling Floyd’s death ‘an execution’. ”
As USA Today describes the public response, “[t]here have been demonstrations in at least 430 cities and towns so far, large and small, across all 50 states [and t]he number of places that have held rallies or protests is still growing[.] ”
Across the country, protestors and journalists documented law enforcement officers engaging in acts of violence.
The Baltimore Sun : “As demonstrators took to the streets in cities across the nation to decry police brutality in the wake of the ruthless killing of yet another unarmed black man by a white police officer, law enforcement throughout the country again and again reacted with violence .”
Slate: “police all over the country tear-gassed protesters, drove vehicles through crowds, opened fire with nonlethal rounds on journalists or people on their own property, and in at least one instance, pushed over an elderly man who was walking away with a cane[; …] law enforcement officers escalated the national unrest. ”
The Guardian: “These lawless rioters are out of control. They have driven an SUV into a crowd, tossed journalists to the ground and pepper-sprayed them, beaten people with batons and even blinded a woman in one eye. They have been launching unprovoked attacks on peaceful, law-abiding citizens exercising their constitutional rights. The violent behavior of these mobs should be condemned by all. We need to restore order: someone must stop the police. ”
The ACLU: “Police violence is one of the leading causes of death for Black men in America, and police officers who kill rarely face any type of accountability. This needs to stop. Yet in too many cities, the police response has been only more brutality .”
Police departments have engaged in this behavior despite the fact that, as the Marshall Project notes, “[r]esearchers [who] have spent 50 years studying the way crowds of protesters and crowds of police behave…will tell you [that] disproportionate police force is one of the things that can make a peaceful protest not so peaceful. ”
Mayors of many prominent cities sought to justify law enforcement’s actions–although some elected officials’ positions have moved. A few examples:
Meanwhile, in Washington DC:
“Trump and some of his advisers calculated that he should not speak to the nation because he had nothing to say, according to a senior administration official. He had no tangible policy or action to announce, nor did he feel an urgent motivation to try to bring people together. So he stayed silent. ”
Silent, that is, until “[i]n a massive show of force, federal law enforcement officers fired rubber bullets and chemical gas at peaceful protesters outside the White House on Monday evening as President Trump appeared in the Rose Garden to threaten the mobilization of ‘thousands and thousands of heavily armed soldiers’ to quell ‘lawlessness’ across the country…Arlington County officers who were supporting Park Police at Lafayette Square were ordered to leave downtown after county officials realized they had been a part of what they called a presidential publicity stunt. ”
Steve Herman, White House bureau chief for Voice of America, reported that Principal Deputy Press Secretary Hogan Gidley told reporters on Thursday,“ ‘All options are on the table’ for use of the military to deal with nationwide unrest[.] ” Herman went on to note that Ted Lieu (CA-33), a member of the House Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security, reacted to this statement with alarm.
Additionally, “[t]ensions between President Trump and U.S. military leaders have escalated over the handling of protests, culminating in officials reminding troops about their oath to the Constitution. Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley, Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy, and National Guard chief Joseph Lengyel have sent out guidance to take that oath seriously as protests swell across the country in response to the death of George Floyd, an unarmed black man who died after a white police officer knelt on his neck for more than eight minutes while Floyd pleaded for his life. ”
Relatedly,
In the Legal Community:
The ACLU has begun bringing lawsuits in collaboration with protest organizers:
“The President of the United States is not a dictator, and President Trump does not and will not dominate New York state. In fact, the president does not have the right to unilaterally deploy U.S. military across American states[.] We respect and will guard the right to peaceful protest, and my office will review any federal action with an eye toward protecting our state’s rights. Rest assured: We will not hesitate to go to court to protect our constitutional rights during this time and well into the future. ”
Permalink
May 15, 2020 at 2:06 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Law News Bulletin
Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives
Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress
Hello there, interested public! The news continues to pour in, shaking the windows and rattling the walls. Major stories this week include student loans, in which the Democratic caucus released a debt relief proposal as part of the HEROES Act only to amend their proposal two days later, significantly reducing their proposed forgiveness. In civil access to justice, reporting from DC highlighted the stark difference in FEMA’s efforts to provide legal services during the pandemic, compared with its approach to other disasters. In the legislative branch, a bipartisan group of Representatives proposed a civil Gideon bill. Meanwhile, on the criminal side, legal authorities in Colorado and Massachusetts highlighted a vacuum of authority when considering decarceration as a public health measure. And the Michigan legislature cancelled its session in the face of armed opposition.
As always, these stories and more are in the links below.
