May 19, 2011 at 3:21 pm
· Filed under Career Resources, Public Interest Jobs
The Pacific Northwest is calling! The Northwest Immigrant Rights Project (NWIRP) seeks a Directing Attorney for its Granger Office. NWIRP promotes justice for low-income immigrants by pursuing and defending their legal status. We focus on providing direct legal services, supported by our education and public policy work.
NWIRP is an exciting and dynamic nonprofit immigrant rights organization that has been in operation for more than 27 years. NWIRP provides services at four sites in Washington State: Seattle, Granger, Moses Lake and Tacoma (serving the Northwest Detention Center). NWIRP’s Granger Office is located in Granger, WA, a city of more than 3,000 people located in a rural area 25 miles southeast of Yakima. From this location, the office serves clients from across Central and Eastern Washington. The office currently has a staff of eight and serves a client base consisting largely of farmworkers and their families.
Basic responsibilities: Oversee and supervise operations of NWIRP’s Granger office. Provide mentoring, support and supervision to attorneys, accredited representatives and legal advocates in the office. Maintain own caseload of immigration matters.
To view the full job listing, go to PSLawNet (login required).












Permalink
May 18, 2011 at 11:33 am
· Filed under News and Developments
Permalink
May 17, 2011 at 3:22 pm
· Filed under Career Resources, Public Interest Jobs
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission is seeking a paid summer intern! The CPSC is an independent federal regulatory agency charged with protecting the public against unreasonable risk of injury and death associated with consumer products.
The agency enforces the Consumer Product Safety Act and the Federal Hazardous Substances Act, among others. The Office of General Counsel consists of four divisions: Compliance, General Law, Regulatory Affairs, and Enforcement and Information. The Legal Intern would perform work for each of those divisions. Depending on the division, duties include conducting legal research, drafting letters, memoranda, and regulations, and assisting in investigations and case development.
To view the full job listing, go to PSLawNet (login required).












Permalink
May 16, 2011 at 3:38 pm
· Filed under Career Resources, Public Interest Jobs
New York Lawyers for the Public Interest (NYLPI) is seeking applications for a staff attorney in its Environmental Justice Program. NYLPI approaches its work from a community lawyering perspective and the position will include legal, policy, and administrative advocacy, as well as community organizing and coalition-building.
The Environmental Justice Program takes on issues ranging from the
overburdening of low-income communities of color with garbage facilities, to the presence of dangerous toxins in public schools, to environmentally just community development. The attorney will take on existing advocacy and have ample opportunity to lead and collaborate upon new campaigns.
NYLPI pioneered the practice of community lawyering in the five boroughs of New York City. With every case and every campaign, we continue to elaborate an approach to working with marginalized communities that is ambitious, participatory, and dynamic. Our work draws on a range of strengths: community trust; proficient organizing; media savvy; effective legislative advocacy; and bold, creative approaches to litigation. The attorney will work both independently and in collaboration with other attorneys, community organizers, and media and lobbying consultants.
To view the full job listing, go to PSLawNet (login required).
FYI–NYLPI is also hiring staff attorneys for its health justice, disability rights, and education and disability rights programs. Definitely not to miss!












Permalink
May 13, 2011 at 12:40 pm
· Filed under Career Resources, Public Interest Jobs
The U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Environmental Management seeks a Chief Counsel in the fabulous city of Cincinnati.
The incumbent of this position serves as the Chief Counsel for the Environmental Management Consolidated Business Center (EMCBC). The incumbent is responsible for providing legal services on all matters arising from the activities of the EMCBC and its serviced sites, including procurement law, litigation, environmental law, atomic energy laws, environmental compliance, and closure of government-owned, contractor-operated facilities, employing thousands of contractor employees and having projects/programs valued in the hundreds of millions of dollars. The incumbent reports to the Director, EMCBC and also reports functionally to the DOE HQ General Counsel.
The incumbent directs, manages, and supervises the work of the staff with full organizational and personnel authorities for assigned programs and provides leadership to approximately 20 professional and administrative employees ranging in grade from GS-7 to GS-15. The incumbent takes appropriate legal action to protect the interests of the Department in litigation and administrative proceedings, supervises the conduct of litigation and oversees lawsuits, represents the DOE and the United States in selected cases in Federal district courts.
To view the full job listing, go to PSLawNet (login required).












