Tag Archive | "Public Interest"

Tags: , , ,

Public Interest Externships at a Glance


Crystal Lara, 2L

Mental Health Advocacy Services

Interning at Mental Health Advocacy Services during the summer was a once in a lifetime experience.  I was exposed to so many different areas of the law and was able to see firsthand how my efforts were helping some of the most vulnerable members of our society.  MHAS really nurtured my understanding and provided me with opportunities to be an advocate after my first year and strengthened my belief in public interest.  I am so appreciative of the time I spent with MHAS.”

Cynthia Castellon, 3L

Harriett Buhai

This summer I was an intern at the Harriett Buhai Center for Family Law.  It was one of the best legal and working experiences I have ever had.  I had the opportunity to learn about the family law process and the family court system.  I also had the opportunity to have my own caseload and meet with my own clients which is a rare opportunity as a law student.

Stephanie Herrick, 2L

Public Counsel

I worked at Public Counsel last summer in the Homelessness Prevention Law Project, and it was a great experience.  The firm has seven law projects and over 40 staff attorneys.  They brought in 47 law clerks over the summer, all unpaid positions.  I had the opportunity to do the General Relief Advocacy Project all summer, which Southwestern participates in during the school year.  I learned a great deal about public benefits and major issues that confront marginalized members of society.  Most interns can also work on different projects to get more experience.  The internship is fulfilling and a lot of fun, and I would recommend for anyone to work there.

Posted in SW CommunityComments (0)

Public Interest Opportunities at Southwestern

Tags: ,

Public Interest Opportunities at Southwestern


SW’s campus will expand to include the building to the west of Bullocks Wilshire.     Photo Credit: Liz Reinhardt

SW’s campus will expand to include the building to the west of Bullocks Wilshire. Photo Credit: Liz Reinhardt

By Stephanie Herrick, 2L

Southwestern Law School prides itself on being an excellent Public Interest Law school. Public Interest can include working in areas of the law such as immigrant rights, children’s law, homelessness prevention, housing, consumer rights, disability rights, and any number of social justice issues that lawyers can be a part of litigating and creating policy for to advance the rights of individuals.

“There are several reasons why students should consider working for a public interest law organization,” Prof. Ronald Aranovsky, Chair of the Public Interest Law Committee, said. “Above all, the work is important. Large segments of our community need legal services to deal with important problems in their lives but cannot afford an attorney. Students who work in public interest firms help meet this need.”

Students should get involved in public interest legal work because it will benefit them as people as well as lawyers. “Working for a public interest firm can provide excellent training opportunities, including client interviewing and legal writing and research skills development as well as the chance to work closely with and learn from experienced lawyers,” Prof. Aranovsky said. Anyone who takes the time to give back to the community and help others should feel good about their work and know it was time well spent.

In addition, Southwestern has sought to further its commitment to public interest law by creating the Public Service Program. This program rewards students for the volunteer hours they give during their law school career.

Students can get credit for PSP hours either through on campus or off campus volunteer opportunities. A full list is available on the PSP TWEN site. Below are some of the opportunities students can get involved with right here on campus.

General Relief Advocacy Project (GRAP)

GRAP is a program that was developed by Public Counsel’s Homelessness Prevention Law Project. A Public Counsel attorney supervises the law school program but it is run by the students. Volunteers for GRAP advocate on behalf of pubic benefits recipients at the local Los Angeles County Department of Public Social Services offices. The program includes a training that covers information about the reality of homelessness in Los Angeles County, the legal basis for GRAP, and what volunteers need to know when they advocate for clients in the field. Outings to the DPSS offices are then arranged on Friday afternoons once a month throughout the school year. Students ask clients about their needs and provide them with assistance. This assistance usually includes advocating for a client’s rights regarding receiving public benefits, helping clients through the process of applying for benefits, or giving legal referrals or other information, such as where to find homeless shelters and medical care. Students learn client counseling and negotiation skills when advocating on behalf of clients, and are given an opportunity to see what they can do using the legal knowledge and advocating skills they have acquired.

Sign up sheets for GRAP trainings and outings are available on the GRAP TWEN page.

Teen Court

Teen Court is a juvenile diversion and prevention program with the intent to reduce recidivism and encourage first time juvenile offenders to accept responsibility for their actions and to stay out of the juvenile court system. The hope for the program is that a juvenile offender will not continue their criminal behavior after participating in a judicial process in which a jury of their peers, which are other teenagers, decide the verdict and recommend disposition orders. Law students who participate visit local high schools to observe Teen Court trials and assist with jury instructions and jury deliberation. Students who participate in Teen Court have the opportunity to learn more about the juvenile delinquency system while making a difference in the community.