Stay well,
Sam
Bar Exam Changes
Remote Court Practice & Lawmaking
Rule of Law
Pro Bono Response
In Oklahoma, Katie Dilks, Executive Director of the Oklahoma Access to Justice Foundation (and former PSJD Fellow), and Michael Figgins, ED of Legal Aid Services of Oklahoma, reported that “[t]he foundation is working with partners across the state to launch a statewide pro bono portal where lawyers can connect with volunteer opportunities, both in their communities and across the state. ”
In Tennessee, “Legal Aid of East Tennessee (LAET) has announced the launch of Pro Bono Matters on its website[.] Pro Bono Matters offers volunteer attorneys the opportunity to express interest in specific cases, which will help LAET to achieve its mission of strengthening communities and changing lives through high-quality legal services. ” You can find the new program here .
In Central Islip NY, “Touro law school [h]as established a helpline to answer legal questions arising from the pandemic. Volunteer attorneys will provide referrals to [Touro’s] own clinic program and appropriate legal partners[.] ”
In New York NY, “[m]ore than 150 Columbia Law School students are working with faculty on pro bono projects: They are guiding small-business owners through the federal Paycheck Protection Program loan process, supporting public defenders working to win the release of prisoners vulnerable to COVID-19, and finding crucial resources for unemployed workers and immigrants. ”
Student Loans & Student Debt
In Washington DC, “[j]ust two days after releasing the Heroes Act, House Democrats [] released an amendment to the bill. The original bill called for $10,000 in student loan cancellation for all borrowers and a suspension of student loan payments through September 30, 2021. This new amendment scales back the proposed student loan forgiveness. ”
Also in Washington DC, “Senate education committee Chairman Lamar Alexander on Tuesday said, ‘interest rates on new federal student loans will drop to historic lows on July 1.’ …The interest rate on undergraduate loans will be 2.75 percent for the 2020-2021 school year, down from 4.53 percent in the 2019-2020 school year. The interest rate on loans for graduate students will be 4.3 percent (down from 6.08 percent) and for PLUS loans for parents and graduates will be 5.3 percent (down from 7.08 percent). ”
Also also in Washington DC, “[r]esponding to a lawsuit from the National Students Legal Defense Network, DeVos noted that her agency instructed nearly 37,500 employers to halt the practice Monday. Over the weekend, it assured some 83,500 borrowers in default that their wages would not be garnished.” Overall, “[a]bout 54,000 workers had their wages garnished as of May 7. This is about 14% of the 390,000 Americans who saw March wages garnished. ”
In Wisconsin, We are Green Bay described the efforts of the state’s Student Debt Task Force, created in January, which “will meet eight times in the coming months, with a goal of submitting a series of recommendation to the governor to deal with student debt, which he will include in his next biennial budget. ”
In New York NY, Judge Ramos of the Southern District of New York “ruled he will allow full discovery” in a suit by New York State against “the Federal Education Department’s sole-source contractor FedLoan Servicing…for ‘failing miserably in its administration of the Public Service Loan Forgiveness [sic]. ” The docket for this ongoing case is available here .
Benefits Pro reported that under the CARES Act, “[e]mployers can now help their employees pay down student debt faster and save a significant amount of money on student loan interest. ”
Non-Profit & Gov’t Management & Hiring
In Washington, “[u]nprecedented job losses and furloughs have pushed millions of Americans to the brink of eviction during the coronavirus pandemic, but the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the White House have failed to fund a legal assistance program that is routinely available to disaster survivors. ”
In Kentucky, the “court system will impose a statewide hiring freeze and suspend out-of-state travel to reduce expenses as the coronavirus drives down revenues, the state’s chief justice said. ”
Note: There are many stories of this nature across the United States at the moment. NALP is working to keep track of news related to this issue on a consolidated page; you can find a link to this page and other COVID-19 national survey materials at www.psjd.org/covid19
In Washington DC, “the nation’s charitable nonprofits strongly urge[d] leaders in both the House and Senate to take swift action to ensure that nonprofits of all sizes receive critical relief so they can continue to serve their communities through the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond. ”
In British Columbia, “non-profit organizations say they’re at risk due to pandemic restrictions, with 15-19% saying they face closure and 23% saying they might not last another six months. ”
In Edmonton AB, “a University of Alberta law professor…raised more than $120,000 for his 100 Interns Project through online seminars, direct employment donations, and financial contributions. ”
In the United States, Government Executive reported that “the federal government lags when it comes to attracting Generation Z tech talent. ”
In Canada, “[t]he economic fallout from the coronavirus has cut off scores of young Canadians from summer jobs and internships, which usually help them bridge gaps between tuition payments. ”
Immigration, Refugee & Citizenship Issues
Access to Justice – Criminal & Decarceration
