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Civil Justice

A Real Fix for the Poorest Victims of the Foreclosure Crisis

Also posted at The Hill's CongressBlog, 3/1/2010.

As the foreclosure crisis moves from subprime to prime borrowers, the lives of some of the poorest of families in the country – rent-paying tenants in low-income communities – continue to be ravaged by the crisis. Too often, when landlords find themselves in foreclosure, their tenants are forced onto the street with little or no notice. Tenants, as distinct from homeowners, comprise 40% of the families facing eviction due to foreclosure, according to some estimates.

Despite a federal law enacted last year that included provisions to increase tenants’ protection from wrongful evictions (for example, by requiring owners to provide 90 days notice before a tenant’s eviction can proceed), real estate development companies and lenders continue to harass and illegally pressure tenants to move out. More than ever before, low-income tenants need the help of an advocate in the courtroom and at the negotiating table to ensure that their rights to remain in their homes are protected. In a complex legal environment, and without the help of an attorney, a tenant threatened with eviction is unlikely to know what his or her rights are, let alone how to pursue them. 

As a recent Brennan Center report, Foreclosures: A Crisis in Legal Representation, explains, empirical studies demonstrate that having a lawyer can make the critical difference in a range of civil legal disputes, at times increasing the individual’s chances of prevailing more than tenfold. For tenants in foreclosed buildings, a lawyer can press lenders to follow proper procedures and help to extend the time that families are able to remain in their homes. Of course, even with legal representation, not every family can expect to keep its home, but a lawyer can help to ensure that evictions proceed lawfully and can act as a much-needed check on the practices of lenders and developers in vulnerable communities.

But, such help is in short supply. Every day, low-income individuals are unable to get the legal assistance they need in their efforts to protect their homes, maintain custody of their children, obtain restraining orders against abusive spouses and secure the government benefits to which they are entitled. Fully half of the eligible individuals who seek legal assistance from federally funded civil legal aid organizations, nearly one million people each year, are turned away by those organizations due to lack of resources, according to a 2009 report on the nation’s “justice gap.”

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Tags: Justice, Civil Justice, Civil Legal Aid

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DOJ Commits to Access to Justice

Harvard Professor Laurence Tribe will head a DOJ-push to strengthen indigent defense. Attorney General Holder urged renewed commitment to legal defense for the poor at this year's Brennan Legacy Awards Dinner and at the 2010 Indigent Defense Symposium. "Ours is an adversarial system of justice -- it requires lawyers on both sides who effectively represent their client's interests," Holder said at our dinner. "When defense counsel are handicapped by lack of training, time, and resources...we start to wonder: Is justice being done? Is justice being served?"

Tags: Justice, Racial Justice, Civil Justice, Civil Legal Aid, Criminal Justice, Indigent Defense Reform

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“...a beacon of light in a shadowed world…”

"... we turn away from it at our peril.” 

--Senator Sheldon Whitehouse on the Constitution, during the Second Annual Living Constitution Lecture, 11/20/2009, at NYU School of Law

Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) delivered the Brennan Center’s Second Annual Living Constitution Lecture to a packed crowd in Greenberg Lounge at New York University School of Law. After a welcoming reception that featured the cuisine and libations of Rhode Island, Brennan Center Executive Director Michael Waldman introduced the pro-democracy evening. Katherine vanden Heuvel, editor-in-chief of The Nation, introduced Senator Whitehouse and moderated a Q&A following his remarks.  

The Center’s Living Constitution Project brings together thinkers and policymakers to further a progressive interpretation of the Constitution. Senator Whitehouse, a member of the Judiciary and Intelligence committees, started his speech by noting that the Constitution is “a beacon of light” to citizens of the world and that, to protect its great principles, there must be respect for the rule of law and procedures “well down” the ranks of executive branch officials and the lawyers who interpret and enforce our laws. He pointed to the “litter of mischief” that resulted from torture memos written by lawyers in the Office of Legal Counsel during the last Bush Administration as a consequence of a turn away from a proper understanding of the principles that have made us strong and secure as a nation. 

The Senator warned that the Constitution, the foundation of our democracy at home, faces grave threats in the form of widespread efforts to meddle with access to the ballot box by engaging in “electioneering games that trick voters into not participating.” Another looming threat is the pending Supreme Court decision in Citizens United, which might unleash corporations from the bounds of government by allowing corporations to tap their great accumulations of wealth to influence elections. In a lighter moment, he suggested that the only way to resolve this might be to muster a Constitutional amendment providing that only human beings can participate in the political process. 

The Senator’s third concern springs from threats to the civil justice system. He argued that corporations have waged a successful war on our civil justice system and have won battles for mandatory arbitration systems and strict interpretations of statutes of limitations. The Constitution mandates trial by jury no less than three times, but in recent years we have witnessed persistent and successful efforts to erode and deride this right. 

