May 10, 2011 at 3:18 pm
· Filed under Career Resources, Public Interest Jobs
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Michigan seeks a Staff Attorney!
Under the direction of the Legal Director, the Staff Attorney will both litigate cases and participate in non-litigation advocacy activities to advance civil liberties in Michigan. The Staff Attorney’s responsibilities include serving as lead and co-counsel on a variety of civil liberties cases; working in conjunction with National ACLU lawyers; investigating, developing and litigating cases at the trial and appellate level in state and federal courts. The Staff Attorney will also have non-litigation advocacy responsibilities including: public speaking, media interviews, outreach, and writing op-eds, newsletter articles and reports. The Staff Attorney will work with local legal committees and be responsible for recruiting and working successfully with cooperating attorneys.
Qualifications include:
- JD with litigation experience, preferably federal litigation raising civil liberties and civil rights issues.
- A strong understanding of, and demonstrated commitment to, civil liberties, civil rights and the mission of the ACLU. Experience in non-profit advocacy or other community-based groups is valuable.
- Exceptional writing and analytical skills is required. Judicial clerkship is a plus.
- The attorney must be a member of the State Bar of Michigan (or pass the next bar examination).
- Substantive knowledge and understanding of constitutional law and civil liberties issues.
- Demonstrated skills in litigating independently, jointly and under pressure.
- Excellent communication skills to both legal and non-legal audiences.
- Demonstrated skills in legal analysis, research, and strategic thinking.
To view the full job listing, go to PSLawNet (login required).












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May 10, 2011 at 1:47 pm
· Filed under Career Resources, News and Developments, Public Interest Jobs
GovernmentExecutive.com is keeping up with a critical issue: federal job postings. This is a serious concern deserving of attention. But who knew “KSA” would be part of common parlance in the land of federal employment? Monday’s article reports that agencies still need to better streamline their job announcements as part of the government’s push to reform the bureaucratic federal hiring process, a top official from the Office of Personnel Management.
Sixty-one percent of agencies have simplified their job vacancy postings, said Nancy Kichak, OPM’s associate director for employee services, while 89 percent of agencies have abolished the much-reviled knowledge, skills and abilities statements that for years applicants painstakingly filled out and managers waded through. Kichak said there is a disconnect between agencies’ desire to eliminate KSAs and the habit of writing long and complicated descriptions of job vacancies.
“We don’t want to hear it [via KSAs], but we’re certainly willing to say it ourselves,” she told an audience during a conference on federal financial management in Washington. Kichak said the goal is to push managers to produce job announcements that are less than five pages long. She said at various times, some postings have been as long as 38 pages.
38 pages?! Yikes. Progress has been made, though. During the past year, agencies have transitioned from KSAs to category ratings as well as to a resume- and cover letter-based system. In addition, OPM last month debuted a new online platform that tests applicants for a variety of positions across government. Not exactly baby steps, but as most agree, there is more to be done.












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May 10, 2011 at 9:34 am
· Filed under News and Developments
The Charleston Gazette in lovely West Virginia has run a lovely profile of Adrienne Worthy, the non-lawyer who is at the helm of Legal Aid of West Virginia. Worthy arrived in West Virginia from Ohio in 1971, fresh out of college and eager to get involved in community activism.
‘I answered an ad in a progressive ad bulletin looking for door-to-door citizen activist canvassers. I came to West Virginia, the
closest place for an interview…. So for three years, I was going 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.’
Worthy gravitated towards women’s issues, and spent several years with the West Virginia Women’s Commission. Eventually, her talent for nonprofit administration and passion for being a force for positive change in people’s lives drove her into the legal services community, where she’s found a home at Legal Aid of West Virginia.
We are a statewide nonprofit poverty law firm. We provide civil legal assistance and advocacy to low-income people and vulnerable people, domestic violence victims, people struggling with homelessness or working to get benefits they are entitled to. We also run the state’s long-term care ombudsmen program, advocacy for people in nursing homes. Our third component is advocating for adults and kids with mental illness.
And Worthy talks a little bit about what keeps her motivated in the face of funding cuts and other adversities.
I’ve thought about leaving Legal Aid, but the people I work with are some of the hardest working, most committed people I know. I get inspired by them. I get inspired by clients who have overcome incredible odds and, through our help, have been able to make a difference.












