Archive for Public Interest Law News Bulletin

PSJD Public Interest News Digest – April 26, 2019

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Hello there, interested public! Major stories this week include Senator Warren’s proposal for student debt forgiveness, continuing fallout from Premier Doug Ford’s announced 30 percent cut to Ontario Legal Aid, and pushback from various law enforcement groups against efforts by progressive prosecutors (and, in the case of immigration, judges). I’d say more, but time is short for me this week. As always, sources for these stories and more can be found below.

See you around,
Sam

Immigration, Refugee, & Citizenship Issues

Non-Profit Management & Hiring

Student Loans & Student Debt

Legal Technology

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

Comments off

PSJD Public Interest News Digest – April 19, 2019

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Hello there, interested public! I’m still settling in back at NALP’s offices after last week’s Annual Education Conference in San Diego, but the news continues, so here’s the scoop. Major stories this week include a new roadmap for local governments interested in impact litigation out of San Francisco and Yale, a huge proposed cut to Ontario Legal Aid that has left many service providers scrambling, and a strike by legal aid attorneys in New York City.

Oh, and the Washington Post reported that “OPM [Office of Personnel Management employees were briefed” on Trump Administration plans “in the final stages of review” to “pull[ the agency] apart and [divide] its functions…among three other departments.” So there’s that as well.

For all this and more, read on.

See you around,
Sam

Noteworthy Miscellany

Immigration, Refugee, and Citizenship Issues

Student Debt & Loans

Nonprofit Management & Hiring

Legal Technology

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

Comments off

PSJD Public Interest News Digest – April 12, 2019

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Awa Sowe, PSJD Fellow

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Hello, interested public! The digest a bit late today, and a bit short, as Awa and I are at NALP’s Annual Education Conference in San Diego. (I couldn’t have completed this edition without the help of Awa Sowe, our 2018-2019 PSJD Fellow. Thanks Awa!) You may hear more about this week, next week.

As for this edition of the digest, highlights include a sweeping new proposal concerning Public Service Loan Forgiveness from Senators Gillibrand and Kaine and a law review article from David Udell summarizing last fall’s A2J Summit in New York City.

And if you’re in San Diego for the conference as well and you haven’t already tracked me down to say hi, you still have a chance. Just sayin’.

See you around,
Sam

Immigration, Refugee & Citizenship Issues

Student Debts & Loans

Legal Technology

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice- Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

Comments off

PSJD Public Interest News Digest – April 5, 2019

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Hello there, interested public! The big news this week is that the Department of Education, in response to questioning from Senator Kaine, revealed statistics concerning the percentage of public servants whose applications for student loan forgiveness have been granted (or, much more frequently, denied). This news, linked below, reinforces the Law360 profile released this week discussing the mounting challenges facing public service attorney recruiting. Also of particular interest is an argument in Mondaq making the case that the 2019 PROTECT Students Act could significantly change the definition of “nonprofit institution of higher education.”

In the good news column, the looming legal aid strike in British Columbia was averted through at least the end of this summer.

See you around,
Sam

Immigration, Refugee & Citizenship Issues

Environmental Law

Public Service Management & Hiring

Student Debt & Loans

Legal Technology

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

Comments off

PSJD Public Interest News Digest – March 29, 2019

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Hello there, interested public! There have been a torrent of stories, again, this week. In addition to the predictably important stories concerning student loans, you may also want to look for the DC Circuit’s concerns about a new attorney fee matrix the federal government is employing to reduce attorney fee awards in class actions, the NLADA’s thoughts on the steady stream of court challenges to Cy Pres awards, and overview articles on the Right-to-Counsel in Eviction and Progressive Prosecutors (two topics I look forward to discussing with those of you able to attend NALP’s Annual Education Conference in two weeks).

See you around,
Sam

Noteworthy Miscellany

Student Debt

Immigration, Refugee, & Citizenship Issues

Public Service Management & Hiring

Disaster Legal Aid

Legal Technology

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

Comments off

PSJD Public Interest News Digest – March 22, 2019

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Hello there, interested public! Every week I drink from the firehose; this week even more than usual. There are too many highlights below to even list, but one issue does stand out:

This week’s bombshell news was the Executive Order the President signed yesterday, which addresses both student loans and campus speech policy. The bit that’s getting the most attention is its provision that “agencies shall…take appropriate steps…to ensure institutions that receive Federal research or education grants promote free inquiry.” But the order additionally directs the Department of Education to publish more information about loans–both individual data via a “secure and confidential website and mobile application” and “program-level data for each certificate, degree, graduate, and professional program” through changes to the College Scorecard program. (Inside Higher Ed has some thorough reporting on both aspects of the order.) Many, many keystrokes have been entered about this order since it was issued yesterday, especially in relation to the President’s request that Congress cap student loan borrowing earlier this week. I’ll start you off with the resources I’ve linked in this paragraph.