Finally, the Senator expressed concern for the promise of economic well-being that is embodied in the Constitution. He argued that the framers had a simple goal: to allow Americans to live freely and without government interference; but, for the past decade, progress on the economic front has not kept pace with the Constitution’s equally important promise of equality and justice. Economic disparities – widened by laws including those that allow reduced capital gains tax treatment of carried interest by hedge fund managers (15% rather than 36%, if deemed ordinary income) – erode this promise. And allowing executive compensation to be “taken” by the government under its TARP program without due process is a dangerous precedent, no matter how unsympathetic well-paid financial industry executives might seem at the moment. 

Read the entire lecture by Senator Whitehouse here.

Tags: Democracy, Campaign Finance Reform, Justice, Civil Justice, Civil Legal Aid, Civil Right to Counsel

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Justice for Half

One in two low-income Americans seeking legal help does not receive it, a new report shows.  The report paints a grim picture of a two-tiered justice system, in which wealthy people are able to hire lawyers to help them get their "day in court," while low-income families must face life-changing legal issues without the same assistance.  The report, Documenting the Justice Gap In America, was released this week by the Legal Services Corporation (LSC), the federal body that funds legal assistance for low-income Americans in civil cases. 

The study found that budget shortfalls prevent the 137 local, LSC-funded legal aid providers from helping half of the eligible potential clients who contact them seeking help.  Parents trying to protect their custody rights; individuals unable to collect the government support they need to pay their mortgage and feed their families; and workers fighting to obtain hard-earned wages illegally denied to them -- are all being turned away due to lack of funding for legal aid.  The report estimates that in a year, almost 22,000 people seeking help to save their homes from foreclosure alone will be turned away by LSC grantees.

These figures likely understate the current crisis in legal representation.  The U.S. Census Bureau reports that the number of people eligible for LSC-funded services (people living at or below 125 percent of the federal poverty level) grew to 53.8 million in 2008, up from 50.8 million just one year before, and even these figures capture just the recession's start.  Only a fraction of low-income people with legal needs contact legal aid offices at all, and while LSC reports that half of those seeking help are "served," some receive just advice, not full representation in court. 

In a case dealing with issues as important as child custody, the loss of one's home, or wage theft, standing alone in a courtroom, without the help of a lawyer, would be unthinkable to people of means.  Low-income families are left without other options.  There are ten times more private attorneys providing personal legal services to people who can afford it than there are legal aid lawyers serving the poor.  And the poor suffer because of it; the report cites a growing body of research demonstrating that those without legal representation fare worse in court.

It is not just the poor who suffer.  The court process is slowed and court costs multiply when litigants enter the courthouse without knowledgeable representation.  Communities are drained of wealth when neighbors' homes are foreclosed.  Consumers lose out when lenders are allowed to continue deceitful practices.  And children suffer when family problems go unaddressed.

As the number of Americans with legal needs and eligible for federally financed legal aid swells, national and state-level responses fall woefully short.  To date, federal stimulus bills have included no funding for legal representation, and though Congress is considering upping LSC's funding for Fiscal Year 2010, the proposed $10 - 50 million increase will not come close to the doubling of LSC funding needed to provide merely "necessary access to civil legal assistance," according to the report.

Further exacerbating the effects of funding shortages are Newt Gingrich-era federal restrictions on LSC grantees that not only limit the tools legal aid lawyers can use, but also create inefficiencies throughout the legal aid system.  Unconscionable at this time of expanding need, a restriction prohibiting clients of LSC-funded programs from participating in class actions forces legal aid organizations to waste resources by unnecessarily litigating similar cases one-by-one.  Unable to seek attorneys' fees, even when otherwise allowed under statute, the restrictions cause LSC-funded organizations to lose out on a potential funding source.  And if an LSC grantee wishes to "un-restrict" its non-LSC funds, it must set up a wholly separate organization, creating major losses in duplicated overhead and administrative costs.

Only when all low-income people can obtain a measure of legal assistance in cases related to basic human needs, from lawyers with all the requisite tools, will the promise of "equal justice under law," inscribed on the Supreme Court, ring true.

Tags: Justice, Civil Justice, Civil Legal Aid

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A Legal Practice Well Worth Doing

Cross-post from CityLimits.org

Negotiating Justice: Progressive Lawyering, Low-Income Clients, and the Quest for Social Change, by Corey S. Shdaimah, NYU Press, $45.

Amid the surfeit of bad news that has surfaced of late is the less than obvious connection between the economic downturn generally and the budget crisis now being faced by legal service providers. Due to a quirk in the manner in which many organizations receive funding, hard times for Wall Street now means it's even harder than usual to fund lawyers who serve the poor.