The trials are on Wednesdays or Thursdays from 3pm to about 5:30pm. Sign up sheets are available on the Teen Court TWEN page.

Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA)

VITA is an IRS program that is run at Southwestern by the Tax Law Society. The purpose of VITA is to offer free income tax preparation to low income and elderly tax payers. Volunteer preparers will work on campus Saturday afternoons, February 6 through April 10, 2010. All preparers must pass a basic certification test through the IRS website. This experience gives students the opportunity to learn how to do their own taxes and those of their friends and family, as well as gives them practical professional skills that will be very useful upon graduation. Students who participate not only learn a great deal, but also help others in need.
For more information on training and participation, students should sign up for the Tax Law Society TWEN page.

Posted in FeaturedComments (0)

PSP Rewards Students for Public Service

Tags: ,

PSP Rewards Students for Public Service


Chad Derby, 3L

On Wednesday, September 6th, Professor Laura Cohen, along with the SBA Community Affairs Committee, held a well received informational meeting about Southwestern’s new Public Service Program. The PSP is designed to promote student’s involvement in public interest legal work and to reward them for their service.

“The Public Service Program encourages law students to use their legal skills to help others both on and off campus,” Professor Cohen said. Participating in Public Interest legal work is a way for students to gain experience and develop legal skills, enhance exposure to substantive law, as well as build relationships with attorneys and local community organizations. Southwestern encourages all students to perform at least twenty-five hours of pro bono public service each academic year.

Representatives from various public interest organizations attended the meeting and provided information about what their organization does, and how students can get involved. On campus organizations present included Teen Court and GRAP. The community legal organizations included Public Counsel, the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles, Neighborhood Legal Services, Harriett Buhai Center for Family Law, Bet Tzedek, and the Alliance for Children’s Rights. All of these public interest law firms offer volunteer opportunities during the year for which students can earn PSP hours. A complete list of opportunities on and off campus is available on the PSP TWEN site.

“I am here to answer questions and to help find volunteer opportunities in our community,” Professor Cohen said. “My hope for students who get involved is that you will learn a lot while doing the volunteer work now, as well as come away with a sense of responsibility and understanding of your role to society as future lawyers.”

Students who complete twenty-five hours of pro bono public service in a year will receive a formal letter of recognition from the Dean and be invited to attend an end-of-year banquet. Additionally, students who perform at least seventy-five hours of public service throughout their law school experience will be recognized at commencement ceremonies and a notation will be placed on their law school transcript.

To qualify, the public service work must be performed under the supervision of a licensed attorney or faculty member, students may not receive compensation or academic credit, and the public service work must be law related.

For more information please sign up for the “Southwestern Public Service Program” TWEN or stop by the Legal Clinic, 4th floor Westmoreland Bldg., and review the bulletin board.

Posted in FeaturedComments (0)

A New Way to Kick-Off Public Interest Law Week: Casino Night/Live Auction

Tags: , ,

A New Way to Kick-Off Public Interest Law Week: Casino Night/Live Auction


By Cynthia Castellon, 3L

Public Interest Summer Grant Program

Public Interest Law Week is just around the corner, and the importance of the event is greater this year than ever before. With the down turn in the economy, the need for public interest law has increased while the number of available paid jobs for law students has decreased. The week of events will raise awareness about the public interest legal field as well as raise the funds needed for the Public Interest Law Summer Grant Program.

Since the vast majority of public interest firms are unable to pay summer interns, the grant gives students an opportunity to work for public interest agencies for pay. Many of these firms see students as a necessary part of their services. As more and more people fall on hard economic times, more of them are qualifying for public services. An increase of people qualifying also comes with a increased need for volunteers and student workers.

“The summer public interest law grants provides students with opportunities to work with a nonprofit organization that provides free or low-cost legal assistance to low-income or marginalized individuals or underserved communities,” Ronald Aranovsky, Chair of the Public Interest Law Committee, said. For nineteen years the goal of the week has been to raise as much money as possible in order to provide as many grants as possible. Every year the number of applicants outnumbers the number of grants available, and this year does not look any different.