In Massachusetts, “Supreme Court Chief Justice Ralph Gants had a question for attorneys who argued Thursday that some state agencies should not be named in a lawsuit seeking to release more prisoners because of COVID-19. ‘We’ve got the governor saying, `Not my problem, I shouldn’t be ordered to do something.` We’ve got the Department of Correction saying, `We manage the prisons, the only thing we’re involved with is medical parole,` and now we’ve got the parole board saying that it’s not their problem. So who’s supposed to do it?’ Gants asked during Thursday’s SJC hearing on a class action lawsuit seeking to reduce the number of people incarcerated to stem the spread of the coronavirus behind bars. ”
In Aurora CO, the Colorado Sentinel reported on how efforts to release municipal offenders to slow the spread of the pandemic highlighted a vacuum in legal authority: “City Attorney Dan Brotzman…wrote in an email…citing a bevy of case law [that] ‘in Colorado and across the country, it is clear that a commutation or pardon of a municipal ordinance violation cannot be performed under the executive power of the governor, nor of any city official, unless that power is granted to that official. Under the Colorado Constitution,…the governor is provided that specific power…only for state crimes, not convictions for ordinance violations.’ “
Note: There are many stories of this nature across the United States at the moment. The Prison Policy Initiative is working to keep track of news related to this issue on a consolidated page; you can find a link to this page and other COVID-19 national survey materials at www.psjd.org/covid19
In Chicago IL, University of Chicago News covered the experience of students in the law school’s Federal Criminal Justice Clinic, which executed “a quick pivot…as the coronavirus pandemic took hold [and] urgent needs emerged in the federal criminal justice system just as other clinic projects were postponed. ”
In Louisiana, “public defenders face steep financial challenges as the coronavirus rages on, forcing leaders to declare an emergency shortfall in funding this week. The outbreak has shuttered courthouses across the state, halting the flow of user fines and fees that account for about half of the Louisiana Public Defender Board’s budget. ”
Access to Justice – Civil & Economic
In Washington, “Two Republicans, Reps. Susan Brooks of Indiana and Fred Upton of Michigan, and thirteen other Democrats, including Reps. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota and Jerrold Nadler of New York, have so far co-sponsored [a] resolution [from Rep. Joe Kennedy III], which aims to provide counsel in civil proceedings tied to ‘health, safety, family, shelter or sustenance’ for those who otherwise could not afford or access it. ”
In California, the “State Bar voted Thursday to form a group to study launching an experimental ‘sandbox’ to come up with innovative ways to give more people access to legal services, which could include relaxing rules regarding the unauthorized practice of law and nonlawyer ownership of firms. ”
In Southern California, “[t]hree…cities have received letters threatening lawsuits if they don’t repeal eviction bans enacted to protect out-of-work or ill renters during the coronavirus pandemic. Two of the cities–Upland and La Verne–repealed their bans after getting the letters. ”
In Missouri, “Legal Services of Eastern Missouri has expanded its services to help people with the unemployment benefits application process. ”
Criminal Justice Reform
In Sangamon County IL, “[i]n a scathing resignation letter, an assistant Sangamon County public defender has blasted the local judiciary as being a politically influenced body that seeks to manage the public defender’s office. ”
In Nevada, “[a]t least nine public defenders running for judicial seats in Southern Nevada think any meaningful solution [to over-incarceration] has to include balancing the benches. ”
In Nova Scotia, “Nova Scotia Legal Aid wants to help the hundreds of people in the province who’ve been ticketed for walking in a park or failing to physically distance during COVID-19. It’s encouraging people to call for free legal advice if they’ve received a summary offence ticket under the province’s health protection and emergency management acts. ”
In New Jersey, the state legislature is “among the first states to consider making it a crime to issue a ‘credible threat to infect another with COVID-19 or similar infectious disease that triggered public emergency,’ said a spokesman for the National Conference of State Legislatures…Advocates for HIV-positive people said states drafting such laws should be careful not to make them so broad that they punish poor and minority communities, as studies show HIV criminalization has[.] ”
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May 8, 2020 at 4:45 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Law News Bulletin
Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives
Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress
Hello there, interested public! The days remain packed, even as we all stay at home. Some major stories include a decision to restrict the New York bar exam to people who graduated from law school in New York, a judicial opinion out of Ontario suggesting that courts may not want to return to in-person appearances under some circumstances, a decision in New Jersey to allow out-of-state-licensed lawyers to provide temporary, supervised pro bono assistance, and a lawsuit alleging that Secretary DeVos has illegally continued to garnish the wages of student debtholders after the CARES Act suspended this practice.
As always, these stories and more are in the links below.