The decline in interest rates undercuts the interest earned on a key kind of account maintained by lawyers, called the Interest on Lawyers Trust Accounts (IOLTA), a major source of funding for legal aid organizations. Cash-strapped legal aid groups may be fielding more demands than ever, yet find themselves less able to provide services than they were even just last year.

Negotiating Justice: Progressive Lawyering, Low-Income Clients, and the Quest for Social Change

And it is no secret that, even in flush times, the best efforts of these groups barely scratch the surface of the legal needs of poor communities and families. While the victims of Bernie Madoff will almost certainly have their day in court, it's clear that for many victims of mortgage fraud and predatory lending schemes, workplace harassment, landlord-tenant disputes, credit problems, or those grappling with mental illness, securing a lawyer with the time and inclination to properly address their needs remains a pipedream.

A new book by Corey S. Shdaimah, "Negotiating Justice: Progressive Lawyering, Low-Income Clients, and the Quest for Social Change," makes a measured, observation-based analysis of the operation of a single legal service clinic, named with the pseudonym "Northeast Legal Services" or NELS, that serves poor clients in a medium-sized American city.

Through interviews, the author applies social science methods in evaluating day-to-day interactions of lawyers and clients. The book is particularly meticulous in examining whether the work in the clinic maps onto the contours of what has been a vigorous conversation in academic and legal services circles concerning the goals and nature of community-based legal practice.

Starting several decades ago, some legal scholars and practitioners on the left began to question whether the potential for empowering clients in legal work was being realized in practice. Law professors and pioneering theorists Gerald Lopez of UCLA, Lucie White at Harvard, and Amherst College's Austin Sarat, among others, asked whether legal services lawyers were able to, or did, assist clients in achieving social justice through litigation and advocacy, or whether power dynamics within the lawyer-client relationship were actually reinforcing poor clients' difficulty in effecting change.

After losing many of the struggles to enshrine social entitlements that were part of the so-called "War on Poverty," immediate goals for legal practitioners did - and had to - rise to the forefront as part of a far more piecemeal approach to legal practice.

Particularly against the current legal backdrop of largely conservative courts, as well as federal funding restrictions that prohibit many legal aid lawyers from bringing class actions and other important types of cases, it became more crucial for legal services and community-based lawyers to ensure that their work did not re-victimize poor clients as those clients sought justice.

Scores of law review articles were published as part of what Shdaimah calls the "progressive lawyering" approach, which encouraged legal services lawyers to use opportunities to listen more closely to clients, to maximize client autonomy and lawyer-client collaboration, and to gain self-awareness about the limitations of lawyerly expertise in telling client stories. The obvious class divisions among lawyers and poor clients were also highlighted.

As a conversation, it revealed a clear need for community-based and more holistic, inclusive approaches to the practice of law that included access to non-legal help as well as self-help, and justified organizations' attempts to transcend a narrowly legal approach by grappling with at least some other negative pressures in clients' lives.

Most of these insights are now accepted widely by legal services lawyers. They are an important aspect of both aspirations and achievements of legal services organizations, including such local, multi-dimensional organizations such as Make the Road by Walking or The Neighborhood Defender Service of Harlem.

Shdaimah's book is an important recent addition to this tradition of closely examining public interest legal practice. Isolating certain themes concerning progressive lawyering, Shdaimah - a lawyer and assistant professor in the University of Maryland School of Social Work - probes them carefully. Her innovation is to ask directly about, for example, lawyer-client collaboration and client autonomy. The book contains substantial excerpts from interviews, in which we hear both the lawyers' and clients' voices and perspectives.

Shdaimah argues with some force that much of the earlier scholarship lacked a substantial empirical component, and this was to its detriment. From her perspective, the literature has saddled practitioners with a set of abstract and difficult-to-achieve goals, thereby burdening lawyers with the unattainable.

Her most pointed example concerns the value of collaboration: Shdaimah asks whether wealthy clients get their legal needs met without being asked to shoulder a laboring oar, and therefore whether it is fair for clients with far fewer resources to be expected to perform tasks (such as getting affidavits signed) as a precondition of receiving services. She rightly points out that, for many clients, securing access to competent legal counsel is no small victory in itself.

Yet the book makes it clear that, in practice, lawyers need client assistance on many aspects of a case due to both the pressure of caseloads and the greater efficiency of client action on a matter. In interviews, the lawyers also directly linked their hopes for collaboration in a particular case to their assessments of client capacity. One lawyer indicated that he would do far more than usual in the case of one specific client, a woman who was particularly vulnerable and easily overwhelmed. In short, a mixture of transactional and resource realities (and compassion) informed lawyers' judgments in applying the abstract notion of collaboration to particular clients and circumstances.   

