PROJECT HELP: Year in Review (almost)
Project H.E.L.P (Homeless Experience Legal Protection) is preparing to celebrate one year of success in assisting Columbia area homeless people with their legal needs. More than 50 attorneys have volunteered their time and expertise at the clinic to assist about 50 clients since November 2008, when the Richland County Bar, the Public Service Committee, and community sponsors launched the project. Project H.E.L.P’s host for its first year has been St. Lawrence Place, a transitional housing facility for working homeless families in Columbia. With a year of knowledge and experience, and outstanding assistance from the St. Lawrence Place staff, Project H.E.L.P. is preparing to move to a new location and broaden its client base.
Some exciting changes are in the works. Beginning in November, Project H.E.L.P. will be hosted by Catholic Charities of the Midlands, on the corner of Assembly and Taylor Street. This new central location downtown will make the clinic more accessible to clients with limited transportation. In the past year Project H.E.L.P. has also developed relationships with more Midlands area organizations providing assistance to the homeless and is reaching out to those groups to identify clients who are in need of the clinic’s resources.
Ideally, the clinic will be staffed with five or six volunteers who will donate about two hours of their time on the third Thursday of the month. The goal for 2009 is to serve between 12 and 15 clients each month. Clients will continue to make appointments to meet with an attorney volunteer so that we can identify their legal need in advance and give the volunteers a bit of time to prepare to assist the clients.
Another exciting expansion comes in the form of certifying and retaining copies of identification documents for clients. Homeless individuals often have a difficult time keeping their driver’s licenses, social security cards, and other government issued identification. This identification is required to use many services, including staying in some shelters. It can often take six weeks or more to replace lost or stolen identification. Catholic Charities has graciously offered to maintain a file of certified copies of H.E.L.P. clients’ identification to be used in case those items are lost and need to be replaced. Volunteers will be needed to notarize these copies. This is a great opportunity for judges and judicial clerks, paralegals, and law students to give much-needed assistance to Project H.E.L.P. clients without giving any legal advice. Also, if you have a locking file cabinet that you would like to donate for the project, please let us know.
Project H.E.L.P. was started by Judge Jay Zainey, U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Louisiana. Judge Zainey started Project H.E.L.P. in New Orleans to assist homeless people with maintaining certified copies of identification documents so that they would be available for service providers. Since Hurricane Katrina’s tremendous impact on the needs of New Orleans residents, the project has grown dramatically and expanded to other cities including New York, Chicago, Baton Rouge, Lafayette, Shreveport, Birmingham, Savannah, as well as Columbia.
In Columbia, the RCBA H.E.L.P. project operates a once-monthly morning clinic offering pro bono legal services and providing basic information about access to government benefits, identification documentation, housing, child custody, and other common legal issues affecting the homeless. Community programs serving the homeless help the clinic identify clients by encouraging individuals with legal needs to participate.
Morning legal clinics will be held every third Thursday of the month.
Upcoming clinic dates are October 15th, November 19th, and December 17th.
To learn more or to volunteer, please contact Kristen Horne at 255-9530.
Reprinted with permission from the Richland County Bar News. (c) 2009
-RFW
Filed under: 1, Law, Legal, Legal Clinic, Legal Documents, Legal Drafting, South Carolina, South Carolina Access to Justice Commission, access to justice, access to justice blog, attorney, blog, homeless, housing, indigent, legal aid, poverty, pro bono, public interest attorney , Assembly and Taylor Street, Catholic Charities of the Midlands, homeless families in Columbia, Hurricane Katrina, Judge Jay Zainey, Kristen Horne, Midlands area, New Orleans, Project H.E.L.P. (Homeless Experience Legal Protection), Public Service Committee, Richland County Bar, St. Lawrence Place, U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Louisiana, Volunteer Attorneys
October 8, 2009 • 11:52 am 0
Elkins Family Law Task Force Recommendations Open for Comment
On October 2, 2009, the Elkins Family Law Task Force released its draft recommendations for ways to improve access to justice in the California Family Court system.
The public comment period is October 1, 2009, through December 4, 2009.
The draft recommendations and an online comment form are available at www.courtinfo.ca.gov/jc/tflists/elkins.htm.
In addition, the task force will hold two public hearings to receive in-person comments on the draft recommendations. The public hearings will be held on Thursday, October 22 in San Francisco, and on Tuesday, October 27 in Los Angeles. For information and to sign up to participate in the public hearings, go to www.courtinfo.ca.gov/jc/tflists/elkins.htm.
To learn more about the Task Force, view the FACT SHEET.
It’s evident from the List of Topics (below) that the Task Force worked hard to review the entire system:
1. Right to Present Live Testimony at Hearings
2. Expanding Legal Representation and Providing a Continuum of Legal Services
3. Caseflow Management
4. Providing Clear Guidance Through Rules of Court
5. Children’s Voices
6. Domestic Violence
7. Enhancing Safety
8. Contested Child Custody
9. Minor’s Counsel
10. Scheduling of Trials and Long-Cause Hearings
11. Litigant Education
12. Expanding Services to Assist Litigants in Resolving Their Cases
13. Streamlining Family Law Forms and Procedures
14. Enhancing Mechanisms to Handle Perjury
15. Standardize Default and Uncontested Process Statewide
16. Interpreters
17. Public Information and Outreach
18. Judicial Branch Education
19. Family Law Research Agenda
20. Court Facilities
21. Leadership, Accountability, and Resources
The SC Access to Justice Commission will continue to follow the project and update you as it develops.
-RFW
Filed under: 1, Civil Gideon, Court, LEP, Law, Legal, Legal Documents, Legal Drafting, Legalese, Limited English Proficiency, Plain English, Plain Language, Readability, Right to Counsel, Rule of Law, South Carolina Access to Justice Commission, access to justice, access to justice blog, advocacy, attorney, blog, children, court innovation, divorce, domestic violence, elderly, foster parents, indigent, law librarians, law students, legal aid, poverty, poverty guidelines, public interest attorney, self-represented litigant , California Courts, California Family Court system, Draft Recommendations, Elkins Family Law Task Force, Public Comment, public hearings