“One way for students to improve their chances of receiving a grant is to become actively involved in Public Interest Law Week fundraising activities,” Prof. Aranovsky said. “It also helps if students have already received a summer clerkship offer from a qualifying organization, or at least applied for a clerkship, by the time they submit the summer grant application.” Applications for the grant are due in the Spring once students have started applying for jobs or have a summer job lined up. The committee that determines which students will receive the grant takes into consideration whether students volunteered and helped in the planning of Public Interest Law Week and took part in the events.

Public Interest Law Week

Public Interest Law Week will take place from October 23 through October 29 and will be filled with fundraising events and informational sessions.

The week will kick off on Friday, October 23 with the first ever Casino Night/Live Auction co-hosted by the SBA. The event will take place in the Louis XVI Room from 7pm to 11pm. There will be table games, a poker tournament, drinks and appetizers, and great items auctioned off. Tickets to Casino Night will be sold the week prior to the event in front of Westmoreland. All students, faculty, and community members are welcome to attend.

The following Monday, October 26, Leslie Starr Heimov, Executive Director of the Children’s Law Center, will be the Public Interest Law Week Keynote Speaker. The event will take place in room W311 at 12:30pm, and is intended to raise awareness about public interest opportunities that are available. Monday will also be the start of the Bake Sale that will be in front of Westmoreland and will run through Wednesday, October 28. Additionally, pre-bids for the silent auction will begin on Monday. The silent auction bid binder will be available in front of Westmoreland.

Tuesday, October 27 during lunch will be the always exciting Trivia Bowl. Twenty teams of up to 5 people will have the opportunity to test their knowledge on legal topics and pop culture. Whether it’s by forming a team or cheering on your friends and professors, the Trivia Bowl always proves to be an entertaining event.

The Exercise-A-Thon will be held on Wednesday, October 28 during lunch at the fitness center. Deans, professors, and students will run on the treadmill or elliptical machine for pledges as students watch and cheer them on.

The week will conclude on Thursday, October 29 with the Public Interest Career Fair and the Silent Auction. The Career Fair is co-sponsored by the Career Center and will include employers and information about job opportunities in the Public Interest Field.

The Silent Auction finale will be held in the Salle Moderne from 4pm to 6pm, and this will be the final opportunity to show support and place bids on the great items being auctioned off.

Public Interest Law Week is made possible by the hard work and dedication of the Public Interest Law Committee who begin in the summer preparing for all these events. The success of the week is made possible by everyone who volunteers or contributes, whether it is by buying an item at the live auction or buying a cookie during the bake sale. To find out how you can get involved add the Public Interest Law Committee TWEN or email sherrick@swlaw.edu.

Posted in FeaturedComments (0)

Tags: ,

Public Interest vs. Public Interest


By Dikran Sevlian, 3L

Immigration is an issue that fuels the fires of debate, argument, and just plain fighting. On the front lines of these issues are the ever dedicated, lowly paid soldiers of public interest. Litigating or providing amicus briefs for those who need representation.

All California public universities adhere to a particular statute in regards to in-state tuition. California Education Code § 68130.5 (commonly referred to as A.B. 540) provides in-state tuition for any individual who is not a permanent resident of California so long as such individual meets certain requirements. Made into law in 2001, A.B. 540 requires that an individual 1) has attended a California high school for three or more years 2) graduated from a California high school and 3) attends an accredited California college or university. A student who does not have lawful immigration status can still take advantage of this code if they file an affidavit with their college or university stating that they will legalize or plan to legalize their immigration status.

In 2005 out of state students brought an action against the U.C. Regents. They claimed that the statute discriminated against out of state students by offering cheaper tuition to undocumented immigrant students. Moreover, the state law violates federal statute 8 U.S.C §1623(a) which states that an undocumented immigrant is not eligible for postsecondary education benefits based on his residency in the state unless those benefits are equally available to all out of state citizens. Therefore under federal law, giving cheaper tuition to an undocumented student in California should not be allowed.

Proponents argue that the statute is not federally preempted by law because the statute does not expressly state that tuition benefits will be offered to student on the basis of residence. The statute applies to any prospective college student who merely meets the basic criteria set by the statute. Notwithstanding, the state of California has a legitimate purpose to offer cheaper education to its residence. The average income of a college graduate is significantly higher than a non college grad. Subsequently, a well educated cohort of California residents translates to long term benefits for the state.

Nonetheless, last year around this time (September 15, 2008), the state appellate court reversed and remanded a trial court’s dismissal of the suit challenging the legality of A.B. 540. The court found that the appellants (Martinez) had a claim of federal preemption, violation of equal protection, and violation of privilege and immunities clause. Presently the case is pending in trial court while the U.C. Regents requested the California Supreme Court to review the appellate court decision.

