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| AT A GLANCE...Senate Committee Approves Mikva Nomination to LSC Board Legal Aid Funding to Fight Domestic Violence Increased in House Bill LSC President is Special Guest at Legal Services NYC “Jazz for Justice” Benefit Massachusetts Justice Project Adopts Pro Bono Resolution Cleveland Legal Aid Program Sees 56% Rise in Need for Help New Report on Unmet Civil Legal Needs in Georgia Rhode Island Legal Services Releases Report on Foreclosure and Eviction Texas Legal Aid Programs to Benefit from $26 Million in New State Funding ABA Launches Website to Promote National Pro Bono Celebration North Carolina, Philadelphia Bar Associations Win Harrison Tweed Award |
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Field NewsCleveland Legal Aid Program Sees 56% Rise in Need for HelpOlivera Perkins, The Cleveland Plain Dealer – June 16, 2009 Francine Thompson tried to apply for Unemployment Compensation when she got laid off last October, but the state told her she would have to wait until July because she had gotten a severance package. Then Thompson learned that co-workers with severance packages were already collecting. "Why can't I?" Thompson asked. The jobless computer analyst wanted to fight to collect sooner, but she couldn't afford a lawyer. She turned to The Legal Aid Society of Cleveland. So have a lot of laid-off workers. "We have seen this marked increase in the number of people coming to us for legal help relating to employment issues," said Melanie Shakarian, the organization's director of development. "We are on pace to field 904 requests for help this year. That is 56 percent ahead of 2008 and 68 percent of two years ago." She said the organization, focused on serving low-income individuals, is turning away as many as 1,400 people. Demand doesn't seem to be waning. Click here to continue reading. New Report on Unmet Civil Legal Needs in GeorgiaThe Supreme Court of Georgia’s Equal Justice Commission released a report this month documenting the vast unmet civil legal needs of the state’s low-income residents. The report, “Civil Legal Needs of Low and Moderate Income Households in Georgia,” is based on the findings of a study conducted by the A.L. Burruss Institute of Public Service and Research of Kennesaw State University. The study found that low-income households experience an average of three civil legal needs a year and that 90 percent of those households received no legal help with their problems. Three-fourths of those interviewed for the study reported being unaware that their problem had a legal solution while others said they did not know where they could find legal assistance. The report also notes that court personnel cite self-represented litigants as an impediment to the efficient operation of the court system and represent an obstacle to the courts’ ability to administer justice for all. Click here for more information. Rhode Island Legal Services Releases Report on Foreclosure and EvictionKevin Shalvey, Providence Business Journal – June 10, 2009 A report released [on June 9] says that financial institutions who had foreclosed on properties in Rhode Island [in 2008] evicted 2,338 tenants, with the highest amount, 1,166 evictions, in Providence. Authored by Steve [Fischbach], an attorney with Rhode Island Legal Services, “Move Out Rhode Island – An Analysis of 2008 Foreclosure Related Evictions” is a collection of data showing where evictions took place and which lenders filed for the evictions. The three lenders with the most evictions made up 47 percent of all evictions. Deutsche Bank evicted 460 tenants; U.S. Bank evicted 382 tenants and Wells Fargo evicted 262 tenants, according to the report. The report notes that there were 3,479 reported foreclosures in Rhode Island in 2008. Click here to continue reading and click here to download the full report. ( Texas Legal Aid Programs to Benefit from $26 Million in New State FundingDarren Barbee, Fort Worth Star-Telegram – June 3, 2009 After months spent agonizing over the loss of millions of dollars in funding for civil legal services for the poor, state and local legal aid officials say the Legislature has come through with desperately needed funding. Combining money from the state budget with other new revenue sources, legal aid services are expected to get about $26 million over the biennium, said Betty Balli Torres, executive director of the Access to Justice Foundation. While that is about $9 million short of what is needed, she said other funding, such as partnerships with banks, will help narrow that gap. Three organizations in the state that provide legal services to the poor received additional federal funding that helps to bridge the gap. That includes Legal Aid of NorthWest Texas, based in Fort Worth. It will see a $400,000 drop in funding from state sources. But because of an additional $733,000 from the federal Legal Services Corp., the organization expects to be in good shape for the rest of this year and through 2010, said Errol Summerlin, its executive director. Click here to continue reading. ABA Launches Website to Promote National Pro Bono CelebrationThe American Bar Association’s Standing Committee on Pro Bono and Public Service is sponsoring the first National Pro Bono Celebration from Oct. 25-31, 2009. The celebration is a coordinated nationwide effort to showcase the meaningful difference that pro bono lawyers can make to their country and its justice system, their communities and the clients they serve. The celebration’s organizers also seek to use the event as a recruiting