Law in the Public Interest: Challenges & Strategies
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Transcript of Law in the Public Interest: Challenges & Strategies
Law in the Public Interest: Challenges & Strategies
Public Interest Law Seminar: 20 June 2008 Morrison Hotel, Dublin 1
Michele Storms, Executive Director Gates Public Service Law Program
University of Washington School of Law, Seattle, WA
“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere”
Martin Luther King, Jr., 1963 from Birmingham jail, Alabama
Public Interest Law Advocacy
Identify the problems facing people, society
Root out the barriers Identify your allies Develop resources Coordinate & collaborate every step of
the way Utilize multi-forum advocacy
2003 Civil Legal Needs Study in Washington State
No Attorney
Assistance 88%
Attorney Assistance
12%
3 out of 4 low income people face at least one critical civil legal problem each year.
2008 US Federal Poverty Guidelines
Persons in Household
Income Limit100% FPL
Income Limit125% FPL
2 $14,000 $17,500
3 $17,600 $22,000
4 $21,200 $26,500
5 $24,800 $31,000
Poverty by the Numbers
About a Millionpeople are living in poverty in Washington (125% FPL).
About 600,000low income people do not receive legal help when they need it.
Income: $24,000Annual income of a family of 4 living in poverty
Imagine Living on this Budget
Expenses: Balance Housing $5,756 $18,244
Utilities $2,656 $15,588
Transportation $5,330 $10,258
Food $4,064 $6,194
Health Care $2,329 $3,865
Child Care $2,600 $1,265 www.povertyusa.org
What do you leave out?
You have $105 left over per month…
School Supplies Clothes & Shoes Toiletries Cleaning Supplies Travel (visiting family) Birthdays & Gifts Life Insurance Entertainment Savings Education
Now Imagine…
You’re unlawfully evicted from your home.
Your employer has not paid you in two months.
Your food stamps are terminated with no explanation.
Your spouse is violent. You fear for your safety and that of your children.
Unresolved Legal Issues = Devastating Consequences
Homelessness Unemployment Hunger Broken Families Physical Abuse Lack of Medical Care Despair
Public Interest Law Advocacy represents the difference
Between:
Homelessness and Shelter
Abuse and Safety
Hunger and Food on the Table
Poverty and Economic Stability
Public Interest Law Advocacy might be in the form of:
Individual Case Representation Class Action Litigation Legislative Advocacy and Reform Community Outreach and Community
Legal Education Collaboration between public interest
lawyers and private practitioners
What is Washington State Doing to Close the Justice Gap?
Alliance for Equal Justice
The State Plan
Public-Private Partnership
The Alliance for Equal Justice
The Alliance for Equal Justice of Washington state is a network of organizations providing civil legal aid to those with nowhere else to turn. Formed to coordinate and foster collaboration, the Alliance provides critically needed services-information, advice and representation-to those in need.
Alliance Members & Supporters
For Clients: Legal education, advice, and representation to
those who otherwise could not afford legal counsel
Legislative Advocacy
For Public Interest Organizations: Financial Support & Accountability Strategic Planning Technological Improvements Effective Communications
The Coordination Challenge:The State PlanA Blueprint for Delivery of Civil Legal Aid to Low-Income People in Washington
Goals:
Ensure availability of equal services for all low
income people in need.
Invest scarce resources equitably & effectively.
Coordinate activities toward common goals.
Support the needs of programs serving clients.
The Hallmarks of an Effective State-wide Civil Legal Services Delivery System
Poverty should not be an impediment to Justice. The mission of the statewide legal services delivery system is to offer low income individuals and groups both direct representation and other legal assistance that enables them to:
Protect and enforce their rights; Use the civil justice system to oppose laws, regulations,
policies and practices that operate unfairly against them; Develop and implement laws, regulations, polices and
practices that improve their quality of life; and Effectively advocate their legal rights and interests on
their own behalf.
The Hallmarks of an Effective State-wide Civil Legal Services Delivery System
The system's effectiveness is dependent upon its commitment to assessing and responding to the most critical needs of clients as identified by low income clients and potential clients.
Those in poverty have an equal right to justice regardless of who they are, where they live, or the language they speak.
The justice system must be barrier free.
The Hallmarks of an Effective State-wide Civil Legal Services Delivery System
A legal services delivery system is effective only to the degree that positive results are achieved for clients, particularly in areas of high priority client need.
The right to justice must remain constant regardless of changing social, political, economic or other conditions in the country, state and communities where low income people live.
The Funding Challenge:Public-Private Support
IOLTA
(Interest on Lawyers Trust Accounts)
Private Support (Campaign for Equal Justice)
Federal
(Legal Services Corporation)
State
(Office of Civil Legal Aid)
The Justice Gap
Justice Gap
IOLTA
Federal
State
Private
Estimated Graph
Getting the Work Done: Partnerships for Advocacy & Education
Alliance Partners Public Interest Advocates & Private
Practitioners Coordination with Social Service
Agencies and Law Schools
Examples of Advocacy Partnerships
Education Equity project: The Washington State Constitution requires that the state provide an adequate education to every Washington child regardless of color, caste, race or gender. The Education Equity project is focusing on: 1) remediation services and other issues relating to ELL (English language learner) students; 2) rulemaking around alternatives to the WASL, remediation services for ELL students and the appeals process for the WASL; and 3) outreach to affected communities in the Yakima Valley.
Participants: Columbia Legal Services, Team Child, ACLU-WA, Northwest Justice Project, law professors & student interns
Working with Law Schools
Providing Public Interest-Focused Curriculum
Coordinating with Law School Clinical programs
Integrating Law Students into Public Interest Practice Venues
Helping to make public interest careers affordable for law graduates
The Relevance of Public Interest Law in Society Today
This is the duty of our generation as we enter the twenty-first century -- solidarity with the weak, the persecuted, the lonely, the sick, and those in despair. It is expressed by the desire to give a noble and humanizing meaning to a community in which all members will define themselves not by their own identity but by that of others.
Elie Wiesel, writer, professor, political activist, Nobel Laureate & Holocaust survivor
Some National (US) ResourcesAlliance for Justicehttp://www.afj.org/about-afj/American Bar Association: Center for Pro Bono & Standing Committee on Legal
Aid and Indigent Defendantshttp://www.abanet.org/legalservices/probono/ http://www.abanet.org/legalservices/sclaid/ Equal Justice Workshttp://www.equaljusticeworks.org/ Legal Services Corporationwww.lsc.orgManagement Information Exchangewww.m-i-e.orgNational Legal Aid & Defender Organizationwww.nlada.org Pro Bono Nethttp://www.probono.net/ The Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law http://www.povertylaw.org/
Washington State Resources
Advocate Resource Centerwww.advocateresourcecenter.org Alliance for Equal Justicehttp://allianceforequaljustice.org/ Equal Justice Coalitionhttp://www.ejc.org/ Washington LawHelpwww.washingtonlawhelp.org (for clients)Washington State Bar Association, Access to Justicewww.wsba.org/atj