At the end of it all, if A.B. 540 is eliminated, undocumented immigrants will have to pay non-resident tuition but cannot be eligible for any federal or university financial aid. On the flip side, nothing will change for the out of state students who brought the action. They and other out of state students will have to pay the non-resident tuition that can be around $22,000 for public schools. In these trying economic times as well, undergraduate and graduate schools are opportunities to get out of the storm for a while. School becomes necessary to distinguish yourself from others once you get out into the job market.

Yet, you might ask, who is so hell bound are helping take these opportunities from students who by “function over form” are essentially residents of California? The counter to that would be who are those just as hell bound to protect these students? On one side of the ring are the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund and Lawyer’s Committee of Civil Rights. On the other side of the ring are the Immigration Reform Law Institute (IRLI), the Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF), and the Washington Legal Foundation (WLF). Each group describes themselves as a public interest group devoted to giving a voice to the voiceless.

The Lawyer’s Committee of Civil Rights tries to “obtain equal opportunity for minorities by addressing factors that contribute to racial justice and economic opportunity.” Noble causes by any means; I can just see those hard working young attorneys spending hours writing amici. They’re trying to presenting things just right, prevailing, getting something for the small guy.

The Pacific Legal Foundation is “devoted to a vision of individual freedom, responsible government, and color-blind justice . . . to build a future of economic freedom and equal opportunity.” The Pacific Legal Foundation and the Committee of Civil Rights are dedicated to equal opportunity and the eradicating injustice.

Immigration Reform Law Institute is an organization narrowly tailored to protect the rights of U.S. citizens. More specifically, advocating for citizens harmed by illegal immigration. On the other hand, MALDEF “promotes equality and justice through litigation, advocacy, public policy, and community education in the areas of employment, immigrants’ rights, voting rights, education, and language rights.” MALDEF proudly calls itself “the law firm of the Latino community.” However, they still call themselves public interest groups.

It is obvious, and I do love to point out the obvious, that these groups advocate for particular groups within the public. So then I have to ask; what is the public? According to Merriam Webster, public means of, relating to, or affecting all the people or the whole area of a nation or state or relating to people in general. This definition just doesn’t seem to fit. If public meant all the people then wouldn’t the interest these groups focus on be related to all the people of a nation? According to Merriam-Webster, a nation or state does not specify citizenship, so people of a nation do not necessarily require the possession of documentation. Moreover, Black’s Law definition is: 1. relating or belonging to an entire community, state, or nation, 2. Open or available for all to use, share, or enjoy.

From the definition then, one who works for the public’s interest should work for all members of the community. Perhaps the term public interest is a misnomer. If a group represents only a subset of people within the public, should they not be called by some other name? Maybe the term public interest should not be used. Each group should just call themselves by the specific interest they represent. MALDEF has the right idea. But to narrowly categorize each group is inefficient, non-uniform, and too difficult to bother with.

There are different terms to use: specified cause interest, fractional interest, interest of the part, constituent interest. I like constituent interest. One of the definitions of constituent is: one part of something that makes up the whole. Yet Constituent Interest Law doesn’t have the same ring as Public Interest Law. The latter offers the hearer an image of dedication, sacrifice, self gratification of helping the people. The former just lets you know you can’t help everybody. Sometimes you might be hurting them.

Posted in VarietyComments (0)

Public Interest Events Calendar – Fall 2009

Tags: ,

Public Interest Events Calendar – Fall 2009


Teen Court

Franklin High School

SW’s campus will expand to include the building to the west of Bullocks Wilshire.     Photo Credit: Liz Reinhardt

SW’s campus will expand to include the building to the west of Bullocks Wilshire. Photo Credit: Liz Reinhardt

October 29

November 19

December 17

Dorsey High School

October 28

November 11

Fairfax High School

October 21

November 18

GRAP Outreach

October 2

November 13

Public Interest Law Week

Friday, October 23 – Casino Night/Live Auction co-sponsored with SBA

Monday, October 26, Tuesday, October 27, and Wednesday October 28 – Bake Sale

Monday, October 26 – Keynote Speaker – Leslie Starr Heimov, Executive Director of the Children’s Law Center

Tuesday, October 27 – Trivia Bowl

Wednesday, October 28 – Exercise-a-Thon

Thursday, October 29 – Public Interest Career Fair 12:20 – 2

Silent Auction – 4 to 6

Posted in FeaturedComments (0)

Our Flickr Photos - See all photos