tool for new volunteer attorneys to meet the ever-growing legal needs of the country’s most vulnerable citizens. In many communities, legal services programs are collaborating with state and local bar groups, courts, access to justice commissions, law schools, and others to plan events that recognize volunteer contributions to the work of their programs. For information about the celebration, and resources to help in planning an event, visit the new National Celebration of Pro Bono website at www.celebrateprobono.org. North Carolina, Philadelphia Bar Associations Win Harrison Tweed AwardAmerican Bar Association – June 11, 2009 The North Carolina Bar Association and the Philadelphia Bar Association will each receive a 2009 Harrison Tweed Award for achievement in preserving and increasing access to legal services for the poor. The North Carolina Bar Association is being recognized for its innovative “4ALL” campaign to increase access to legal services for the poor through a four-prong approach: educate, legislate, donate and participate. The Philadelphia Bar Association is being honored for its role in creating, supporting and sustaining the Residential Mortgage Foreclosure Diversion Pilot Project, which has saved hundreds of low-income homeowners from the loss of their homes. The award, given annually by the American Bar Association Standing Committee on Legal Aid and Indigent Defendants and the National Legal Aid and Defender Association, will be presented during the ABA Annual Meeting in Chicago on Friday, July 31, at a joint luncheon of the National Conference of Bar Presidents, National Association of Bar Executives and National Conference of Bar Foundations. Click here for more information. MIE Sponsoring Conferences for Directors and FundraisersThe Management Information Exchange is sponsoring two conferences for legal aid professionals in Chicago in late July. The first, MIE’s National Directors Conference, will be held on July 21 and 22 and will focus on how legal aid programs can maximize their impact during difficult economic times. Workshop topics will include: creative ideas for reducing costs and increasing revenue, communicating honestly and optimistically with staff, Interest on Lawyers’ Trust Accounts, and an employment law perspective on layoffs, furloughs, early retirement and COBRA. The second conference, MIE’s 2009 National Fundraising Conference, will be held on July 23 and 24 and will focus on best practices for effective communication and resource development. Participants will be able to sign up for a personal 30-minute consultation with a fundraising expert in the legal aid community. Workshop topics will include capitalizing on web-based communications and fundraising, cultivating major donors who have been affected by the recession, taking advantage of new federal funding opportunities, and developing the "dynamic duo" of executive director and development director. | |||||||||||||
Success Story from the Georgia Legal Services ProgramLegal aid is about helping ordinary people with real-life problems. Client stories illustrate Nursing Home Medicaid Policy Declared IllegalPress Release, Georgia Legal Services Program – June 11, 2009 Because of a lawsuit decided last month by Fulton County Superior Court Judge Melvin Westmoreland, now nursing home residents will be able to remain in their nursing home facilities, even if they owe past bills because of delays in the application process. Many times people who need nursing home care apply for Medicaid to help pay for the care, but they are not told about the complicated rules. By the time they are able to figure out the process and get qualified for Medicaid, months have passed and they owe past due bills to the nursing home. Ms. Dorothy Weldon and Ms. Ina Price are nursing home residents and clients of the Georgia Legal Services Program (GLSP) who were being threatened with discharge from their nursing homes. The Georgia Medicaid agency would not allow these nursing home residents to pay their past nursing home bills with their income. As a result, they were about to be discharged. A team of Georgia Legal Services Program attorneys represented Ms. Weldon and Ms. Price. Judge Mel Westmoreland agreed with the GLSP attorneys that federal law required that the Georgia Medicaid agency allow the women to pay their past due bills with their current income and remain in their nursing facilities. Judge Westmoreland declared the state Medicaid policy violated federal law. Ms. Weldon’s son, Joseph Weldon, contacted Georgia Legal Services for legal assistance when his mother received a notice that she was being discharged from the nursing home. “My mother needs the medical care that she receives at her facility. I don’t know where she’d go if they made her leave.” GLSP Gainesville attorney Patrick Cates represented Ms. Weldon in her discharge case. Says attorney Cates, “The nursing home agreed to dismiss the discharge case until after the Medicaid case was decided by the court. Otherwise, Ms. Weldon would have been at risk of losing her care.” Click here for more information about the Georgia Legal Services Program. |
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Created by Congress in 1974, LSC’s mission is to promote equal access to justice in our Nation and to provide high-quality civil legal assistance to low-income persons. LSC Updates is produced by LSC's Office of Government Relations and Public Affairs. Questions, comments, or articles can be submitted to Sean Driscoll at driscolls@lsc.gov. |
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