Stay well,
Sam
State Bar Exams
Remote Court Practice & Lawmaking
Voting Rights
Rule of Law
Pro Bono Response
In New Jersey, the state “Supreme Court has issued an order to allow attorneys not licensed in New Jersey to provide temporary, supervised pro bono assistance to individuals and small businesses impacted by the novel coronavirus pandemic. ”
In Chicago IL, “[t]he American Bar Association is unveiling a new online portal designed to better connect pro bono attorneys with individuals and families who need free legal services because of the national COVID-19 emergency .” You can access this portal here .
In Kentucky, “[l]egal aid societies statewide have launched free training for lawyers who agree to provide pro-bono work in exchange for specialized training on the civil issues Kentuckians are expected to need the most help with. ” The initiative, “Together Lawyers Can”, is available at this link .
In New York, “[a]lmost two years after the New York Workers’ Compensation Board approved rules to allow law students and interns to represent injured workers in medical-only claims, the program has gone nowhere, leaving many workers to represent themselves. ”
In Massachusetts, “Safety Net Project Director Julie McCormack and the students working with her on criminal record sealing (a mostly administrative process before the Massachusetts Probation Service) have taken advantage of the enforced slow-down brought about by COVID19 to develop audio-visual self-help materials for veterans and others seeking to remove the stigma of long ago involvement in the criminal justice system. ”
Student Loans & Student Debt
Non-Profit & Gov’t Management & Hiring
Immigration, Refugee & Citizenship Issues
Access to Justice – Criminal & Decarceration
Access to Justice – Civil & Economic
In Washington DC, “[t]he Legal Services Corporation’s Board of Directors will meet remotely on Tuesday, May 19, 2020…Unless otherwise noted herein, the Board meeting will be open to public observation. ”
In Charlottesville VA, “[the] Legal Aid Justice Center call[ed] Governor Northam’s pending decision to begin reopening the state’s closed businesses “reckless”. Executive Director Angela Ciolfi told Morning News Virginia is nowhere near where [the state] need[s] to be in terms of testing capacity and contact tracing in order to make the move. ”
In Utah, the state Bar Foundation “has released a report addressing the unmet legal needs of lower-income Utahns. The report…highlights the civil legal needs of the roughly 26% of Utah’s population living at or below 200% of the federal poverty guidelines. ” The full report is available here .
In Washington DC, “[f]ederal relief aid in the CARES Act was supposed to ensure the country’s indigenous peoples were not forgotten. Instead, tribes have been embroiled in a legal fight with the Trump administration over attempts to send the money to for-profit Native corporations in Alaska. While a federal judge sided with the tribes last week, the U.S. Treasury Department has yet to release any of the funds…[w]hen the money finally does flow…Native Hawaiians won’t see any of it. ”
In South Carolina, “legal experts said…in the weeks and months ahead, they expect a deluge of renters and homeowners who will be unable to keep up with payments. ”
In San Francisco CA, “Mayor London Breed received a demand letter…insisting she follow the Board of Supervisors’ unanimously passed ordinance to procure 8,250 hotel rooms and put vulnerable homeless people in some 7,000 of them. ”
In New York NY, local reporting argued that “[a]mid this pandemic, it is imperative that New York City expands the Right to Counsel law by increasing legal capacity to meet the inevitable COVID-19 eviction demand, and, building on this model, establish a new initiative to provide free legal representation to vulnerable small businesses. ”
Criminal Justice Reform
LawAtlas.org released new data “show[ing] that some states were slow in their initial legal responses to the COVID-19 outbreak in the United States, but have since issued numerous state orders to mitigate the spread of the virus nationwide. ”
In New York NY, “[d]espite mounting pressure to stop using police to enforce social distancing and data showing that such arrests disproportionately affect people of colour, Mayor Bill de Blasio stood by the practice[.] ”
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April 24, 2020 at 12:22 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Law News Bulletin
Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives
Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress
Hello there, interested public! News continues to be big, keeping pace with world events. Major stories come from the ABA, which is recommending state bars develop paths to practice for graduates unable to take the bar exam because of the pandemic, Suffolk Law, which has launched a volunteer initiative to design internet-friendly court forms, and the 11th Circuit, which overturned a motion to dismiss in a case brought by student debtholders “alleging they were given false information about whether their student loans would be forgiven when they worked in public-service jobs.” Also, a coalition of states is developing to negotiate for student debtholder protections and accommodations, and the LSC briefed the legal aid community on its response to the pandemic.
As always, these stories and more are in the links below.