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May 6, 2011 at 10:59 am
· Filed under Legal Education, News and Developments, Public Interest Jobs, Public Interest Law News Bulletin
Happy Seis de Mayo, dear readers! This is the day when many Cinco de Mayo revelers reflect, remorsefully, on just how easy it is to drink margaritas on a nice Spring day. Your PSLawNet Blog permitted himself no such indulgences, however, as he scrambled to produce this week’s News Bulletin after having spent the first half of the week hiking in the Grand Canyon and driving throughout rural California and Arizona, of which there is much. But that’s not why you’re here. Without further ado…
This week: Indiana University law students pitch in to help taxpayers in need; the head of the Pro Bono Institute argues for allowing in-house lawyers to more easily do pro bono; New York Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman wants to bolster the state’s indigent defense system; a new plan in LA courts to help low-income individuals facing evictions; the Press of Atlantic City worries about the Garden State’s legal services infrastructure; public interest contributions by Charlotte College of Law students; Alabama law students and lawyers rally to assist tornado victims; the importance of better salaries for Wisconsin prosecutors.
- 5.2.11 – In the National Law Journal this week, Esther Lardent contends that corporate lawyers should be allowed to provide pro bono services, unsupervised, in states where they work, even if not admitted there. Many state rules allow in-house attorneys licensed in another jurisdiction to work for an employer-client, but do not allow those same attorneys to provide pro bono legal services. Lardent argues that states that expressly permit nonlocally admitted attorneys to undertake pro bono often handcuff them with restrictions that are “unnecessary, insulting and unjustifiable in the face of the crisis in access to justice.” There are beacons of hope found in some states’ exceptions. Recently, Colorado and Virginia changed rules for in-house pro bono work by removing problematic obstacles. Perhaps other states will follow? Until then, we’ll need to keep thinking creatively to fill the widening gap between the legal needs of the low-income and disenfranchised and the assistance available.
- 5.2.11 – from the LA Times, we learn that a quartet of legal services providers is collaborating to bolster services to low-income persons facing evictions: “Thousands of residents in Los Angeles’ poorest neighborhoods will get new legal help in fighting high-stakes eviction cases involving slumlords and foreclosures under a pilot project approved by the state’s judicial leaders Friday. The new Eviction Legal Assistance Center at Los Angeles County Superior Court’s downtown civil courthouse will provide legal representation to about 15,000 people facing eviction over three years, according to legal aid groups, which will be jointly running the center.” The Inner City Law Center, Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles (LAFLA), Neighborhood Legal Services, and Public Counsel are joining forces to staff the new project.
- 5.2.11 – sobered by a recent report from Legal Services of New Jersey, the editorial board of the Press of Atlantic City (AC, by the way: great HBO show, great Springsteen song, lousy town) wonders whether slashing government funding for legal services may do more harm than good: “Even the most rabid of the budget-cutters, deficit hawks and don’t-dare-raise-my-taxes crowd must, at some point, think about what kind of nation we are creating” if budget cutting results in the poor being unable to meaningfully access the justice system. The LSNJ report, released late last month, is indeed sobering. And as the PofAC editorial notes, at a time of increased client need, LSNJ has been forced to downsize from 720 staff members to 490 in less than three years.
- 5.2.11 – as we noted in a blog post earlier this week, the Charlotte Observer reports on pro bono and public interest work at the Charlotte College of Law: “Students must perform at least 20 hours of free legal work…. Since the for-profit school opened in 2006, students have performed 27,000 pro bono hours. Under supervision of lawyers, they’ve provided legal assistance to immigrants, the elderly, an entrepreneur program at Central Piedmont Community College and helped nearly 450 buyers of Beazer-built homes file claims from the company’s $50 million restitution fund. With externships and internships, Charlotte Law students have donated 40,000 hours of legal service.
- May, 2011 – Wisconsin State Bar president Jim Boll makes the case for adequately funding prosecutors’ offices and boosting prosecutor salaries so that the state can retain talented, experienced lawyers: “District attorneys (DAs) face significant challenges as their offices around the state continue to be inadequately staffed and underfunded…. A 2007 report issued by the Wisconsin Legislative Audit Bureau showed that prosecutor positions have been cut while prosecutors’ workload has continued to rise, forcing them to spend less time on each case or even to choose which offenses to prosecute…. Further exacerbating the problem is the lack of pay progression, which leads to high turnover and very few mid-level prosecutors…. Thus, DA offices are staffed by a small number of highly experienced attorneys and a large number of recently hired attorneys, with nearly no one in the middle…. The governor has taken a step in the right direction in his proposed biennial state budget by providing $1 million annually to increase retention of experienced assistant DAs in each year of the biennium. However, for the criminal justice system to function effectively the state must be willing to fund all the essential parts of the system.”












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May 5, 2011 at 3:15 pm
· Filed under Career Resources, Public Interest Jobs
Neighborhood Legal Services of Los Angeles County is in search of a Staff Attorney! The Staff Attorney will be an advocate at NLSLA’s innovative and nationally recognized flagship Medical Legal Community Partnership (MLCP) program located at St. John’s Well Child and Family Health Centers in South Los Angeles and at the Northeast Valley Health Corporation Sun Valley Health Center. Neighborhood Legal Services (NLSLA) is one of Los Angeles County’s leading public interest law offices and has been the primary legal aid program serving the San FernandoValley for 40 years and the San Gabriel, Pomona & Antelope Valleys since 2001. The NLSLA staff of 100+, including 45 lawyers, provides legal assistance to low-income individuals, families and groups in the areas of family law and domestic violence, housing, health care, education, public benefits, economic and job development, immigrant rights, consumer rights, and environmental justice.
MLCPs require advocates who can work effectively with medical personnel
and in a medical environment to address the social determinants of health. Staff Attorney may also be assigned work through NLSLA’s Health Consumer Center. The Attorney is expected to provide individual client assistance, policy advocacy, and work closely with community organizations.
California Bar membership or pending membership and bilingual verbal, reading and writing skills in Spanish required. Highly motivated attorney passionate about public service work, with sensitivity to those in crisis. Prefer someone with 1-3 years experience; new graduates will be considered.
To view the full job listing, go to PSLawNet (login required).












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May 4, 2011 at 7:32 pm
· Filed under News and Developments
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