Also in the lede, I’ve been asked to mention the ABA’s John J. Curtin, Jr. Justice Fund 2019 Summer Legal Internship Program. This scholarship program will pay “a $3,500 stipend to three law students who spend the summer months working for a bar association or legal services program designed to prevent homelessness or assist homeless or indigent clients or their advocates.” The scholarship application deadline is March 29th, and the program is still actively seeking applicants. Applicants should already have unfunded summer employment with qualifying organizations. [Reminder: you can read about the Curtin Justice Fund and other summer scholarship opportunities in the PSJD Resource Library.]

Lastly, because it does’t fit many other places, the Washington Post reported this week on the Trump administration’s “extraordinary record of legal defeat…paint[ing] a remarkable portrait of a government rushing to implement far-reaching changes in policy without regard for long-standing rules against arbitrary and capricious behavior.”

See you around,
Sam

Immigration, Refugee, & Citizenship Issues

Student Loans

Public Service Management & Hiring

Disaster Relief

Legal Technology & Privacy

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

Comments off

PSJD Public Interest News Digest – March 15, 2019

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Hello there, interested public! It’s been an eventful couple of weeks.

First, the elephant in the room: Operation Varsity Blues. The articles highlighted in this week’s NALP News Digest are worth a look. I’ll just add one more here: “Asha Rangappa [former Yale Dean of Admissions] says the biggest victims of the U.S. college admissions scandal are the bright and diverse students from less privileged backgrounds who will be discouraged from applying to Ivy League schools.

In addition to that news, the Trump Administration released a budget packed with changes for the student loan world, the former student loan ombudsman of the CFPB and current head of the Student Borrower Protection Center testified to Congress, Texas attorneys are suing their state bar in objection to the bar’s diversity and immigration-related efforts, under a “forced-speech” rationale, and Civil Legal Aid is making headlines of all kinds in British Columbia, with an upcoming strike of the Association of Legal Aid Laywers leading the bill. You can find all this and more, below.

See you around,
Sam

Immigration, Refugee, and Citizenship Issues

Student Loans

Public Service Management & Hiring

Legal Technology

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

Comments off

PSJD Public Interest News Digest – March 1, 2019

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Hello there, interested public! It’s March now, but the last week of February certainly packed a punch. There are two items I want to highlight for you:

First, Brooklyn Defender Services’ Director of Policy took to Twitter yesterday to highlight a two-justice dissenting opinion questioning Gideon v. Wainright. (Link to the opinion available below.) Second, any of you heading to the ABA’s Equal Justice Conference in May may want to check out the Law School Pro Bono Advisor’s Pre-Conference event.

If that isn’t enough, there’s also a legal aid strike brewing in British Columbia, a new FTC task force to police the technology sector, a report from the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Adequate Housing tying housing to the access-to-justice gap, and allegations of infants under one-year-old detained by ICE. As always, details are in the links below.

See you around,
Sam

Student Debt

Nonprofit Management

Immigration, Refugee, and Citizenship Issues

Legal Technology

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

The right to counsel is not an assurance of an error-free trial or even a reliable result. It ensures fairness in a single respect: permitting the accused to employ the services of an attorney. The structural protections provided in the Sixth Amendment certainly seek to promote reliable criminal proceedings, but there is no substantive right to a particular level of reliability. In assuming otherwise, our ever-growing right-to-counsel precedents directly conflict with the government’s legitimate interest in the finality of criminal judgments.

Garza v. Idaho, No. 17-1026, slip op. at 17 (U.S. 2019)

Comments off

PSJD Public Interest News Digest – February 22, 2019

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Hello there, interested public! Major news this week includes investigative reporting from Bloomberg revealing a surge in student-loan delinquencies, British Columbia’s decision to provide amnesty for student loan interest, and a vigorous debate in Canada over recent comments by the Chief Justice indicating his interest in exploring mandatory pro bono strategies. Also, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimously to curtail civil forfeiture practices by state governments. And lots more besides! To see what I mean, read below.

See you around,
Sam

Immigration, Refugee, and Citizenship Issues

Workplace Discrimination and Harassment

Nonprofit Management

Student Debt

Electoral Reform

Legal Technology

Environmental Justice

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

Comments off

PSJD Public Interest News Digest – February 15, 2019

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Hello there, interested public! Student debt new continues to dominate this week, as the Department of Education’s Inspector General released an audit highly critical of the DoE’s oversight of student loan servicers and Congress introduced bipartisan bills in both houses proposing to allow employers to contribute funds tax-free toward employees’ student loans. (Commentary below.) There are also stories on legislative developments at the state level, mostly concerning states deliberations about whether or not to regulate student loan servicers. There are also some major items in Criminal Justice Reform, where the ACLU released a new report on prosecutorial transparency and New York’s The Legal Aid Society coined the phrase “knock and spit” policing.

See you around,
Sam

Legal Recruiting

Immigration, Asylum, & Citizenship

Student Debt

Legal Technology

Environmental Justice

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

Comments off