The book, as a whole, will be a terrific resource for students who would like to leaven their academic scholarship with insights gained from observations, surveys and interviews at a real legal clinic. It would also be a deeply helpful companion text in seminars accompanying clinical legal studies programs, wherein law students work alongside lawyers to serve clients.

However, with the collaboration question, as with many of the others that Shdaimah highlights, I found myself far more drawn to the direct sources and stories she assembled than to her critique of the scholarship. Much of what Shdaimah found confirms that lawyers are able to work with clients to secure measurable improvements in their lives, and are valued in this role by the clients, despite the fact that no transformational change in the overall conditions of poverty is on the horizon.

Her descriptions underlined the significance of the core lawyer-client collaboration - "naming, claiming and blaming" - which both confirms the clients' feelings of righteousness in their cause, and makes the most of lawyers' skills in framing challenges and possible solutions.

Moreover, through the interviews, it was clear that the lawyers at NELS were very familiar with at least the broad contours of the literature, and aware of its conceptual significance for community-based legal centers. Shdaimah did not have the liberty of studying this kind of legal practice before and after the notion of progressive lawyering took shape, and these notions appear to already pervade legal practice at NELS.

My own view is that the lawyers' attempt to apply such values, however constrained in practice or by compassion, is a rarely celebrated, but crucially important, advance in how we have come to imagine legal practice in these and other settings. When I was a law student, I admit to being captivated by this literature, and credit it with providing me and countless others tools for self-examination and self-awareness that have proven an invaluable part of whatever I have done.

While scholars such as Lucie White do exhort practitioners to a set of engagement-oriented norms, equally important for her and others is a call to situated practice, informed by real-life contingencies and a clear-eyed assessment of what is possible. So while Shdaimah appears somewhat dismayed by the distance between the literature and reality, I am instead reassured by how far we have come in understanding the challenges and pitfalls of lawyering in poor communities. Shdaimah's findings at NELS of attentive, hardworking lawyers, who sensitively work with clients to secure incremental change, are actually a happy, and somewhat overdue, confirmation that real-world application of these values creates a legal practice well worth doing.

Tags: Justice, Civil Justice, Civil Legal Aid, Civil Right to Counsel

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Common Sense Solutions for Civil Legal Aid

Yesterday, Senator Harkin introduced the Civil Access to Justice Act of 2009.  The Act will take significant steps towards improving access to civil legal aid: it will remove expensive and cumbersome restrictions on the ability of civil legal aid lawyers to help their clients, increase the funding allocated to civil legal aid programs, and expand  the ability of law school clinics to provide legal assistance. 

This is a vitally important move at exactly the right time.  Record numbers of Americans face foreclosure, eviction, layoffs, domestic violence and other legal problems.  Low-income people, and communities of color—which are disproportionately poor, and have been targeted by subprime lenders—suffer the most.  They need help figuring out their legal rights, and making their voices heard in court.

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Tags: Justice, Civil Justice, Attorneys' Fee Awards, Civil Legal Aid

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Congress Boosts Funding for Legal Services Corporation

Good news: as part of the omnibus appropriations bill passed yesterday, the Legal Services Corporation will receive an additional $40 million in funding for fiscal year 2009. The timing of the additional funds is critical. Hit hard by the economic downturn, cash-strapped legal aid organizations nationwide are experiencing a tremendous increase in people seeking their services, especially for help with foreclosure cases.

According to their press release, found here, "The additional funding is critical to every one of our programs," LSC President Helaine M. Barnett said. "Low-income individuals and families are increasingly at risk during this economic downturn and our programs are overwhelmed with requests for help."

As part of our Civil Justice Initiative, the Brennan Center for Justice has put together a page chronically the economic downturn impact on civil legal services for the poor—impact on funding, uptick in legal services intake, etc. Click here to read more.

Tags: Justice, Civil Justice, Civil Legal Aid, Civil Right to Counsel, Economic Opportunity

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A Little Representation Would Go a Long Way

Signed into law today, the $787 billion stimulus package places our bets for the economy’s health on a plan promising job creation, government investment, and tax cuts. Another key component of the economic prescription is the expansion of public benefits programs needed to protect the most vulnerable families from falling deeper into poverty and essential to promoting growth.

To achieve their full remedial potential, these benefit program expansions must come with the assurance that claimants are receiving the full benefits to which they are entitled. Unfortunately, this is where the stimulus fell short. The Washington Post reports that, at least in the area of unemployment compensation, people applying for benefits are finding it increasingly difficult to obtain them.

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Tags: Justice, Civil Justice, Civil Legal Aid, Civil Right to Counsel

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