Stay well,
Sam
Remote Court Practice & Lawmaking
In Ontario, MPP Doug Downey spoke about the province’s work “r apidly updating procedures and creating policies to physically shut down courthouses and allow wider use of virtual hearings ”: “ ‘ We’ve modernized the legal system by about 25 years in 25 days. It’s really quite phenomenal the work that’s been done ‘[.] ”
In New York, “executive orders have been issued to facilitate not only remote notarization, but now also remote witnessing. ”
Also in New York, after “ the state’s judiciary…successfully implemented a statewide ‘virtual court’ system this month[, ]…representatives of poor and moderate-income communities across the state say they’re concerned for underserved clients who may have trouble getting connected. ”
In Boston MA, “a group of students and staff members at Suffolk University Law School…organize[d] an assembly line of volunteers to design mobile-friendly court forms and assist lawyerless people with their filings. Court officials are sharing relevant documents with Suffolk’s Legal Innovation & Technology Lab, which parcels out the tasks based on volunteers’ skills. ”
In Philadelphia PA, DA Larry Krasner’s office “propos[ed] that the city courts establish a Zoom court where hearings could be held virtually. ”
In Hennepin County MN, “County District Judge Martha Holton Dimick appeared for hearings Monday via telephone, bucking mandates issued by the county’s chief judge and state Chief Justice Lorie Skjerven Gildea. ”
In Washington DC, “[d]ozens of former congressional members [hosted] a mock remote hearing Thursday to spotlight how Congress can continue its work online during the global coronavirus pandemic. ”
Pro Bono Response
Student Loans & Student Debt
In Florida, “[a] federal appeals court [] cleared the way for a lawsuit in which two Florida women allege they were given false information about whether their student loans would be forgiven when they worked in public-service jobs. ”
In Massachusetts, New Jersey, Connecticut, Illinois, and Vermont, state governments “have announced that they are participating in a multi-state initiative to provide relief to borrowers whose student loans are not covered by the CARES Act through agreements with certain student loan servicers. Other states identified in the announcements that are also participating in the initiative are California, Colorado, Virginia, and Washington. ”
In Calfornia, Governor Newsom “said that 21 companies that service student loans will be granting [a] 90-day grace period on payments with no late fees. Newsom credited Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker for leading the effort to support borrowers who were not covered by debt forbearance in the $2.2 trillion federal…(CARES) Act. ”
In Washington DC, Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) “called for any new stimulus package to include additional relief for student debt, stimulus money for high school and college students, and the creation of a federal program to give young people not bound for college the opportunity to earn a free, post-high school educational certificate. ”
Also in Washington DC, Sens. Warren (D-MA) & Brown (D-OH) proposed a consumer protection plan that included “[e]suring that private student borrowers are protected, just like federal student loan borrowers.” The plan also calls for “broad cancellation of student loan debt as a way to stimulate the economy as well as ‘ensure Americans don’t have a massive student debt load waiting for them on the other side of this emergency and help a generation of Americans who never fully recovered from our last economic crisis participate in stimulating our economy through this crisis.’ ”
Non-Profit & Gov’t Management & Hiring
In Chicago IL, “[t]he American Bar Association is urging state licensing authorities to let 2019-20 law school graduates who can’t take the bar exam because of the coronavirus pandemic practice law under certain circumstances. ”
In Washington DC, house Democrats announced plans to “push for a number of additional protections for federal workers in future legislation aimed at combating the coronavirus pandemic, including hazard pay, expanded leave and telework, and reversing the Trump administration’s policies toward federal employee unions. ”
Also in Washington DC, “Senate Democrats announced a proposal to supplement the health care workforce through a massive outreach and training program, part of a larger effort to expand national service during the COVID-19 pandemic. ”
Also also in Washington DC, “more than 200 national nonprofit organizations [] sent a letter to congressional leadership, calling on them to include a “Nonprofit Track” in any future legislation that builds on the CARES Act. ”
In the United States, “[a] majority of federal employees say the novel coronavirus outbreak has had a “major” or “extreme” impact on their agencies’ operations, according to a new survey[.] ”
Immigration, Refugee & Citizenship Issues
Access to Justice – Criminal & Decarceration
Access to Justice – Civil & Economic
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April 3, 2020 at 12:47 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Law News Bulletin
Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives
Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress
Hello there, interested public! Once again, the news is overwhelming. I’ve done my best to catalogue it for you all below. One big announcement: as major stories roll out everywhere concerning eviction moratoria, changes to court procedures, changes to policing and carceral policies, and government hiring freezes, we’ve collected resources that are working to centralize information on these stories as they develop in the PSJD resource center . This section of the resource center also includes links to student-driven pro bono projects that have sprung up in response to the pandemic.
As for the digest itself, you will still find some of the most prominent stories on these topics, but please refer to the PSJD resource page for materials that focus on them exclusively and that attempt to be comprehensive.