Permalink
May 13, 2011 at 9:45 am
· Filed under Legal Education, News and Developments, Public Interest Jobs, Public Interest Law News Bulletin, The Legal Industry and Economy
This week: cutbacks at Idaho Legal Aid Services; an interview with Disability Rights Advocates’ ED; Biglaw partners can play bigger role in funding legal services; in one Ohio county, a debate about a debate about creating a public defender’s office; gloomy, gloomy news on law school
debt; shakeups in Shasta County’s (CA) prosecutor’s office; the nonlawyer at Legal Aid of West Virginia’s helm.
- 5.12.11 – funding woes are affecting Idaho Legal Aid Services, and more cuts are coming. From a short AP story on the KMVT website: “Idaho Legal Aid Services, which has already cut hours of its staff and 21 attorneys, has a $250,000 hole in its $2.6 million annual budget. Leaders say employees across the state will take forced days off without pay starting on May 27. The move comes after a bill failed in the 2011 Idaho Legislature that would have shored up its coffers.”
- 5.11.11 – On Wednesday, the PSLawNet Blog looked at a proposal, featured in The American Lawyer, to create a private-bar-funded “Lawyers Foundation” to support civil legal services. In the piece, Aric Press argues that Biglaw partners could greatly advance the cause of access to justice by endowing and supporting a foundation to help fund both the Legal Services Corporation and other legal services projects. Press notes that LSC’s funding outlook in Congress is uncertain, but particularly dire given the current fiscal state of affairs and the fact that the federal funder of legal services has enemies on the Hill. While this is a thoughtful proposal, and certainly an attempt to think creatively (which the PSLawNet Blog applauds), the private sector can’t let Congressional appropriators off the hook with respect to funding LSC.
- 5.9.11 – Reader warning: the following news is frightening for those concerned about student debt. An article in the ABA Journal reports that annual law school loans borrowed has jumped 50 percent since 2001. In the last academic year, law students borrowed an average of $68,827 for public schools and $106,249 for private educations. Compare this with $46,499, or the average amount borrowed for the public school, and $70,147, average for a private school in the 2001-2002 academic year. For many of us–PSLawNet Bloggers included, these are not just staggering numbers, they’re lived experiences. Wow-zah.
- 5.9.11 – In the Shasta County, California district attorney’s office, many prosecutors are not amused with recent office/case shuffling. And, as a result, The Record Searchlight reports that the restructuring of sorts have prompted one of its senior prosecutors who specialized in homicide cases to leave the office. Stewart Jankowitz, who lost only one murder case in his approximately 15 years with the office retired last week. Prosecutors are required to handle an assortment of cases, although some do have specific assignments, such as sex crimes, felony DUIs and white-collar crime, such as embezzlement. Jankowitz stated that he did not delight in the idea of handling non-homicide cases after his many years of legal experience. While many will miss him, it’s time to go.
- 5.8.11 – Charleston, West Virginia’s Gazette feature a piece about Adrienne Worthy, executive director of Legal Aid of West Virginia, oversees provisions for legal assistance for the low-income and disenfranchised. Her story is about what motivates her: responsibility. Legal Aid of West Virginia currently has 55 lawyers, a statewide staff of 120 and 12 regional offices, but Worthy is not a lawyer. After graduating from undergraduate school, she answered an ad in a progressive ad bulletin looking for citizen activist canvassers, then for three years went door-to-door every night from 4 until 9, five days a week, snow sleet or hail, to raise money and organize around environmental, consumer and utility issues. She then worked at a library and for the WV Women’s Commission. She knows she has marched to her own drummer in terms of jobs, but her commitment to find how she’s needed is unwavering. “I am finding it harder to be motivated by the belief that real changes are going to happen,” Worthy says. “I don’t understand the vision of what we are supposed to do with the changes proposed for the environment, our old and young people. I don’t know what’s going to happen to our clients here.” She confesses that she’s thought about leaving, but gets inspired by clients who have overcome incredible odds and, through the help of legal services, have been able to make a difference.












Permalink
May 11, 2011 at 4:45 pm
· Filed under News and Developments, The Legal Industry and Economy

The legal services community needs more green!
Aric Press, editor in chief of American Lawyer Media and owner of a wonderfully Dickensian surname, has penned a thoughtful piece, proposing that Biglaw partners (and, we suppose, other well-heeled members of the private bar) could greatly advance the cause of access to justice by endowing and supporting a foundation to help fund both the Legal Services Corporation and other legal services projects. Press notes that LSC’s funding outlook in Congress is uncertain, but hardly rosy given the current fiscal state of affairs and the fact that LSC is something of a political football. He further notes that, recession notwithstanding, many law firm partners are doing quite-well-thank-you-very-much with respect to the ol’ cash flow.
The arithmetic is compelling. The surviving partners of The Am Law 100 continue to prosper even in the worst economic downturn of the last 25 years. For Am Law 100 equity partners, profits rose by an average of 8.4 percent, and the average compensation for all partners — equity and income — increased by 7.7 percent, to $1 million. I’m told one can live on that, even save a little.
There are 30,888 Am Law 100 lawyers carrying the label partner. On average, across their many offices, they bill roughly 2,000 hours at roughly $500 per hour. Were each to contribute the equivalent of 20 hours of billable time in cash — 1 percent — the resulting stash would reach $309 million. Toss in the 15,000 Am Law Second Hundred partners, and there’s more than enough to underwrite the annual LSC budget even after firms excluded their non-U.S. licensed lawyers.
The PSLawNet Blog supports creative thinking to channel more money to the legal services community. This certainly includes contributions from the private sector, and this certainly includes the bar. LSC’s model is, after all, emblematic of a successful private-public partnership. With that said, a caveat: in our view, the key word when thinking about what makes private-public partnerships work is “balance.” And for too long, Congress has not been holding up its end. LSC’s appropriation, in real dollars, has markedly decreased over time. And this has occurred even as demand for legal services – from domestic violence victims, homeless veterans, and children in need of healthcare – has grown too fast in light of the limited financial and human resources to help these would-be clients. So if the private bar is to move forward with a formal funding initiative, we hope that it will make a priority of lobbying the folks on Capitol Hill to hold up their end of the deal.












Permalink