Major news this week includes reporting that analyzes the impact of last week’s $2.2 trillion CARES Act on student loan debt payments (and employer-driven student loan benefits). Also, you’ll find lawsuits challenging the ongoing detention of incarcerated individuals, whether as pretrial detainees, convicts, or detainees in ICE facilities. Additionally, there’s a new section looking at the growing pro bono response to the pandemic–and particularly at the areas into which lawyers are productively channelling their energies to address the crisis.
These stories and more are in the links below. As with last week, in each section news that is not related to the current crisis appears at the section’s end, separated from Coronavirus content with a horizontal line (—).
Stay well,
Sam
Editor’s Choice
Remote Court Practice & Lawmaking
In the UK, “Legal futurologist Professor Richard Susskind unveil[ed an] initiative to co-ordinate efforts to use technology to keep courts open. ”
In Canada, “[t]he Federal Court is continuing to hear all urgent matters, as well as exceptional matters, on a ‘case-by-case’ basis, by teleconference or videoconference according to the terms of its practice direction and order issued March 17, and the frequently asked questions (FAQs) on March 20, the court’s legal counsel, Andrew Baumberg has confirmed. ”
Also in Canada, former Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin wrote “to lend my voice to the growing list of practitioners, judges, academics and court users who are beseeching governments across Canada to see COVID-19 and the courts’ woeful inability to pivot as a wake-up call. ”
In Georgia, “the executive director of the Georgia Public Defender Council sent an urgent letter to Georgia’s criminal justice community [regarding] “[a] few local courts” across the state [] still requiring public defenders to appear personally at county jails before their clients could be released or their cases could proceed,… [and urging] he courts still requiring personal appearances…to implement alternatives ‘as soon as possible’ to limit the risk to lawyers, clients, court officers and incarcerated defendants. ”
In Wisconsin, “Governor Evers signed Assembly Bill 293 earlier this month, permitting parties in Wisconsin to allow the performance of notarial acts using audio-visual technology for remotely located individuals. ”
Worldwide, “Zoom’s ease of use, feature base, and free service tier have made it a go-to resource not only for all those office meetings that used to happen in conference rooms but also for teachers, religious services, and even governments. The widespread use, in turn, is shining a bright spotlight on Zoom’s privacy and data-collection practices, which apparently leave much to be desired. ”
Pro Bono Response
In New York, “[t]he state bar association and court system said in a statement…that they are putting together a network of pro bono lawyers that can respond to legal issues arising out of the pandemic, especially those affecting people who can’t afford to hire an attorney. ”
Law360 discussed the “surging interest from…lawyers looking to tackle the flood of legal problems caused by the pandemic. ”
Law360 also covered “a few ways that lawyers can step up in a time of social distancing. ”
Law.com reported on “[Hogan Lovells] pro bono efforts [that] helped Patriots owner Bob Kraft use his team’s plane to secure 1.7 million N95 masks from China and guided Ford in a deal with GE Healthcare to produce 50,000 ventilators in 100 days. ”
In Baltimore MD, Warnken, LLC announced in a press release their firm “will represent healthcare workers or public safety employees exposed to COVID-19 at work pro bono.” They also mentioned that “Jim Lanier, attorney at Warnken, LLC, was primary drafter of a proposed new bill that would create a presumption under Maryland law that healthcare workers at COVID-19 facilities, and public safety employees, got COVID-19 at work. That bill is with government relations professionals actively seeking sponsorship. ”
In Miami FL, Law.com published a conversation with the Executive Director of Legal Services of Greater Miami about “3 Ways Lawyers Can Help Legal Services of Greater Miami Right Now”
In Canada, CBC reported that “[w]aves of people concerned about COVID-19 are rushing to write or change their wills, but they’re running into a roadblock caused by the effort to curb the pandemic. ” In response, the chair of the Canadian Bar Association’s Elder Law section and one of her partners at Loopstra Nixon are “trying [to] advance the law a little bit by obtaining a court order that says it’s OK to witness the will over the internet, whether it be Skype or Zoom or what-have-you[.] ”
Student Loans & Student Debt
Forbes advised that “this is probably one time when you’ll want to contact your student loan servicer. ” The article also includes brief bullets on what to keep in mind about modifying your payments and contact information for various loan servicers.
Meanwhile, “the Education Department as of Wednesday still had outdated information on its own site, leaving borrowers confused about what help is available as the financial impact of the coronavirus outbreak takes hold. ”
401k Specialist Mag reported that “[t]he $2.2 trillion Cares [sic] Act…includes a new student loan repayment benefit for employees that can help them start saving for retirement earlier. Under the provision, an employer may contribute up to $5,250 annually toward an employee’s student loans, and such payment would be excluded from the employee’s income. The $5,250 cap applies to both the new student loan repayment benefit as well as other educational assistance (e.g., tuition, fees, books) provided by the employer under current law. ”
Bloomberg reported on “terms of the [student loan] garnishment suspension [that] may confuse employers as the Education Department refines details of the program authorized by the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, which was signed March 27 by President Donald Trump. ”
Non-Profit & Gov’t Management & Hiring
In Washington DC, “the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled the department [of Veterans Affairs] could not retroactively apply the 2017 VA Accountability and Whistleblower Protection Act, nor could it declare its punishments ineligible for review. The decision strikes major blows to VA’s authorities to enforce the law it, Trump and lawmakers on both sides of the aisle had trumpeted as a fundamental step to ease the disciplinary process for misbehaving and poorly performing employees. ”
Immigration, Refugee & Citizenship Issues
In Washington DC, “[t]he federal docket…is quickly becoming a hotbed for litigation seeking to force officials to protect detained immigrants and inmates during the COVID-19 pandemic. ”
In the United States, the American Immigration Lawyers Association, the National Association of Immigration Judges, and AFGE #511 (ICE Professionals Union) called for the “Immediate Closure of All Immigration Courts”
Also in the United States, “[t]housands of people with legal status in the United States could inadvertently violate immigration law over the next few months, as the government agency that processes applications remains closed due to the coronavirus pandemic. ”
In Portland OR, the Southern Poverty Law Center, the Innovation Law Lab, and Perkins Coie LLP “s[ought] a temporary restraining order mandating that immigration courts take appropriate measures to protect immigrants, attorneys, court staff and the public from COVID-19 without endangering the rights of people in removal proceedings. ”
In Boston MA, “the Worker & Immigrant Rights Advocacy Clinic (WIRAC) at Yale Law School joined the Boston-based Lawyers for Civil Rights (LCR) and the Brazilian Worker Center in filing a class action lawsuit against Bristol County Sheriff Thomas Hodgson, Bristol County Superintendent Steven Souza, and top federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials. The complaint alleges that the dozens of detainees like Ceballos who are held in civil immigration detention at Bristol are at undue risk of contracting and suffering from the novel coronavirus. “
In San Bernardino CA, “A federal judge has ordered the release of two detainees from the Adelanto ICE facility…due to the coronavirus pandemic. ”
In Alabama, Connecticut Public Radio interviewed “[o]ne Connecticut resident who’s being held by ICE in an Alabama county jail” about his conditions of detention. ”
Quartz.com reminded its readers that just last year “the American Association of Medical Colleges…warned in an amicus brief to the US Supreme Court of a severe shortage in healthcare professionals nationwide [and] explained that the country now very much relies on more than 27,000 grown children of undocumented immigrants in healthcare and medicine, authorized to work under an Obama-era program introduced in 2012, called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA). ”
Access to Justice – Criminal & Decarceration
In Washington DC, “[t]he federal docket…is quickly becoming a hotbed for litigation seeking to force officials to protect detained immigrants and inmates during the COVID-19 pandemic. ”
In California, the California Public Defenders’ Association strongly criticized the orders of the state’s Chief Justice extending deadlines for preliminary hearings, trials, and other time periods specified in court procedures as actions “taken without and [sic] regard for, or any mention of, the extensive written objections that CPDA and many other criminal defense and civil liberties groups submitted to the Chief Justice and the Judicial Council in response to their request[.] ”
Relatedly, Slate published a Maryland attorney’s account of “What It’s Like to Be a Public Defender Right Now”: “Our work, by its nature, necessitates contact…Through remote lawyering, we can prepare most of our cases, sure. But we cannot fully advocate for clients, especially under the limited and ever-shrinking capacity in which Maryland courts are now operating. Basically, under the current regime, defendants can plead guilty, but if a client wants to profess his innocence, the case is postponed (likely without a hearing). In an environment where sitting in jail could, in itself, result in serious illness or death, a system that was already heavily weighted toward guilty pleas has only become more so when, in some cases, clients have options of going home on probation or languishing indefinitely in jail awaiting trial. ”
In Washington DC, “[t]he ACLU and DC Public Defender Service accuse the city of a flagrant disregard for the well-being of prisoners in the DC Jail in a federal lawsuit they have filed against the city. ”
In Saskatchewan, “[t]he John Howard Society of Saskatchewan is urging to [sic] province to quickly implement measures to reduce the further spread of COVID-19 in prisons. ”
In US Federal prisons, “inmates will be confined to their cell or quarters for the next two weeks as a part of efforts to stem the spread of the coronavirus, the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) announced[.]…Criminal justice reform advocates criticized the Federal Bureau of Prisons’s move to confine inmates for an extended period. Scott Hechinger, a public defender in Brooklyn, tweeted that ‘solitary confinement is not a solution. Solitary confinement is torture.’ “
In Honolulu HI, “Mayor Kirk Caldwell…objected to efforts to relieve overcrowding at Hawaii’s correctional facilities amid the coronavirus pandemic, claiming that ‘our prison could actually be the safest place in terms of COVID-19. ’”
In Wyoming, the state Supreme Court reversed a contempt order levied against State Public Defender Diane Lozano “after she decided her office could no longer provide representation for defendants in misdemeanor cases due to a heavy caseload and an ongoing understaffing crisis. ”
Access to Justice – Civil & Economic
In the United States, “ civil legal aid groups…now face an unprecedented crunch from all sides as the nation’s poor take the brunt of the faltering economy and skyrocketing unemployment numbers. The closure of businesses for social distancing will not only increase the number of people with those legal problems but also increase the number of people who qualify as low income. ”
In Canada, the National Self-Represented Litigants Project reported that “[m]any of those working on the front lines will tell you, like health care workers this week, that they feel like they have their finger in a dyke – of need and frustration – that could burst at any moment. ”
In Ontario, Legal Aid Ontario announced that “as part of our ongoing response to the COVID-19 pandemic, lawyers across Ontario may, temporarily, apply for legal aid on behalf of clients that are in custody, when clients cannot. ”
In New York NY, the Director of the family and matrimonial practice at Her Justice called attention to the difficulties the pandemic imposes on individuals attempting to escape domestic abuse: “[o]ne Her Justice client has already gotten word to her lawyers that they should not try to reach her by phone or email because she’s afraid her abuser, with whom she’s now cloistered at home, will see the messages, Diamanti said. Another client suspected that her partner was exposing their immunosuppressed child to COVID-19 but didn’t have sufficient facts to file an emergency petition. ”
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March 27, 2020 at 2:23 pm
· Filed under Public Interest Law News Bulletin
Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives
Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress
Hello there, interested public! It’s been a busy week–so busy in fact that the digest will be a bit brief today. To start with, our PSJD Fellow Brittany Valente has done a stellar job pulling together all of the various orders under which state judiciaries are now operating across the country , which is available now as a resource on PSJD. We hope to add information about federal courts before too long, and are also working on a document about changes in carceral policies and policing.
As with last week, in each section news that is not related to the current crisis appears at the section’s end, separated from Coronavirus content with a horizontal line (—).
Stay well,
Sam
Tracking the Changing Landscape
Remote Court Practice & Lawmaking
Student Loans & Student Debt
At Harvard, “Harvard Law School students and alumni wrote a letter on Saturday asking the Law School’s Low Income Protection Plan to maintain current levels of financial aid if the federal government approves student debt relief amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic…’We basically don’t want the intention of assistance from the federal government to be offset by a corresponding and equal reduction in assistance from Harvard, because then it’s not assistance at all, right?’ said [a signatory]. ”
In British Columbia, officials announced they would follow the Canadian government’s example and suspend student loan payments “effect[ive] at the end of March and last[ing] all the way until September 2020. ”
In Washington DC, “[t]he Trump administration has stopped seizing the wages, tax refunds and Social Security benefits of people who are in default on their federal student loans, an administration official confirmed[.] ”
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In Washington DC, The Aspen Institute published “Making the Case: Solving the Student Debt Crisis ”, a policy report “outlin[ing] goals and solutions for crosssector action from federal, state, and local policymakers, employers, and other stakeholders to address rising student debt burdens[.] ”
Non-Profit & Gov’t Management & Hiring
Immigration, Refugee & Citizenship Issues
Decarceration
Access to Justice – Civil & Economic
In Washington DC, “[a]ctivist groups are asking the White House and several federal agencies to freeze any rulemaking that isn’t directly related to the COVID-19 response effort, saying in a letter on Tuesday that it would be a misallocation of resources to do otherwise. ”
Also in Washington DC, “the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued official guidance stating, ‘Unless individual housing units are available, do not clear encampments during community spread of COVID-19.’ ”
In California, “More than 125 organizations say gaps in worker protections desperately need to be filled by Governor Gavin Newsom and the legislature. The urgent action required is detailed in a letter asking state leaders to protect the health, safety, and economic well-being of workers impacted by the new coronavirus outbreak. ”
In Colorado, “Colorado Legal Services is suspending all in-person outreach clinics at least until April 6. ”
In Connecticut, “New Haven legal aid is asking the state to eliminate barriers to those workers getting help, like fears that undocumented family members might get deported after going to the doctor. ”
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